This is a list of agrarian parties, that is, parties which explicitly rely on farmers as their main constituency and/or adhere to some form of agrarianism.
For a list of parties called Agrarian Party, Farmers' Party or Peasants' Party see Agrarian Party (disambiguation), Farmers' Party (disambiguation) and Peasants' Party (disambiguation), respectively. For a list of Nordic Agrarian parties see Nordic agrarian parties.
Active parties
Americas
Europe
- Åland: Centre[1]
- Albania: Agrarian Party, Environmentalist Agrarian Party
- Belarus: Agrarian Party
- Bosnia and Herzegovina: Croatian Peasant Party of Bosnia and Herzegovina
- Bulgaria: People's Union, Agrarian National Union, Bulgarian Agrarian People's Union "Aleksandar Stamboliyski", Bulgarian Agrarian People's Union–United
- Croatia: Peasant Party, Democratic Peasants' Party
- Czech Republic: Agrarian Democratic Party
- Denmark: Venstre – Liberal Party[1][2][3]
- Faroe Islands: Union Party[1]
- Estonia: Estonian Agrarian Centre Party,[1] People's Union
- Finland: Centre Party,[1][2][3] True Finns (in government)
- France: National Centre of Independents and Peasants, Hunting, Fishing, Nature, Tradition
- Greenland: Feeling of Community[1]
- Hungary: Independent Smallholders, Agrarian Workers and Civic Party
- Iceland: Progressive Party,[1][2] Centre Party
- Italy: South Tyrolean People's Party
- Latvia: Farmers' Union (in government)[1]
- Lithuania: Lithuanian Centre Party, Farmers and Greens Union (in government)
- Moldova: Agrarian Party
- Montenegro: Popular Movement
- Netherlands: Farmer–Citizen Movement
- North Macedonia: Party for a European Future
- Norway: Centre Party[1][2]
- Poland: People's Party,[1] Self-Defense, AGROunia, Piast Faction
- Portugal: People's Monarchist Party[4]
- Romania: Christian Democratic National Peasants' Party, Democratic Union of Hungarians in Romania
- Serbia: United Peasant Party and People's Peasant Party
- Slovakia: Party of the Hungarian Coalition
- Slovenia: People's Party
- Sweden: Centre Party[1][2][3]
- Switzerland: Swiss People's Party[2]
- Ukraine: People's Party, Agrarian Party, Radical Party
Asia
Africa
Oceania
Former parties
Americas
- Argentina: National Autonomist Party
- Canada: United Farmers (specifically: United Farmers of Alberta, United Farmers of Ontario), Progressive Party (specifically: Progressive Party of Manitoba), Co-operative Commonwealth Federation
- Chile: Agrarian Labor Party
- Peru: Agrarian National Party
- United States: Democratic-Republican Party, Greenback Party, Populist Party, Farmer-Labor Party (specifically: Minnesota Farmer-Labor Party)
Europe
- Czechoslovakia: Republican Party of Farmers and Peasants
- Denmark: Farmers' Party (Denmark)
- Finland: Finnish Rural Party[5]
- Germany: Agricultural League, Bavarian Peasants' League, Christian-National Peasants' and Farmers' Party, German Farmers' Party, Schleswig-Holsteinische Bauern- und Landarbeiterdemokratie
- Greece: Agrarian Party of Greece, Peasants and Workers Party
- Ireland: Land League, Farmers' Party, Clann na Talmhan
- Italy: Peasants' Party of Italy
- Liechtenstein: Workers' and Peasants' Party
- Lithuania: Liberal and Centre Union[1]
- Moldova: Bessarabian Peasants' Party
- Netherlands: Farmers' Party, Peasants' League
- Romania: Peasants' Party, National Peasants' Party, Agrarian Democratic Party, National Agrarian Party
- Poland: Polish People's Party "Piast", Polish Peasant Bloc, Polish People's Party "Wyzwolenie", Stronnictwo Chłopskie
- Russia: Agrarian Party
- Serbia: Peasants Party of Serbia
- Spain: Agrarian Party
- United Kingdom: Agricultural Party
- Ukraine: People's Bloc, Peasant Democratic Party
- Yugoslavia: Agrarian Party
Asia
Africa
Oceania
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 This is a Nordic agrarian party.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 Svante Ersson; Jan-Erik Lane (28 December 1998). Politics and Society in Western Europe. SAGE. p. 108. ISBN 978-0-7619-5862-8. Retrieved 17 August 2012.
- 1 2 3 T. Banchoff (28 June 1999). Legitimacy and the European Union. Taylor & Francis. pp. 123–. ISBN 978-0-415-18188-4. Retrieved 26 August 2012.
- ↑ "Partido Popular Monárquico | EUROPEIAS 2014". Partido Popular Monárquico. Archived from the original on 2 October 2012. Retrieved 31 December 2014.
- ↑ Cazes, Marie (2019-12-21). "Populismin evoluutio Suomessa". Politiikasta (in Finnish). Retrieved 2021-05-18.
See also
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