Red-green Alliance

In democratic politics, a Red-Green alliance is an alliance of socialist (or social democratic) and decentralist-ecologist (or, to chose a shorter word, green) parties. The alliance is often based on a shared suspicion of corporate capitalist institutions which the socialists (red) believe promote economic and social inequality and the ecologists (green) believe are exploitative of the environment. In "First Past the Post" democracies, it is usually an agreement to retain separate means of defining policy, but commit to a common primary process which is "Red Green colorblind" and thus gives candidates from any party, committed to "Red" or "Green" political theory, an equal chance to be s/elected by progressives. In proportional representation or approval/preference voting democracies, this primary process is replaced by the official electoral process, and the elected candidates from "Red" and "Green" background agree to co-operate in the forming or criticizing of governments. Countries in which red-green alliances have taken place include Germany, Belgium, Italy, France, and Finland, where government coalitions were formed between socialist or social democratic parties and green parties. There are other examples similar to red-green alliances, namely Portugal, where the Greens ran a joint ticket with the Communists, and the Netherlands, where the larger green party, GroenLinks, was formed in a merger of four smaller parties, including green and communist parties. See also:

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
1040s bc
1030s bc
1020s bc
1010s bc
1170s bc
1180s bc
1190s bc
1200s bc
1210s bc
1000s bc
1220s bc
tether propulsion
marine engineering
welding
who's afraid of virginia woolf?
pope sixtus v
robert schumann
franz schubert
aeolian islands
moses mendelssohn
united arab republic
espoo
kauniainen
tango
vowel harmony
astor piazzolla
asthma
syllable
list of national parks of tanzania
national parks of india
pliny the elder
selinunte
private eye
mahogany
dannii minogue
neem
carlo rubbia
pavia
billboard magazine
world heritage site
dogma
reggio calabria
campania
'ndrangheta