Green Party for Progress
Green Party for Progress | |
---|---|
Arabic name | حزب الخضر للتقدم |
French name | Parti des verts pour le progrès |
Abbreviation | PVP |
Secretary-General | Mongi Khamassi |
Spokesperson | Faycel Naîmi |
Treasurer | Fethi Dargachi |
Women's Chair | Aïcha Khammassi |
Youth Chair | Hafedh Khaldi |
Founder | Mongi Khamassi |
Founded | November 14, 2005 |
Legalised | March 3, 2006 |
Split from | PSL |
Headquarters | 2 Avenue de France, 1000 Tunis |
Newspaper | Le Tunisien (French) Ettounsi (Arabic) |
Ideology | Green politics |
Green Party for Progress (Arabic: حزب الخضر للتقدم, French: Parti des verts pour le progrès), often abbreviated to PVP, is a Tunisian green political party.
Founded in November 2005 by Mongi Khamassi,[1] a former member of PSL,[1] they were legalised four months later as one of the nine political parties that were legalised before the Tunisian revolution.[1] The first party conference was held in December 2008.[1]
Internationally the party has been denounced as not a true green party, particularly by the French[2] and European Green parties.[3]
In the 2009 presidential election, they supported the winning candidate Ben Ali.[4] In the general election, their first contested, which was held simultaneously, they won six seats with 74,185 votes and a 1.67% vote share.[5] They won a single councillor seat in the 2018 municipal elections with 150 votes.[6]
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d Néjib Sassi (20 December 2008), Société civile : premier congrès du Parti des verts pour le progrès (PVP) (in French), L'Expression
- ^ Communiqué à la presse du 8 mars 2006 (in French), Les Verts, 8 March 2006, archived from the original on 5 May 2009, retrieved 29 July 2021
- ^ The European Green Party acknowledges the Tunisian Green Party, European Green Party
- ^ Tunisie : le parti des verts de Mongi Khamassi sort ses griffes (in French), Espace Manager, 25 January 2011, archived from the original on 28 January 2011, retrieved 29 July 2021
- ^ A parliamentary majority for the Constitutional Democratic Rally (RCD) with 89.59%[permanent dead link], Tunisia Online News, October 26, 2009.
- ^ Nadia Dejoui (9 May 2018), Résultats des élections municipales 2018 (in French), leconomistemaghrebin.com.