Social Democracy (Czech Republic)
Social Democracy Sociální demokracie | |
---|---|
Abbreviation | SOCDEM |
Leader | Jana Maláčová |
Deputy Leaders | Lubomír Zaorálek Jiří Oliva Jiří Nedvěd Radek Scherfer |
Senate Leader | Petr Vícha |
Founders | Josef Boleslav Pecka Ladislav Zápotocký |
Founded | 7 April 1878 |
Headquarters | Lidový dům, Hybernská 7, Prague |
Think tank | Masaryk Democratic Academy |
Youth wing | Young Social Democrats |
Women's wing | Social Democratic Women |
Religious wing | Christian Social Platform |
Membership (2023) | 6,500[1] |
Ideology | Social democracy[2] Pro-Europeanism[2] |
Political position | Centre-left[2] |
National affiliation | National Front (1945-1948) |
European affiliation | Party of European Socialists |
European Parliament group | Progressive Alliance of Socialists and Democrats |
International affiliation | Progressive Alliance Socialist International |
Colours | Pastel red |
Slogan | Lidskost místo sobectví (Humanity Instead of Selfishness) |
Chamber of Deputies | 0 / 200 |
Senate | 1 / 81 |
European Parliament | 0 / 21 |
Regional councils | 13 / 675 |
Governors of the regions | 1 / 13 |
Local councils | 799 / 61,780 |
Party flag | |
Website | |
socdem | |
Social Democracy (Czech: Sociální demokracie, SOCDEM), known as the Czech Social Democratic Party (Czech: Česká strana sociálně demokratická, ČSSD) until 10 June 2023, is a social-democratic[3][4] political party in the Czech Republic.[5] Sitting on the centre-left of the political spectrum[6] and holding pro-European views,[7][8] it is a member of the Party of European Socialists, the Socialist International, and the Progressive Alliance.[5] Masaryk Democratic Academy is the party-affiliated's think tank.[9]
The ČSSD was a junior coalition party within Andrej Babiš' Second Cabinet's minority government from June 2018, and was a senior coalition party from 1998 to 2006 and from 2013 to 2017. It held 15 seats in the Chamber of Deputies of the Czech Republic following the 2017 Czech legislative election in which the party lost 35 seats.[5] From 2018 to 2021, the party was led by Jan Hamáček, who has since been replaced by Michal Šmarda as leader after the 2021 Czech legislative election, in which the party lost all of its seats after falling below 5%.[10]
History
[edit]This section needs additional citations for verification. (June 2019) |
The Social Democratic Czechoslavonic party in Austria (Czech: Sociálně Demokratická strana Českoslovanská v Rakousku) was a political group founded on 7 April 1878 in Austria-Hungary as a regional wing of the Social Democratic Party of Austria. Founded in Břevnov atop earlier social democratic initiatives, such as the Ouls, it represented much of the Kingdom of Bohemia in the Austrian parliament, and its significant role in the political life of the empire was one of the factors that led to the creation of an independent Czechoslovakia. After the collapse of Austria-Hungary at the end of World War I, the party became one of the leading parties of the first Czechoslovak Republic. Its members were split over whether to join the Comintern, which in 1921 resulted in the fracturing of the party, with a large part of its membership then forming the new Communist Party of Czechoslovakia.
During the occupation of the Czech lands by Nazi Germany, the party was officially abolished, but its members organized resistance movements contrary to the laws of the German-controlled Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia, both at home and abroad. After the re-establishment of the Czechoslovak Republic in 1945, the party returned to its pre-war structure and became a member of the National Front which formed a new governing coalition. In 1948, after the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia gained a parliamentary majority, the Czech Social Democratic Party was incorporated into the Communist Party. At the time of the Prague Spring, a reformist movement in 1968, there were talks about allowing the recreation of a social democratic party, but Soviet intervention put an end to such ideas. It was only after the Velvet Revolution of 1989 that the party was recreated. Since the dissolution of Czechoslovakia, which came into effect on 1 January 1993, the ČSSD has been one of the major political parties of the Czech Republic, and until October 2017 was always one of the two parties with the largest number of seats in the Chamber of Deputies.
At the 1998 Czech legislative election, the party won the largest number of seats but failed to form a coalition government, so formed a minority government under its leader Miloš Zeman. With only 74 seats out of 200, the government had confidence and supply from the Civic Democratic Party (ODS), under the so-called Opposition Agreement. At the 2002 Czech legislative election, the party gained 70 of the 200 seats in the Chamber of Deputies of the Czech Republic. Its leader Vladimír Špidla became prime minister, heading a coalition with two small centre-right parties, the Christian and Democratic Union – Czechoslovak People's Party (KDU–ČSL) and the Freedom Union – Democratic Union (US-DEU) until he was forced to resign in 2004 after the ČSSD lost in the 2004 European Parliament election in the Czech Republic.
The next leader was Stanislav Gross, serving as leader from 26 June 2004 to 26 April 2005 and as prime minister from 4 August 2004 to 25 April 2005. He resigned after a scandal when he was unable to explain the source of money used to buy his house. The successor of Gross as prime minister was Jiří Paroubek, while Bohuslav Sobotka became acting party leader from 26 April 2005 to 13 May 2006. Paroubek was then elected as the new party leader in the run-up to the 2006 Czech legislative election, at which the party won 32.3% of the vote and 74 out of 200 seats. The election at first caused a stalemate, since the centre-right parties plus the Green Party and the centre-left parties each had exactly 100 seats. The stalemate was broken when two ČSSD deputies, Miloš Melčák and Michal Pohanka, abstained during a vote of confidence, allowing a coalition of the Civic Democrats (ODS), the KDU-ČSL, and the Green Party to form a government, while the ČSSD went into opposition.
At the 2010 Czech legislative election, the ČSSD gained 22.08% of the vote but remained the largest party, with 56 seats. Failing to form a governing coalition, it remained in opposition to a government coalition of the ODS, conservative TOP 09 and conservative-liberal Public Affairs parties. Paroubek resigned as leader on 7 June and was succeeded by Sobotka.[11] It remained the largest party after the 2013 Czech legislative election, and in December of the same year formed a governing coalition with the populist ANO 2011 and the centrist Christian and Democratic Union – Czechoslovak People's Party.[12] The leader of ČSSD, Bohuslav Sobotka, became the new Prime Minister of the Czech Republic.[13]
The party suffered heavy losses in the 2017 Czech legislative election and was reduced to 15 seats, the worst result in its history. ČSSD suffered another defeat in the Prague Municipal, local and Senate elections in 2018. ČSSD lost 12 senators (only one managed to win re-election), all Prague deputies and more than half of their local councillors. In 2019 ČSSD lost all their representatives in the European Parliament. Some political commentators have interpreted the string of poor results as a sign of ČSSD losing their position in national politics.[14] ČSSD suffered another defeat in 2020 Regional Elections and Senate elections, when they lost 10 senators (none re-elected) and 97 regional deputies.[15][16] From 2018 to 2021, ČSSD had Jan Hamáček as First Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Interior, Jana Maláčová as Minister of Labour and Social Affairs, Lubomír Zaorálek as Minister of Culture, and Miroslav Toman as Minister of Agriculture. After the poor performance of the ČSSD in the 2021 Czech legislative election, in which the party failed to meet the 5% voting threshold, Hamáček resigned as leader of the party.[10]
Organization
[edit]Names
[edit]Czech lands as part of Austria-Hungary:
- 1878–1893: Czechoslavonic Social Democratic Party in Austria (Sociálně-demokratická strana českoslovanská v Rakousku), then part of the Social Democratic Party of Austria
- 1893–1918: Czechoslavonic Social Democratic Workers' Party (Českoslovanská sociálně demokratická stranu dělnická), an independent party
- 1918–1938: Czechoslovak Social Democratic Workers' Party (Československá sociálně demokratická strana dělnická), and was a member of the Labour and Socialist International between 1923 and 1938;[17] after the split-up of Austria-Hungary, the portion of the party that ended up within the new Republic of Austria split from the main party to form the Czechoslovak Social Democratic Workers Party in the Republic of Austria
- 1938–1941: National Labour Party (Národní strana práce), which was a merger of the party with the left wing of the Czechoslovak National Socialist Party to unite the left in opposition to the ruling Party of National Unity
- 1945–1948: Czechoslovak Social Democracy (Československá sociální demokracie)
- 1948–1989: merged with the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia but concurrently existed as an exile party with its headquarters in London
- 1990–1993: Czechoslovak Social Democracy (Československá sociální demokracie)
- 1993–2023: Czech Social Democratic Party (Česká strana sociálně demokratická), keeping the previous abbreviation ČSSD
- Since June 2023: Social Democracy (Sociální demokracie), adopting the abbreviation SOCDEM.
Logos
[edit]-
Party logo, 1945–1948 1990–1992
(1948–1990 in-exile) -
Party logo, 1992–1998
-
Party logo, 2011–2021
-
Party logo, 2021–2023
-
Party logo, 2023–
-
Electoral logo for 2020 elections
-
Electoral logo for 2021 elections
Policy positions
[edit]In economic matters, the ČSSD party platform is typical of Western European social democratic parties. It supports a mixed economy, a strong welfare state, and progressive taxation. In foreign policy, it supports European integration, including joining the Eurozone, and is critical of the foreign policy of the United States, especially when in opposition, though it does not oppose membership of the Czech Republic in NATO.
Membership
[edit]1990 | 12,954 |
1991 | 12,468 |
1992 | 11,797 |
1993 | 11,031 |
1994 | 10,482 |
1995 | 11,757 |
1996 | 13,043 |
1997 | 14,121 |
1998 | 17,343 |
1999 | 18,762 |
2000 | 17,079 |
2001 | 16,300 |
2002 | 17,026 |
2003 | 17,913 |
2004 | 16,658 |
2005 | 16,750 |
2006 | 17,650 |
2007 | 18,354 |
2008 | 20,684 |
2009 | 24,497 |
2010 | 24,486 |
2011 | 24,000 |
2012 | 23,802 |
2013 | 22,881 |
2014 | 23,202 |
2015 | 21,501 |
2016 | 20,349 |
2017 | 19,477 |
2018 | 17,208 |
2019 | 13,845 |
2020 | 13,139 |
2021 | 11,531 |
2022 | 9,403 |
2023 | 7,539 |
2024 | 6,500 |
- Further references
[21][22][23][24][25][26][27][28]
Election results
[edit]Cisleithanian elections
[edit]Imperial Council elections
[edit]Date | Leader | Votes | Seats | Position | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
No. | % | No. | ± | Size | |||
1907 | Antonín Němec | 389,960 | 8.5 | 22 / 516
|
22 | 6th | Opposition |
1911 | Antonín Němec | 357,234 | 7.9 | 25 / 516
|
3 | 4th | Opposition |
Czechoslovakia wide elections
[edit]Legislative elections
[edit]Date | Leader | Votes | Seats | Position | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
No. | % | No. | ± | Size | |||
1920 | Antonín Němec | 1,590,520 | 25.7 | 74 / 300
|
74 | 1st | Coalition |
1925 | Antonín Hampl | 632,403 | 8.9 | 25 / 300
|
45 | 4th | Coalition |
1929 | Antonín Hampl | 963,462 | 13 | 39 / 300
|
10 | 2nd | Opposition |
1935 | Antonín Hampl | 1,032,773 | 12.6 | 38 / 300
|
1 | 3rd | Coalition |
1946 | Zdeněk Fierlinger | 855,771 | 12.1 | 37 / 300
|
1 | 5th | Coalition |
1948 | as part of National Front | 23 / 300
|
14 | 3rd | Bloc | ||
1954 | Illegal. Merged into Communist Party. De jure in-exile. | ||||||
1960 | |||||||
1964 | |||||||
1971 | |||||||
1976 | |||||||
1981 | |||||||
1986 | |||||||
1990 | Jiří Horák | 342,455 | 3.2 | 0 / 150
|
0 | 9th | No seats |
1992 | Valtr Komárek Alexander Dubček |
648,125 | 6.8 | 10 / 150
|
10 | 4th | Opposition |
Devolved assembly elections
[edit]Czech assembly elections
[edit]Date | Leader | Votes | Seats | Position | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
No. | % | No. | ± | Size | |||
1990 | Jiří Horák | 296,165 | 4.11 | 0 / 200
|
0 | 6th | No seats |
1992 | Jiří Horák | 422,736 | 6.53 | 16 / 200
|
16 | 3rd | Opposition |
Slovak assembly elections
[edit]Date | Leader | Votes | Seats | Position | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
No. | % | No. | ± | Size | |||
1928 | Ivan Dérer | 96,901 | 7.33 | 4 / 54
|
4 | 4th | – |
1935 | Ivan Dérer | – | 11.3 | 4 / 54
|
0 | 5th | – |
Czech Republic wide elections
[edit]Legislative elections
[edit]Date | Leader | Votes | Seats | Position | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
No. | % | No. | ± | Size | |||
1996 | Miloš Zeman | 1,602,250 | 26.4 | 61 / 200
|
45 | 2nd | External support |
1998 | Miloš Zeman | 1,928,660 | 32.3 | 74 / 200
|
13 | 1st | Minority |
2002 | Vladimír Špidla | 1,440,279 | 30.2 | 70 / 200
|
4 | 1st | Coalition |
2006 | Jiří Paroubek | 1,728,827 | 32.3 | 74 / 200
|
4 | 2nd | Opposition (2006–2009) |
Coalition (2009–2010) | |||||||
2010 | Jiří Paroubek | 1,155,267 | 22.1 | 56 / 200
|
18 | 1st | Opposition |
2013 | Bohuslav Sobotka | 1,016,829 | 20.5 | 50 / 200
|
6 | 1st | Coalition |
2017 | Lubomír Zaorálek | 368,347 | 7.3 | 15 / 200
|
35 | 6th | Opposition (2017–2018) |
Coalition (2018–2021) | |||||||
2021 | Jan Hamáček | 250,397 | 4.7 | 0 / 200
|
15 | 6th | No seats |
Senate elections
[edit]Election | First round | Second round | Seats | Total seats | Notes | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Votes | % | Runners-up | Place* | Votes | % | Place* | ||||
1996 | 559,304 | 20.3 | 48 / 81 |
2nd | 733,713 | 31.8 | 2nd | 25 / 81 |
25 / 81 |
The whole Senate was elected. Only one third of Senate was elected in all subsequent elections. |
1998 | 208,845 | 21.7 | 5 / 27 |
3rd | 121,700 | 22.7 | 3rd | 3 / 27 |
23 / 81 |
|
1999 | 327 | 1.0 | 0 / 1 |
5th | 0 / 1 |
23 / 81 |
By-election in Prague 1 district. | |||
2000 | 151,943 | 17.7 | 5 / 27 |
3rd | 53,503 | 9.5 | 5th | 1 / 27 |
15 / 81 |
|
2002 | 122,397 | 18.4 | 14 / 27 |
2nd | 224,386 | 27.3 | 2nd | 7 / 27 |
11 / 81 |
|
2003 | 2,424 | 6.8 | 0 / 2 |
6th | 0 / 2 |
11 / 81 |
By-elections in Strakonice and Brno-city district. | |||
2004 | 5,203 | 14.7 | 1 / 2 |
3rd | 5,358 | 20.51 | 3rd | 0 / 2 |
11 / 81 |
By-elections in Prague 4 and Znojmo districts. |
2004 | 90,446 | 12.5 | 3 / 27 |
4th | 24,923 | 5.2 | 4th | 0 / 27 |
7 / 81 |
|
2006 | 204,573 | 19.2 | 11 / 27 |
2nd | 120,127 | 20.9 | 2nd | 6 / 27 |
13 / 81 |
|
2007 | 6,456 | 21.66 | 1 / 2 |
1st | 4,338 | 21.54 | 2nd | 1 / 2 |
13 / 81 |
By-elections for Chomutov and Přerov |
2008 | 347,759 | 33.2 | 26 / 27 |
1st | 459,829 | 55.9 | 1st | 23 / 27 |
29 / 81 |
|
2010 | 290,090 | 25.3 | 22 / 27 |
1st | 299,526 | 44.0 | 1st | 12 / 27 |
41 / 81 |
|
2011 | 12,088 | 44.3 | 1 / 1 |
1st | 13,505 | 65.1 | 1st | 1 / 1 |
41 / 81 |
By-election in Kladno district |
2012 | 199,957 | 22.7 | 23 / 27 |
1st | 207,064 | 40.3 | 1st | 13 / 27 |
46 / 81 |
|
2014 | 3,695 | 16.1 | 0 / 1 |
3rd | 0 / 1 |
46 / 81 |
By-election in Zlín district | |||
2014 | 226,239 | 22.0 | 19 / 27 |
1st | 165,629 | 35.0 | 1st | 10 / 27 |
33 / 81 |
|
2014 | 2,092 | 16.8 | 1 / 1 |
1st | 3,664 | 50.9 | 1st | 1 / 1 |
33 / 81 |
By-election in Prague 10 district, Ivana Cabrnochová was a Green Party candidate supported by ČSSD |
2016 | 128,875 | 14.6 | 9 / 27 |
2nd | 55,622 | 13.1 | 3rd | 2 / 27 |
25 / 81 |
|
2018 | 1,294 | 5.7 | 0 / 1 |
6th | 0 / 1 |
25 / 81 |
By-election in Trutnov district. | |||
2018 | 1,270 | 7.5 | 0 / 1 |
6th | 0 / 1
|
25 / 81 |
By-election in Zlín district. | |||
2018 | 100,478 | 9.2 | 5 / 27 |
3rd | 33,887 | 8.10 | 6th | 1 / 27 |
13 / 81 |
|
2019 | 2,674 | 13.9 | 0 / 1 |
3rd | 0 / 1 |
13 / 81 |
By-election in Prague 9 district, Petr Daubner was a Czech Pirate Party candidate supported by ČSSD | |||
2020 | 81,105 | 8.1 | 3 / 27 |
5th | 18,175 | 4.0 | 8th | 0 / 27 |
3 / 81 |
|
2022 | 43,870 | 3.9 | 1 / 27 |
7th | 10,344 | 2.2 | 9th | 0 / 27 |
1 / 81 |
|
2024 | 28,479 | 3.59 | 0 / 27 |
7th | 1 / 27 |
1 / 81 |
- Notes
- In 1996, the whole Senate elected (81 seats), while in next elections only one third of seats is to be contested.
Presidential elections
[edit]Indirect election | Candidate | First round result | Second round result | Third round result | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Votes | % | Result | Votes | % | Result | Votes | % | Result | |||
1998 | Václav Havel | 130 | 70.65 | Runner-up | 146 | 52.3 | Won | — | |||
2003 | |||||||||||
Jaroslav Bureš | 46 | 17.04 | Eliminated | — | |||||||
Miloš Zeman | 83 | 30.18 | Eliminated | — | |||||||
Jan Sokol | 128 | 46.55 | Runner-up | 129 | 48.13 | Runner-up | 124 | 46.6 | Lost | ||
2008 | Jan Švejnar | 138 | 49.82 | Runner-up | 135 | 48.74 | Runner-up | 113 | 44.84 | Lost | |
128 | 49.10 | Runner-up | 141 | 47.19 | Runner-up | 111 | 44.05 | Lost |
Direct election | Candidate | First round result | Second round result | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Votes | % | Result | Votes | % | Result | |||
2013 | Jiří Dienstbier Jr. | 829,297 | 16.12 | 4th | Supported Miloš Zeman | |||
2018 | No candidate | |||||||
2023 | Josef Středula | withdrawn |
European Parliament elections
[edit]Election | List leader | Votes | % | Seats | +/− | EP Group |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2004 | Libor Rouček | 204,903 | 8.78 (#5) | 2 / 25
|
New | PES |
2009 | Jiří Havel | 528,132 | 22.39 (#2) | 7 / 22
|
5 | S&D |
2014 | Jan Keller | 214,800 | 14.17 (#3) | 4 / 21
|
3 | |
2019 | Pavel Poc | 93,664 | 3.95 (#8) | 0 / 21
|
4 | − |
2024 | Lubomír Zaorálek | 55,260 | 1.86 (#9) | 0 / 21
|
0 |
Regional elections
[edit]Election
|
Votes | % | Councillors |
---|---|---|---|
2000 | 344,441 | 14.67 | 112 / 675
|
2004 | 297,083 | 14.03 | 105 / 675
|
2008 | 1,044,719 | 35.86 | 280 / 675
|
2012 | 621,961 | 23.58 | 205 / 675
|
2016 | 386,150 | 15.25 | 125 / 675
|
2020 | 185,714 | 6.71 | 37 / 675
|
Local elections
[edit]Election
|
% | Councillors |
---|---|---|
1994 | 8.7 | 1,628 |
1998 | 17.54 | 4,259 |
2002 | 15.57 | 4,664 |
2006 | 16.61 | 4,331 |
2010 | 19.68 | 4,584 |
2014 | 12.65 | 3,773 |
2018 | 5.17 | 1,882 |
2022 | 2.49 | 799 |
Prague municipal elections
[edit]Year | Leader | Vote | % | Seats | +/− | Place | Position |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1990 | 484,484 | 5.6 | 5 / 76
|
4th | Opposition | ||
1994 | Jiří Paroubek | 2,435,279 | 8.6 | 5 / 55
|
4th | Opposition | |
1998 | Jiří Paroubek | 363,917 | 17.5 | 10 / 55
|
5 | 3rd | Coalition |
2002 | Jiří Paroubek | 656,936 | 14.7 | 12 / 70
|
2 | 3rd | Coalition |
2006 | Petra Buzková | 4,197,631 | 15.9 | 12 / 70
|
2nd | Opposition | |
2010 | Jiří Dienstbier Jr. | 615,209 | 17.9 | 19 / 65
|
7 | 2nd | Coalition |
2014 | Miloslav Ludvík | 2,160,963 | 10.4 | 8 / 65
|
11 | 5th | Coalition |
2018 | Jakub Landovský | 727,826 | 2.9 | 0 / 65
|
8 | 8th | No seats |
Chairmen
[edit]Czechoslovak Social Democratic Party in Austria
[edit]- Josef Boleslav Pecka (1878–1893)
- Josef Hybeš (1887–1893)
Czechoslavonic Social Democratic Workers' Party
[edit]- Josef Steiner (1893–1904)
- Antonín Němec (1904–1915)
- Bohumír Šmeral (1916–1917)
Czechoslovak Social Democratic Workers' Party
[edit]- Antonín Němec (1917–1925)
- Antonín Hampl (1925–1938)
Czechoslovak Social Democracy
[edit]- Zdeněk Fierlinger (1945–1947)
- Bohumil Laušman (1947–1948)
Czechoslovak Social Democracy in-exile
[edit]- Blažej Vilím (1948)
- Václav Majer (1948–1972)
- Vilém Bernard (1972–1989)
- Karel Hrubý
Czechoslovak Social Democracy
[edit]- Slavomír Klaban (1989–1990)
- Jiří Horák (1990–1993)
Czech Social Democratic Party
[edit]- Miloš Zeman (28 February 1993 – April 2001)
- Vladimír Špidla (April 2001 – 26 July 2004)
- Stanislav Gross (26 July 2004 – 26 April 2005)
- Bohuslav Sobotka (2005–2006; acting)
- Jiří Paroubek (2006–2010)
- Bohuslav Sobotka (2011–2017)
- Milan Chovanec (2017-2018; acting)
- Jan Hamáček (2018–2021)
- Roman Onderka (2021; acting)
- Michal Šmarda (2021–2024)
- Jana Maláčová (since 2024)
See also
[edit]Notes
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "Vládní strany ztrácí členy. Prim hrají fígle marketingových mágů, míní politologové". 7 April 2024.
- ^ a b c "European Election Watch Czech Republic". Center for Strategic and International Studies. Retrieved 4 January 2022.
- ^ Paul G. Lewis (2000). Political Parties in Post-Communist Eastern Europe. Routledge. p. 51. ISBN 978-0-415-20182-7.
- ^ Dimitri Almeida (2012). The Impact of European Integration on Political Parties: Beyond the Permissive Consensus. CRC Press. p. 71. ISBN 978-1-136-34039-0.
- ^ a b c Nordsieck, Wolfram (October 2021). "Czechia". Parties and Elections in Europe. Retrieved 31 October 2021.
- ^ "Czech centre-left party approves joining coalition, new government close". Reuters. Retrieved 2 June 2018.
- ^ "Hamáček dostal důvěru. ČSSD má teď být levicovým rebelem ve vládě". 20 October 2018.
- ^ Merle, Jean-Christophe (2012). Die Legitimität von supranationalen Institutionen der EU Die Debatte in den neuen und alten Mitgliedstaaten Reihe. Lit Verlag. p. 255. ISBN 978-3-643-11207-1.
- ^ "Masarykova demokratická akademie". ČSSD. Retrieved 2 June 2015.
- ^ a b "Končím, prohlásil Hamáček po propadu ČSSD ve volbách". iDNES.cz (in Czech). 9 October 2021. Retrieved 10 October 2021.
- ^ "Šéf ČSSD Paroubek po volbách rezignoval. Prohráli obyčejní lidé, řekl". iDNES.cz (in Czech). 29 May 2010. Retrieved 10 October 2021.
- ^ Leos Rousek (11 December 2013). "Czechs Clear Way for Three-Party Coalition Government". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 23 December 2017.
- ^ "Novým premiérem byl jmenován předseda ČSSD Bohuslav Sobotka". vlada.cz (in Czech). 17 January 2014. Retrieved 10 October 2021.
- ^ "Eurovolby jsou pro ČSSD debaklem, potvrdili politologové". Globe24.cz. Czech News Agency. 27 May 2019.
- ^ "Czech Senate and regional elections 2020: Bitter victory for the Prime Minister, dominance of the opposition in the Senate". Heinrich Böll Stiftung.
- ^ Kouba, Karel; Lysek, Jakub (2021). "The 2020 Czech regional elections: A story of a winner that lost". Regional & Federal Studies. 32 (4): 485–497. doi:10.1080/13597566.2021.1948839. S2CID 237827332.
- ^ Kowalski, Werner. Geschichte der sozialistischen Arbeiter-Internationale: 1923 – 1938, Berlin: Dt. Verl. d. Wissenschaften, 1985. p. 327.
- ^ Gargulák, Karel (2011). "Členská základna. Česká strana sociálně demokratická" (PDF). IS Muni (in Czech). Retrieved 31 October 2021.
- ^ "Masarykova demokratická akademie – Zpráva o činnosti československé sociální demokracie strany dělnické v letech 1933-1936 vydaná k XVIII. řádnému sjezdu v Praze ve dnech 15. Až 17. Května 1937".
- ^ "Masarykova demokratická akademie – Protokol XI. řádného sjezdu českoslovanské sociálně-demokratické strany dělnické kon. Ve dnech 7., 8. A 9. Prosince 1913 (1913)".
- ^ "ODS ztratila tři tisíce členů, Babiš láká více než Peake". 6 May 2013.
- ^ "Počet členů ANO strmě roste, Okamurův Úsvit zamrzl na devíti členech". 11 April 2014.
- ^ "ČSSD nevzkvétá. Jen letos odešlo dalších 2 500 členů". Seznam Zprávy. 25 July 2019.
- ^ "ČSSD vysychá tradiční zdroj. Přišla o miliony od členů, kteří ji opustili". Seznam Zprávy. 8 April 2020.
- ^ "Během posledního roku přišla sociální demokracie o 2000 členů. Novým hnutím naopak lidé přibývají". iROZHLAS. 30 December 2020.
- ^ "Členská základna ODS je větší než ČSSD, z mladých uskupení nejvíce roste SPD". ČT24.
- ^ "Politické strany na vymření. Mizí jim straníci, nejvíce těm z levice". iDNES.cz. 27 July 2021.
- ^ "Během posledního roku přišla sociální demokracie o 2000 členů. Novým hnutím naopak lidé přibývají". iROZHLAS (in Czech). 30 December 2020. Retrieved 29 March 2021.