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Party of Socialists and Democrats

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Party of Socialists and Democrats
Partito dei Socialisti e dei Democratici
AbbreviationPSD
PresidentMatteo Rossi
SecretaryGerardo Giovagnoli
Founded18 February 2005 (2005-02-18)
Merger ofPSS and PdD
HeadquartersVia Rovellino, 12 – Murata
Youth wingSocialist Youth Area of San Marino
IdeologySocial democracy[1]
Democratic socialism[1]
Pro-Europeanism[2]
Political positionCentre-left
National affiliationLibera-PS/PSD
European affiliationParty of European Socialists
International affiliationSocialist International
Italian counterpartsDemocratic Party
Italian Socialist Party
Colours  Red
Grand and General Council
8 / 60
Website
www.psd.sm

The Party of Socialists and Democrats (Italian: Partito dei Socialisti e dei Democratici, PSD) is a social-democratic[1] and democratic socialist[1] political party in San Marino. It is a member of the Socialist International,[3] and observer member of the Party of European Socialists.[4] It is the only Sammarinese party with a reference to the European Union in its official political symbol. Its current-day Italian counterpart is the Democratic Party.

History

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The PSD was formed in 2005 by a merger of the Sammarinese Socialist Party (PSS), the oldest political party in the country founded in 1892, and the Party of Democrats (PdD). At the party's formation it had 27 of 60 seats in the Grand and General Council, which was reduced to 20 in the 2006 general election. The PSS long governed as the junior partner in a coalition with the Sammarinese Christian Democratic Party, while PD had its origins in the Sammarinese Communist Party founded in 1921.

The merger of the two parties provoked the exit of the centrist wing of PSS, which launched the New Socialist Party and of the socialist wing of PD, which formed the Left Party and joined the Sammarinese Communist Refoundation into forming the United Left, while 2 other splinters, led by Fabio Berardi and Nadia Ottaviani, both members of the Grand and General Council, who considered the PSD to be too left-wing, split in September 2008 to form the Arengo and Freedom party. Another split in 2009 in Borgo Maggiore formed the Sammarinese Reformist Socialist Party.

In the 2006 general election PSD won 31.8% of the vote and 20 out of 60 seats and governed in coalition from 2006 to 2008 with the Popular Alliance and United Left until tensions between the latter two caused the coalition to disintegrate.

For the 2008 general election the PSD allowed the smaller Sammarinese for Freedom party run as part of its electoral list and was part of the Reforms and Freedom electoral coalition which won 25 seats out of 60 in the Grand and General Council gaining 45.78% of the national vote but failed to gain a governmental majority and as a result the Party of Socialists and Democrats which itself gained 18 seats (a few of which went to Sammarinese for Freedom) out of the 25 the coalition gained and 31.96% of the national vote, and became part of the official opposition to the government of the centre-right coalition Pact for San Marino.

After the Sammarinese political crisis of 2011, PSD entered in a new government of national unity with Sammarinese Christian Democratic Party (PDCS). For the 2012 general election, the PSD ran as part of the winning San Marino Common Good coalition led by the Sammarinese Christian Democratic Party, restoring the political formula which had run San Marino until the 1990s.

The party contested the 2016 general election as part of San Marino First, along with the PDCS and Socialist Party (PS). The alliance formed the opposition to the Adesso.sm alliance led by the Democratic Socialist Left, which one the second round runoff election on 4 December 2016.

In April 2024 the party launched an alliance with the PS and Libera San Marino for the 2024 general election,[5][6] referred to as the Liberal/PS–PSD coalition.[7]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d Nordsieck, Wolfram (2019). "San Marino". Parties and Elections in Europe. Retrieved 15 January 2020.
  2. ^ "Congresso Psd: si cerca la mediazione su un nome che rappresenti le diverse anime" (in Italian). San Marino RTV. 19 September 2013. Retrieved 20 May 2021.
  3. ^ "Members". Socialist International. Retrieved 14 June 2022.
  4. ^ "Members". Socialists & Democrats. Retrieved 15 August 2022.
  5. ^ Giardi, Davide (24 April 2024). "Elezioni a San Marino, la coalizione Libera-Ps-Psd si presenta - VIDEO". libertas (in Italian). Retrieved 28 June 2024.
  6. ^ "Libera e Psd dicono sì alla coalizione". San Marino Rtv (in Italian). 23 April 2024. Retrieved 28 June 2024.
  7. ^ https://www.elezioni.sm/on-line/home/elezioni-politiche/elezioni-del-09062024/pubblicazione-elezioni-politiche-2024/documento26146162.html [bare URL]
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