Finance:Bourgeois party

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Short description: German political party description

Template:Conservatism in Germany "Bourgeois party" (German: bürgerliche Partei) or "bourgeois camp" (German: bürgerliche Lager) is a political term used in Europe, which can refer to a conservative or right-leaning liberal party, and is in contrast to the socialistic "left-wing camp" (German: linken Lager). The term is mainly used when the main left-leaning forces are social democrats and socialists, and the main right-leaning forces against them are liberals and conservatives; it is rarely used when the main left-leaning forces include liberals. In the political landscape of the Germanic language region, traditional bourgeois parties are as follows:

  •  Germany: Christian Democratic Union of Germany, Christian Social Union in Bavaria, Free Democratic Party
  •  Austria: Austrian People's Party, NEOS – The New Austria and Liberal Forum
  •  Switzerland: FDP.The Liberals, Swiss People's Party, The Centre

Parties that adopted term in their name include:

  •  Switzerland: Bourgeois Party of Switzerland (German: Bürgerlich-Demokratische Partei Schweiz)
  •  Austria: Bourgeois Democrats (German: Bürgerliche Demokraten)
  •  Denmark: New Bourgeois (Danish: Nye Borgerlige), Bourgeois Alternative (Danish: Borgerligt Alternativ), Bourgeois Centre (Danish: Borgerligt Centrum)

In Germany

In the German-speaking media, conservative and right-liberal as well as liberal-conservative parties abroad are often referred to as "bourgeois parties" (bürgerliche Parteien).[1][2][3] In the mid-1980s, Heiner Geißler, then secretary-general of the CDU, introduced the camp theory to the West Germany. Within the newly formed four-party system, Geißler described the center-right parties CDU/CSU, and FDP as the bourgeois camp, and the SPD and Greens as the "left-wing camp". In Germany, the opposite expression of "left-wing camp" is preferred as "bourgeois party" rather than "right-wing camp" in order to exclude far-right politics from the mainstream right-leaning forces.[4][5] The Alternative for Germany (AfD), a far-right political party founded in 2013, calls itself a "bourgeois [party]", which is criticized and generally unacceptable.[6][7]

See also

  • Bürgerblock-Regierung
  • Centre-right politics
  • Conservatism in Germany
  • Liberalism in Germany
  • List of major liberal parties considered right

References