Green–Left Coalition – Wikipedia

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Political coalition in Croatia

The Green–Left Coalition (Croatian: Zeleno–lijeva koalicija) is a left-wing political alliance in Croatia represented by six MPs. It is composed of the We can! – political platform, New Left, Sustainable Development of Croatia, as well some City of Zagreb localist political parties and platforms, such as Zagreb is OURS!, and For the City (Za grad) movements. It promotes democratic socialism, green politics, and progressivism on social issues.

History[edit]

The coalition was formed in 2017 for the Zagreb local elections as the Left Bloc (Croatian: Lijevi blok), where it won 4 out of 51 seats in the Zagreb local Assembly, and profiling itself as the most vocal opposition to mayor Milan Bandić and his local majority coalition with right-wing political subjects.[1][2]

For the 2019 European Parliament election[3][4] and upcoming July 2020 national parliamentary election in Croatia, members of the political alliance continue to collaborate. For the 2020 parliamentary election, the coalition changed its name into the current one. In the upcoming elections the coalition began rising in the polls from the start of campaign and receiving media coverage on daily basis. In June 2020 independent MP Bojan Glavašević joined the We can! – political platform and the coalition parliamentary election list.[5]

Front-men of punk-rock Hladno Pivo, one of the most popular rock bands in country Mile Kekin and his wife Ivana (clinical psychologist) also joined the party list as socialists who were concerned with a lack of social policies in the established center-left SDP.[6] Kekin also authored the song that was used for the coalition promotions titled “Happy People”.[7] Prominent theater maker and performer Mario Kovač also joined as the lead candidate of the list for diaspora (again through a performance action). The coalition’s participation in the elections was also supported by a number of public figures, including musicians Damir Urban, Ljiljana Nikolovska and Davor Tolja,[8] journalists Vedrana Rudan, Tomislav Jakić and Viktor Ivančić, multimedia artist Slaven Tolj, as well Bosnian conceptual artist and left-wing activist Damir Nikšić. To add to this, in the last week towards the elections new public figures used video to express support like actor and activist Jane Fonda[9] or voting commitments from numerous individuals.[10] The coalition also received support from the Democratic Socialists of America, the Party of the European Left, GUE/NGL and the European Greens, as well as political organizations from neighboring countries, such as The Left from Slovenia, United Reform Action from Montenegro, Social Democratic Union and Do not let Belgrade d(r)own from Serbia. The Coalition came fifth in the election, winning around 7% of the votes, and being granted 7 parliamentary seats in the 151-seat Croatian parliament.[11] They celebrated their results at the MSU in Zagreb.[12] During December 2020 Tomislav Tomašević of announced that Workers’ Front is no longer member of coalition due the conflict with other parties.[13]

Composition[edit]

Former members[edit]

Electoral performance[edit]

Parliament of Croatia[edit]

Year Popular vote % of popular vote Overall seats won Seat change Government
2020 116,480 6.99% Increase 7 opposition

Zagreb City Assembly[edit]

Year Popular vote % of popular vote Overall seats won Seat change Government
2017 24,706 7.64% Increase 4 opposition
2021 130,850 40.83% Increase 19 government

European Parliament[edit]

Year Popular votes % of popular votes Overall seats won Seat change Affiliation
2019 21,975 2.03% EGP-GUE

References[edit]

  1. ^ Lokalni izbori, 2017, zgizbori.hr, arhiva izbora
  2. ^ “Croatian Intellectuals Unite to Oust Bandic From Zagreb”. March 6, 2017.
  3. ^ National results Croatia, 2019 European Parliament election results, europarl.europa.eu
  4. ^ Henjak, Andrija (June 1, 2019). “Croatia: Towards Further Fragmentation of the Party System”.
  5. ^ Glavašević na listi lijevo-zelene koalicije
  6. ^ Teleskop (2020-06-09). “Ivana Kekin je SDP opisala kao stranku s krivim imenom i prezimenom: Je li ona nagovorila supruga Milu da se “baci” u politiku?”. Teleskop (in Croatian). Retrieved 2020-06-14.
  7. ^ “Mile Kekin – Happy people (Croatian:Sretni ljudi) video for party campaign”. YouTube.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  8. ^ Katarina Peović sve popularnija, podrska stigla od Damira Urbana, Ljiljane Nikolovske, Davora Tolje, Vedrane Rudan
  9. ^ Vijesti.hr (29 June 2020). “Jane Fonda podržala Radu Borić i Možemo!: ‘Naprijed Rada! Glasajte za listu broj 3!’. Vijesti.hr (in Croatian). Retrieved 2020-06-30.
  10. ^ “Podrška Archives – Možemo! – politička platforma”. Možemo! — politička platforma (in Croatian). Retrieved 2020-07-06.
  11. ^ “hina.hr”. www.hina.hr. Retrieved 2020-07-06.
  12. ^ “Tomašević: Ušli smo u Sabor, a nakon 20 godina maknut ćemo Bandića s vlasti”. www.vecernji.hr (in Croatian). Retrieved 2020-07-06.
  13. ^ “Tomašević o raskidu s Radničkom frontom: Kapović nam je više puta postavljao ultimatum”. www.vecernji.hr (in Croatian). 9 December 2020. Retrieved 2020-12-09.
  14. ^ “2017 Local elections results” (PDF). March 6, 2017.
  15. ^ Svađa Radničke fronte i Možemo: Iz Radničke Fronte objavili svoju stranu priče, N1, 8 December 2020