Progressive Surinamese People's Party
Progressive Surinamese People's Party Progressieve Surinaamse Volkspartij | |
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Founder | Jozef Weidmann, Coen Ooft |
Founded | August, 1946 |
Dissolved | August, 2015 |
Ideology | Christian democracy |
The Progressive Surinamese People's Party (Template:Lang-nl, PSV) was a political party in Suriname. The party was a member of the Christian Democrat Organization of America.
The party was founded in August 1946[1] by, among others, Father Jozef Weidmann and Coen Ooft.
In 1948, party member Julius Caesar de Miranda, on behalf of the PSV, went to the First Round Table Conference in the Netherlands, where he pleaded for universal suffrage for men and women. One of the results of this conference was that the census and capacity selection right for men was replaced by an universal suffrage for men and women.
At the 1973 elections, the PSV belonged to the coalition National Party Combination (NPK), led by Henck Arron, who obtained 22 of the 39 seats. The PSV received two ministerial posts in the Arron cabinet.
In 1977, the NPK once again won 22 of the 39 seats in a slightly changed composition, with another two PSV ministers in the cabinet. As a result of the military coup in 1980 led by sergeant Dési Bouterse, this government came to an end prematurely.
After the restoration of democracy, the PSV no longer played a major role in Surinamese politics.