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| CATEGORIES ABOUT CHRISTIAN HISTORICAL UNION | |
| defunct political parties in the netherlands | |
| protestant political parties | |
| dutch confessional parties | |
| political parties established in 1908 | |
| 1980 disestablishments | |
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The Christian-Historical Union (CHU) was a Dutch Protestant party. It was created by several groups which had earlier seceded from the Anti Revolutionary Party (ARP). These groups opposed Universal Suffrage . Voters of the CHU mainly came from the Dutch Reformed Church , the voters of the ARP also came from this church. The main difference between the CHU and the ARP was that the CHU was loose group of parliamentarians and the ARP was much more organized. The CHU parliamentarians were not held to Party Discipline , for instance. In 1973 the CHU, the ARP and the Catholic's People's Party (KVP) united in form the Christian-Democratic Appeal (CDA), which remains a major party in Dutch Politics . =Party History= BEFORE 1940 The CHU was founded on was a major issue within the ARP, which took a position in favor of universal male suffrage. However, many members, especially those with an Aristocratic background opposed the party on this subject, and formed regional groups and parliamentary clubs which later united in the CHU under leadership of Alexander De Savorin-Lohmann . Many members also opposed the strict leadership of the ARP under Kuyper and wanted to move away from party discipline. Therefore the CHU was not organized as a party but as union of parliamentarians. The party was based around Protestant-Christian principles. It opposed Divorce and disturbance of the Sabbath and promoted government funding of Christian Religious School s. This was combined with an emphasis on the historical development of the Dutch state. Limited suffrage and the Monarchy were seen as important parts of this history. The name was derived from this: the party was Christian and historical. Before the CHU's foundation, the ARP also flirted with this name. Unlike the ARP, Catholics, and the Sociaal Democratische Arbeiders Partij the CHU was not linked own Pillar . Rather it appealed to unaffiliated conservative Protestants. It had good relations with organizations that were part of the ARP's pillar, like the Protestant radio and television broadcaster, the Dutch Christian Radio Association . Although the CHU was seceded for the ARP, and many of its member were anti-Catholic, the CHU still cooperated with ARP and the Roman Catholic - 29 and 1939 - 40 . Both cabinets were 'extra-parliamentary' cabinets in time of political turmoil and De Geer was asked to head these cabinets because he was seen as reliable, stable politician. AFTER 1945 After World War II , prominent politicians of the CHU wanted to end the pillarization of Dutch politics. Some wanted to unite the CHU with the ARP, others joined the new social democratic Labour Party (PvdA). The CHU returned to government in 1948 , as a junior partner in a 'broad coalition' with the Catholic KVP and the PvdA. The ARP was held out of this coalition because it opposed the independence of Indonesia . The CHU was divided on this issue. During the 1960s, votes for the CHU began to decline as many voters were opposed to its conservative policies and its unwillingness to adapt to the new political situation (much unlike the ARP). The CHU was in nearly all governments between 1948 and 1972; it was always joined by the KVP and the ARP. This cooperation led to the foundation of the CDA in 1973, this united the three Christian democratic parties which had worked together closely since their foundation. In 1980 the party ceased to exist. Unlike the ARP and the KVP the CHU was unable to leave a mark on the CDA. |
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