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Social Democratic Union of Macedonia

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Political party in North Macedonia
Social Democratic Union of Macedonia
Социјалдемократски сојуз на Македонија
Lidhja Socialdemokrate e Maqedonisë
AbbreviationSDSM (Macedonian)
LSDM (Albanian)
LeaderVenko Filipče
Secretary-GeneralAleksandar Sasa Dimitrijevikj
Deputy LeaderFani Karanfilovska Panovska
Founded20 April 1991 (1991-04-20)
Preceded byLCM
HeadquartersBihaḱka 8,Skopje
Youth wingSocial Democratic Youth of Macedonia
IdeologySocial democracy
Pro-Europeanism
Political positionCentre-left
National affiliationFor a European Future
European affiliationParty of European Socialists (associate)
International affiliationProgressive Alliance
Colours
  •   Red
  •   White
Assembly
15 / 120
Mayors
18 / 80
Local councils
396 / 1,333
Skopje city council
12 / 45
Party flag
Website
sdsm.org.mk

TheSocial Democratic Union of Macedonia (Macedonian:Социјалдемократски сојуз на МакедонијаСДСМ,Socijaldemokratski sojuz na MakedonijaSDSM,Albanian:Lidhja socialdemokrate e MaqedonisëLSDM) is asocial democratic[1]political party, and the maincentre-left[2] party inNorth Macedonia. The party is pro-European.[3]

The Social Democratic Union of Macedonia was founded on 20 April 1991 at the 11th Congress of theLeague of Communists of Macedonia, when it was transformed into the SDSM. The Social Democratic Union of Macedonia is a member of theProgressive Alliance and an associate affiliate of theParty of European Socialists (PES). The party supported a practical solution to theMacedonia naming dispute withGreece, which succeeded under thePrespa Agreement.

History

[edit]

The Social Democratic Union of Macedonia was established on 20 April 1991. Its roots can be traced to 1943 upon the formation of the Communist Party of Macedonia (CPM) during World War II in theDemocratic Federal Yugoslavia. The CPM became theLeague of Communists of Macedonia (LCM) in 1952 and was the ruling party of theSocialist Republic of Macedonia.Branko Crvenkovski was elected as the president and Nikola Popovski was elected as the vice president of the party. It retained the resources and the organisation of its predecessor.[4][5] Unlike its rival VMRO-DPMNE, the party has traditionally had support from the urban middle-classes, the former Yugoslav managerial elite and the formernomenklatura.[6]

It formed the first political government in 1992.[7] SDSM experienced its first major split whenPetar Gošev established theDemocratic Party in 1993.[6] In 1994, SDSM created theAlliance of Macedonia, together with the Socialist Party and the Liberal Party.[8] The party formed a coalition government with the ethnic AlbanianParty for Democratic Prosperity.[9] The party's president Crvenkovski served as the prime minister of Macedonia from 1992 to 1998.[10] During 1997 and the first half of 1998, Crvenkovski and his governing centre-left coalition were criticised by the public due to the high unemployment rates (42 per cent in 1997 and 41 per cent in 1998), rampant corruption, insider privatization, dysfunctionally high levels of taxation, failure to attract foreign investment, and the slow pace of reforms aimed at giving ethnic Albanians, Turks, and Roma people equal status with ethnic Macedonians.[11][12] The party lost the1998 elections.

In 2001, SDSM was part of the short-lived government of national unity during the2001 insurgency in Macedonia, which also consisted of VMRO-DPMNE, Party for Democratic Prosperity andDemocratic Party of Albanians.[13][14] After the2002 Macedonian parliamentary election, the party became the biggest party, winning 60 out of 120 seats in theAssembly of Macedonia as the largest party of the Together for Macedonia alliance, which it co-led with theLiberal Democratic Party.[4] Together for Macedonia ruled in coalition with theDemocratic Union for Integration.

SDSM defines itself as a social democratic party.[8] It was a member of theSocialist International, while it is currently a member of theProgressive Alliance and an associate affiliate of theParty of European Socialists (PES). Crvenkovski won the2004 presidential elections, becoming thePresident of Macedonia, a post that he held until May 2009.Vlado Bučkovski became the party's president, serving as party leader and Prime Minister until 2006.[11] On 30 November 2005, a prominent member of SDSM,Tito Petkovski, who ran for president in 1999 and came in second place, left the party to form theNew Social Democratic Party. This resulted in the second major split of the party.[6] The party was defeated in the2006 parliamentary elections, with the main reasons being the high rate of unemployment, corruption scandals, and concessions in favour of the Albanians taken to implement theOhrid Framework Agreement.[8]

After 2006, SDSM was led byRadmila Šekerinska.[6] In the2008 parliamentary elections, the coalitionSun – Coalition for Europe (of which SDSM was the leading party) was defeated, receiving 27 of the 120 seats. In the 2009 local elections, the Social Democrats won in 8 out of 84municipalities in the country.[15] After the electoral defeat, Šekerinska resigned and was succeeded by a mayor ofStrumica,Zoran Zaev.[8] In May 2009, after finishing the 5-year-term as President of Macedonia, Crvenkovski returned to the SDSM and was re-elected as leader of the party. He reorganised the party profoundly,[16][further explanation needed] but resigned after the party's defeat in the2013 local elections. In June 2013, Zaev was elected as the leader.[7]

The party was defeated in the2014 general elections by theVMRO-DPMNE, but the results were not recognised and the opposition parties boycotted the Parliament. From February to May 2015, Zaev released wiretapped material that incriminated Prime MinisterNikola Gruevski for illegally spying on more than 20,000 citizens. In May,large protests including SDSM members began in Skopje. Large crowds gathered to protest on May 17, demanding resignation from Gruevski, who refused to step down and organized a pro-government rally the following day. The number of protesters was estimated to be more than 40,000. Zaev claimed the number of protesters reached 100,000, and said that some of them will remain there until Gruevski resigns. European Union diplomats offered to mediate a solution to the crisis. The political crisis was resolved with thePržino Agreement in July 2015, which obliged a resignation from Gruevski, participation of SDSM in the ministries, and early parliament elections.[17] In the elections on 11 December 2016, the party won almost 440,000 votes and 49 MPs which was the second-best result in SDSM's history, after the result from 2002. In April 2017, SDSM formed a coalition with the Albanian parties (Democratic Union for Integration, Besa, and Alliance for Albanians) and in the next month, it formed a government. The party won 57 municipalities in the local elections in October.[18] During the government's rule, North Macedonia joinedNATO and agreements with Bulgaria and Greece were also signed, with the latter resolving theMacedonia naming dispute.[19]

Before the 2020 parliamentary elections, the party rebranded, changing its logo to be similar to other European social democratic parties, and changing its primary colour to red. In the elections, it campaigned for continuing to pursue membership in the EU. It created a government in August after winning 46 seats.[14] After its defeat in the 2021 local elections in North Macedonia when it lost 57 municipalities,[18] Zaev stepped down as the party's president.[20] On 12 December 2021, the party's internal leadership elections were held and the former deputy Finance Minister, Dimitar Kovačevski, was elected as the party's president and he became the prime minister in January 2022.[21][14] In the2024 parliamentary election, the party had its worst result, winning only 18 seats in the Assembly. It resulted in the resignation of the party's leadership.[22] On 30 June, the former health minister of North Macedonia,Venko Filipče, became the party's president.[23]

Party leaders

[edit]
The old logo of SDSM
Old party flag

Election results

[edit]

Presidential elections

[edit]
ElectionParty candidateVotes%Votes%Result
First RoundSecond Round
1994Kiro Gligorov715,08778.4%--ElectedGreen tickY
1999Tito Petkovski343,60633.1%513,61446.8%LostRed XN
2004Branko Crvenkovski385,34742.5%550,31762.6%ElectedGreen tickY
2009Ljubomir Frčkoski202,69120.54%264,82836.86%LostRed XN
2014Stevo Pendarovski326,16438.56%398,07742.67%LostRed XN
2019322,58144.75%436,21253.59%ElectedGreen tickY
2024180,49920.49%251,89930.99%LostRed XN

Assembly elections

[edit]
ElectionParty leaderIn coalition withVotes%Seats+/–PositionGovernment
(Coalition totals)(Coalition totals)
1990Petar GoshevNone220,74827.70%
31 / 120
Increase 31Increase 2ndGovernment
1994Branko CrvenkovskiLPM-SPM329,70053.50%
95 / 120
Increase 64Increase 1stGovernment
1998None279,79925.14%
30 / 120
Decrease 60Decrease 2ndOpposition
2002LDP-DPT-DLB-USR-DPD494,74441.58%
60 / 120
Increase 33Increase 1stGovernment
2006Vlado BučkovskiLDP-DPT-DLB-USR-DPD218,16423.31%
32 / 120
Decrease 30Decrease 2ndOpposition
2008Radmila ŠekerinskaNSDP-LDP-LPM233,28423.64%
27 / 120
Decrease 5Steady 2ndOpposition
2011Branko CrvenkovskiNSDP-NSDP-SEB-LPM-SPS-PPER-UTLS-SSD368,49632.78%
42 / 120
Increase 15Steady 2ndOpposition
2014Zoran ZaevNSDP-LDP-UM-SPER283,95526.22%
34 / 120
Decrease 8Steady 2ndOpposition
2016NSDP-LDP-DOM-SPER436,98137.87%
49 / 120
Increase 15Steady 2ndGovernment
2020"We Can"
BESA-NSDP-LDP-VMRO–NP-DOM-DS-TDP-THP-POPGM
327,40835.89%
46 / 120
Decrease 3Increase 1stGovernment
2024Dimitar Kovačevski"For a European Future"
NSDP-LDP-VMRO–NP-DOM-POPGM
153,25015.36%
18 / 120
Decrease 28Decrease 2ndOpposition

References

[edit]
  1. ^Nordsieck, Wolfram (2020)."North Macedonia".Parties and Elections in Europe. Retrieved16 July 2020.
  2. ^Gardner, Andrew (23 May 2014)."Convincing election win for prime minister of Macedonia".POLITICO Europe.
  3. ^"North Macedonia's Pro-EU Social Democrats Win Elections, Face Complex Coalition Talks".Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty. 2020-07-17. Retrieved2024-03-24.
  4. ^abSteven Levitsky; Lucan Way (2014).Competitive Authoritarianism: Hybrid Regimes After the Cold War. Cambridge University Press. pp. 125, 127.ISBN 9780511902260.
  5. ^Janusz Bugajski (2002).Political Parties of Eastern Europe: A Guide to Politics in the Post-Communist Era. M.E. Sharpe. pp. 739–.ISBN 978-1-56324-676-0. Retrieved6 February 2013.
  6. ^abcdDimitar Bechev (2019).Historical Dictionary of North Macedonia (2nd ed.). Rowman & Littlefield. p. 277.ISBN 9781538119624.
  7. ^abGianluca Passarelli, ed. (2018).The Presidentialisation of Political Parties in the Western Balkans. Springer. pp. 103, 110.ISBN 9783319973524.
  8. ^abcdVera Stojarová; Peter Emerson, eds. (2013).Party Politics in the Western Balkans. Routledge. pp. 35,171–173.ISBN 9781135235857.
  9. ^Jane K. Cowan, ed. (2000).Macedonia: The Politics of Identity and Difference. Pluto Press. p. 133.ISBN 9780745315898.
  10. ^Jenny Engström (2009).Democratisation and the Prevention of Violent Conflict: Lessons Learned from Bulgaria and Macedonia. Ashgate Publishing. p. 119.ISBN 9780754674344.
  11. ^abRobert Bideleux; Ian Jeffries (2007).The Balkans: A Post-Communist History. Routledge. pp. 418,452–453, 457.ISBN 9781134583287.
  12. ^Regime Change in the Yugoslav Successor States: Divergent Paths toward a New Europe. Mieczysław P. Boduszyński. 2010. pp. 167–168.ISBN 9780801899195.
  13. ^Cvete Koneska (2014).After Ethnic Conflict: Policy-making in Post-conflict Bosnia and Herzegovina and Macedonia. Ashgate Publishing. pp. 101, 103.ISBN 9781472419811.
  14. ^abcPeter Lamb (2024).Historical Dictionary of Socialism (4th ed.). Rowman & Littlefield. pp. 501–503.ISBN 9781538159194.
  15. ^Vecer newspaperArchived 2011-09-28 at theWayback Machine
  16. ^"Makfax Independent News Agency". Archived fromthe original on 2020-07-24. Retrieved2009-06-09.
  17. ^Robert Hudson; Ivan Dodovski, eds. (2023).Macedonia's Long Transition: From Independence to the Prespa Agreement and Beyond. Springer Nature. pp. 32–34.ISBN 9783031207730.
  18. ^abDimitri A. Sotiropoulos (2023).The Irregular Pendulum of Democracy: Populism, Clientelism and Corruption in Post-Yugoslav Successor States. Springer Nature. pp. 16, 334, 321, 328.ISBN 9783031256097.
  19. ^Łukasz Kobeszko (15 May 2024)."North Macedonia: the right returns to power".Centre for Eastern Studies.
  20. ^"North Macedonia's prime minister resigns over disappointing local election results".Euronews. November 2021. Retrieved13 December 2021.
  21. ^"North Macedonia Ruling Party Elects Dimitar Kovacevski as Leader".Balkan Insight. 13 December 2021. Retrieved13 December 2021.
  22. ^"North Macedonia's Embattled Social Democrats Plot Long Road to Recovery".Balkan Insight. 13 June 2024.
  23. ^"Venko Filipce is the new president of SDSM".Sloboden Pecat. 1 July 2024.

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