Yahoo Suche Web Suche

Suchergebnisse

  1. Suchergebnisse:
  1. The Portuguese Communist Party ( Portuguese: Partido Comunista Português, pronounced [pɐɾˈtiðu kumuˈniʃtɐ puɾtuˈɣeʃ], PCP) is a communist, [11] Marxist–Leninist [11] [12] political party in Portugal based upon democratic centralism. The party also considers itself patriotic and internationalist, [13] and it is characterized as ...

  2. www.socialistparty.org.uk. Die Socialist Party (deutsch „Sozialistische Partei“) ist eine marxistische und trotzkistische politische Partei in England und Wales. Sie ist Nachfolger der 1964 in der Labour Party gegründeten Militant Tendency. Neben der Wochenzeitung The Socialist veröffentlicht sie das monatliche Magazin Socialism Today.

  3. Alma mater. University of Coimbra. Maria de Belém Roseira Martins Coelho Henriques de Pina GCC (born 28 July 1949) is a Portuguese politician who served as Minister of Health from 1995 to 1999, Minister for Equality from 1999 to 2000, and President of the Socialist Party from 2011 to 2014. [1] She is informally known as Maria de Belém .

  4. Socialist Party (France) The Socialist Party ( French: Parti socialiste [paʁti sɔsjalist], PS) is a French centre-left [3] [4] [5] and social-democratic political party. [6] It holds pro-European views. [7] The PS was for decades the largest party of the "French Left" and used to be one of the two major political parties in the French Fifth ...

  5. Elections. The Portuguese Republican Party ( Portuguese: Partido Republicano Português, pronounced [pɐɾˈtiðu ʁɛpuβliˈkɐnu puɾtuˈɣeʃ]) was a Portuguese political party formed during the late years of the constitutional monarchy that proposed and later brought about the replacement of the monarchy with the Portuguese First Republic. [1]

  6. Elections. Workers Party of Socialist Unity ( Portuguese: Partido Operário de Unidade Socialista, pronounced [pɐɾˈtiðwɔpɨˈɾaɾju ðɨ uniˈðaðɨ susjɐˈliʃtɐ], POUS) is a small Trotskyist former political party in Portugal, founded by Aires Rodrigues and Carmelinda Pereira in 1979 after a split from the Portuguese Socialist Party. [1]

  7. Socialist Party: January 1979 March 1980 3. Joop den Uyl Netherlands Labour Party: March 1980 May 1987 4. Vítor Constâncio Portugal Socialist Party: May 1987 January 1989 5. Guy Spitaels Belgium Socialist Party: February 1989 May 1992 6. Willy Claes Belgium Socialist Party: November 1992 October 1994 7. Rudolf Scharping Germany