List of political parties in Finland
This article is a list of 'political parties in Finland', which includes Finland's national-level political parties and excludes local and provincial parties. A party is defined as a political association whose existence is recorded in the Ministry of Justice's party register.
Finland has a multi-party system. Coalition governments which comprise a majority of seats in the Parliament of Finland are the norm. Those parties which are not in government are called the opposition. Due to the lack of an electoral threshold, many parties are usually represented in Parliament. As a result, it is all but impossible for one party to win a majority. Additionally, the parties usually cannot win enough seats between them to form a governing coalition on their own. Most Finnish governments, particularly since World War II, have thus been grand coalitions comprising parties stretching across the political spectrum.
Political parties work in parliamentary groups which usually vote with non-absolute party discipline.
Parties are composed of local chapters based in municipalities. In municipalities, which are fundamental administrative units in the country, parties hold seats in the municipal councils, but often have to compete for them with local non-party groups.
Finnish law states that a political association which fulfills certain conditions is eligible to become a political party free of charge. Among these conditions are:
- that the primary purpose of the association is to affect governmental affairs,
- that it has received at least 5,000 votes in any parliamentary, municipal, county, or European Parliament election,
- that the association's rules secure the following of democratic principles in its decision making and activities,
- and that it has a general program based on these rules which expresses the association's principles and goals regarding its actions in governmental affairs.
Extra-parliamentary parties
Registered
Those parties that have received neither a seat in the Parliament of Finland nor in the European Parliament, but which are registered political parties, are listed below.De-registered
The parties listed below have previously held the status of a registered party, but have been de-registered.Historical parties
Extra-parliamentary historical parties
- 1870–1906
- 1880–1885
- 1904–1908
- National Workers' Party 1917–?
- 1917–1919
- 1924–1933
- 1927–1929
- United Front 193?–1940
- New Finnish Party 1932–1945
- Finnish Socialist Party 1932–1937
- Patriotic People's Party 1932–1933
- Finnish People's Organisation 1933–1936
- Finnish-Socialist Workers' Party 1934–1944
- Finnish Labor Front 1936–1939
- Party of Finnish National Work 1939–?
- Finnish National Socialist Labor Organisation 1940–1943
- Neo-Socialist Party 1940–1945
- Organisation of National Socialists 1940–1944
- National Socialists of Finland 1941–1944
- Radical People's Party 1944–1951
- 1949–1951
- Finnish People's Party 1950s
- 1960s
- 1972–1979
- Socialist Workers' Party 1973–1990
- 1985–1999
- 1987–2007
- 1990–2014
- 1990–1995
- 1991–1995
- Finnish People's Blue-Whites 1993–2010
- Finland – Fatherland 1993–2007
- Natural Law Party 1994–2001
- Workers' Party of Finland 1999–2018
- Forces for Change in Finland 2002–2007
- For the Poor 2002–2015
- Blue and White Front 2009–2015
- Citizens' Party 2016–2022
- Finnish Reform Movement 2017–2023
- Seven Star Movement 2017–2024
- Finnish People First 2018–2023