Blue future

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Sininen tulevaisuus
Blå framtid
Blue future
Logo of Blue Future.svg
Party leader Campo Terho
Party leader Sampo Terho
vice-chairman Tiina Elovaara
founding June 13, 2017
Place of foundation Helsinki
Headquarters Helsinki
Alignment Conservatism
National conservatism
EU skepticism
Colours) blue
Parliament seats
0/200
MEPs
0/14
European party European Conservatives and Reformists Party (EKR)
Website www.sininentulevaisuus.fi

The Blue Future ( Finnish Sininen tulevaisuus , Swedish Blå framtid ) is a political party in Finland . It emerged in June 2017 as a comparatively moderate split from the right-wing populist grassroots .

Until 2019, you had 18 members of the Finnish Parliament . The party had five ministers in the Sipilä cabinet , including a woman. In the parliamentary elections in Finland in 2019 , the party only received 1 percent of the vote and has not been represented in parliament since then.

ideology

The Blue Future strives for a society in which people are encouraged to work and in which help is given to those who need it. The party will respect family and human rights and reject violence and hatred against other people. The name “Blue Future” should stand for stability, peace, reforms , effectiveness and patriotism .

history

Right shift of the base fins

In March 2017, the party chairman of the base Finns , Timo Soini , announced that he would not stand for the upcoming election as party chairman. Shortly afterwards, former MEP Sampo Terho declared his interest in the office. When choosing, however, he was defeated Jussi Halla-aho , also an MEP, in the past because of Islamophobic posts on his blog was misbehaving and 2012 by the Supreme Court in Helsinki because of religious rioting and hate speech to a fine had been convicted. After the election, the Finnish Prime Minister Juha Sipilä declared that after the party's strong shift to the right, he could no longer imagine a coalition with the grassroots Finns, and threatened to terminate it. In order not to let the governing coalition fail, 20 of 38 members of parliament, including all cabinet members, announced the establishment of a new parliamentary group called Neue Alternative on June 13, 2017 .

Blue future

On June 19, 2017, Sampo Terho called for the foundation of the “Blue Future” party based on the New Alternative parliamentary group. It was officially registered as a party on November 15, 2017.

Election polls by Yle / Taloustutkimus have consistently put the support at only 0.5 to 2.5 percent since the company was founded. In the 2019 parliamentary elections , the party only received 1 percent of the vote and thus missed entry into parliament.

Party leader

Election results

Parliamentary elections

year Mandates be right %
2019 0 29,959 1.0%

See also

Individual evidence

  1. Ari Sundberg: Blå framtid lyckas inte Höja sitt väljarstöd hbl.fi (Swedish), August 10, 2018, accessed on October 21, 2018.
  2. Archive link ( Memento from July 31, 2017 in the Internet Archive )
  3. blogit.iltalehti.fi
  4. hs.fi
  5. Jussi Halla-aho: New boss leads “True Finns” all the way to the right. In: derStandard.at. June 11, 2017. Retrieved December 15, 2017 .
  6. taz.de
  7. yle.fi
  8. yle.fi
  9. Mika Lehto: Kannattajakortit tarkistettu - siniset hyväksyttiin puoluerekisteriin is.fi, November 15, 2017.
  10. Ari Sundberg: Blå framtid lyckas inte Höja sitt väljarstöd hbl.fi (Swedish), August 10, 2018, accessed on October 21, 2018.