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  1. National Party years Belgium: Party for Freedom and Progress: 1979–1992 Liberal Reformist Party: 1979–2002 Flemish Liberals and Democrats: 1992–2004 Democratic Front of the Francophones: 1994–1999 Reformist Movement: 2002–2004 France: Union for French Democracy: 1979–1994 National Centre of Independents and Peasants: 1989–1992 Germany

  2. The Liberal Reformist Party ( Spanish: Partido Reformista Liberal or PRL ), formerly Liberal Party of the Dominican Republic ( Spanish: Partido Liberal de la República Dominicana or PLRD) is a liberal political party in the Dominican Republic. The party was originally named La Estructura, [1] the name under which it contested the 1986 general ...

  3. The Liberal Reformist Party ( Romanian: Partidul Liberal Reformator, PLR) was a minor, self-described centre-right and liberal political party in Romania, founded on 3 July 2014 by former PNL president Călin Popescu-Tăriceanu. [1] [2] In February 2014 the National Liberal Party (PNL) split from the Social Liberal Union (USL) alliance with the ...

  4. Liberal Reformist Party (Belgium) Liberal Reformist Party (Puerto Rico) Newfoundland Reform Liberal Party; Reform Party (19th-century Wisconsin) See also. List of liberal parties ; This page was last edited on 12 February 2023, at 05:16 ( ...

  5. Liberal Reformist Party (Belgium) M. Reformist Movement; P. Partei für Freiheit und Fortschritt ; Party for Freedom and Progress; Progressive Party (Belgium) V. Vivant; This page was last edited on 22 March 2018, at 18:18 (UTC). Text is ...

  6. The Liberal Party was established on 5 October 1990 as the Union of Reform Forces in Macedonia (Сојуз на реформски сили, Sojuz na reformski sili, SRS). Although it shared its name with the Union of Reform Forces operating in other parts of Yugoslavia and headed by Prime Minister Ante Marković, it was not directly linked to ...

  7. Party chairman Bart Somers called in November 2006 for a "revolution" within the party, saying that "a liberal party", like the VLD, "can be only progressive and social". [12] From 2000 to 2004, during the second period of its participation in the Belgian federal government and under Belgian Prime Minister Guy Verhofstadt, the VLD allegedly lost most of its ideological appeal.