Christian Democratic National Peasants' Party


The Christian Democratic National Peasants' Party is an agrarian and Christian democratic political party in Romania. It claims to be the rightful successor of the interwar National Peasants' Party, created from the merger of the Romanian National Party from the then Austro-Hungarian-ruled Transylvania and the Peasants' Party from the Romanian Old Kingdom.
PNȚCD was the largest and most important political party of the Romanian Democratic Convention during the 1990s and was led by Corneliu Coposu and Ion Diaconescu, two former political prisoners during communism, but as the 2000s began it gradually fell out of grace amongst centre-right Romanian voters and slowly became an inactive microparty. The party was subsequently excluded from the European People's Party in June 2017. Eventually, it joined the European Christian Political Party in February 2020.
Given a tremendous disdain and resentment towards Pavelescu's leadership, another Christian peasant group known as the National Peasant Alliance seceded from the main PNȚCD in 2019 and centered around leader Radu Ghidău for the 2020 Romanian local elections.

History

1989–1992

The Christian Democratic National Peasants' Party was -founded by Corneliu Coposu, Ioan Alexandru, and Ion Rațiu in December 1989, being thus the first officially registered political party after the fall of communism. The party competed in the 1990 elections, where it ranked 4th with 2.5% and endorsed Ion Rațiu for president. The PNȚCD presidential candidate ranked 3rd, with 4.3%.
Given the political dominance of the National Salvation Front that was exerted prior and after the first free elections in post-1989 Romania, the PNȚCD decided to form a consistent alliance of centre-right parties aiming mainly to oppose it.
As a result, in 1991, most notably alongside the National Liberal Party, the PNȚCD formed the Romanian Democratic Convention.
Eventually, the PNȚCD would affirm itself as the most dominant internal political force for much of the convention's existence. For the period 1990–1992, PNȚCD was one of the main opposition parties.

1992–1996

At the 1992 elections, the party ran on a common CDR list and endorsed the candidacy of Emil Constantinescu as President of Romania. Consequently, the CDR ranked 2nd, having scored 20.16%, while Emil Constantinescu managed to qualify in the second round of the presidential election where he finished second with 38.57%. For the period 1992–1996, the party was the main opposition force in the Parliament of Romania.

1996–2000

At the 1996 elections, CDR managed to rank 1st, with 30.70%, and once again endorsed Emil Constantinescu, who also managed to win the presidency with 54.41%. For the period 1996–2000, PNȚCD was the most important governing party within the CDR, being also part of a grand coalition which included the Democratic Party and the Democratic Alliance of Hungarians in Romania.
At the 2000 elections, PNȚCD ran on a common CDR 2000 list and scored 5.30%, being unable to pass the electoral threshold required for an alliance. This weak electoral result was primarily owed to the fragmentation of the alliance and the scission of the Romanian right into several other parties as well as to the tumultuous previous governing term. For the period 2000–2004, PNȚCD was in extra-parliamentary opposition.

2004–2008

At the 2004 elections, PNȚCD ran independently, having obtained 1.9%, failing this time as well to surpass the needed electoral threshold. The party endorsed the presidential candidacy of Gheorghe Ciuhandu, former mayor of Timișoara. Ciuhandu eventually ranked 5th in the first round, with 1.9%.
In March 2005, PNȚCD voted to change its name to the Christian Democratic People's Party after the unification with the Union for Romanian Reconstruction. Eventually, it returned to its original name. The party did not compete in the 2008 legislative elections.
Afterwards, the party was split between a wing sustained by Marian Petre Miluț endorsing Aurelian Pavelescu as president and one endorsing former Prime Minister and Bucharest mayor Victor Ciorbea as president.

2011–present

Victor Ciorbea was elected on 18 June 2011 president of the party. In September 2011, the Bucharest Courthouse recognised Victor Ciorbea as party president. Nonetheless, the split continued until Ciorbea left the party in order to become a senator on PNL's lists. Pavelescu was subsequently recognised as president and the fractions were dissolved.
For the 2012 legislative elections, PNȚCD ran on a common Right Romania Alliance, along with the Democratic Liberal Party, and the Civic Force. The party won one senator seat and one deputy seat. On 23 April 2013, Pavelescu was elected president of the party.
At the 2014 European Parliament election, the party gained only 0.89% of the cast votes, with candidates like former EP member Sebastian Bodu and the current party president, Aurelian Pavelescu, opening the list.
Following the 2019 European Parliament election and thanks to an agreement between the party and the Social Democratic Party, the party has 1 MEP, more specifically Cristian Terheș.
For the 2019 Romanian presidential election, the party did not compete but endorsed PSD candidate Viorica Dăncilă. Furthermore, the party did not compete for the 2020 Romanian legislative election but it did compete for the 2020 Romanian local elections, where it won 1 mayor and 42 local councillors.

Motto

Its motto as of 2006 was Fiecare contează. At the 2014 EU elections, PNȚCD's motto was Renaștem pentru România ta!.

Ideology

The PNȚCD is an agrarian, Christian democratic, and Christian humanist political party that stands for "social justice, Christian morality and enlightened patriotism." The party is anti-communist and advocates for de-Sovietization within Romania. It endorses the Universal Declaration of Human Rights in conjunction with the Romanian constitution and seeks to protect the cultural and traditional rights of all Romanian people. It also advocates for equal opportunities for all Romanians, uphold rule of law, defends the right to private property ownership, and calls for economic reform to stimulate the Romanian economy.
Internationally, the party is a member of Centrist Democrat International along with other Christian democratic and conservative movements and was affiliated with the European People's Party in the European Parliament before joining the European Conservatives and Reformists group.

Electoral history

Legislative elections

Notes:
1 CDR members in 1992: PNȚCD, PAC, PNL-AT, PSDR, PNL-CD, and PER.


2 CDR members in 1996: PNȚCD, PNL, PNL-CD, PAR, PER, and Ecologist Federation of Romania.


3 CDR 2000 members: PNȚCD, UFD, Ecologist Federation of Romania, National Christian Democratic Alliance, and The Moldavians' Party.


4 PNȚCD competed on PNL lists.


5 Right Romania Alliance members: PDL, FC, and PNȚCD.

Presidential elections

Notes:
1 Emil Constantinescu was the common centre-right candidate who was endorsed by the PNȚCD in both 1992 and 1996 as part of the larger Romanian Democratic Convention.


2 Mugur Isărescu was endorsed by the PNȚCD at the 2000 elections as part of the Romanian Democratic Convention 2000 alliance.


3 PDL candidate endorsed by PNȚCD due to a decision enforced by the then official fraction of the PNȚCD led by Marian Petre Miluț.


4 Elena Udrea was endorsed by the People's Movement Party -PNȚCD alliance at the 2014 Romanian presidential election.


5 PSD candidate endorsed by PNȚCD.
6
7

European elections

Notes:
1 Electoral protocol endorsing the Social Democratic Party.

Presidents of the party

Name
Born – Died
PortraitTerm startTerm endDuration
1Corneliu Coposu
19901995 5 years
2Ion Diaconescu
19952001 6 years


(1954–
20012001less than 1 year
3Andrei Marga
(1946–
20022002less than 1 year
4Victor Ciorbea
(1954–
20022004 2 years
5Gheorghe Ciuhandu
(1947–
20042007 3 years
6Marian Petre Miluț
(1955–
20072011 4 years
7Aurelian Pavelescu
(1964–
2011Incumbent 11 years

Notable members