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| Details | Ministries | Political Positions | Affiliations | Election Results | Legislation | Legislative Agenda | Voting Record | Actions | Messages |
Progressive Party[?]
This page contains information about the Progressive Party.
This party is inactive.
Details
Nation[?]: Pontesi Hanrapetut’yun (Pontesi)
Seats[?] in Պոնտեսիայի Ազգային ժողով (National Assembly of Pontesi)[?]: 0
Color[?]:
Description[?]:
Ministries
This party is not part of the national cabinet.
Political Positions
Ideology | Position | Visibility | Coherency |
Centralization | moderate unitarist | excellent | perfect |
Civil Rights | restrictive-leaning | excellent | perfect |
Ecology | unknown | close to none | perfect |
Foreign Relations | isolationist-leaning | limited | perfect |
Government Responsibilities | moderate big government | excellent | perfect |
Market | moderate regulator | excellent | perfect |
Military | extreme pacifist | limited | perfect |
Morality | convinced progressive | excellent | perfect |
Religion | convinced secular | excellent | perfect |
Affiliations
This party is a member of the following organizations:
Election Results
History Table
Month | Votes | Total Votes | Votes (%) | Votes (%) (+) | Seats | Total Seats | Seats (%) | Seats (+) |
March 4091 | 40,989 | 57,128,921 | 0.07 | +0.07 | 0 | 75 | 0.00 | +0 |
May 4091 | 37,937 | 57,055,343 | 0.07 | -0.01 | 0 | 75 | 0.00 | +0 |
July 4096 | 11,779,280 | 11,779,280 | 100.00 | +99.93 | 75 | 75 | 100.00 | +75 |
February 4098 | 11,546,520 | 11,546,520 | 100.00 | +0.00 | 75 | 75 | 100.00 | +0 |
February 4104 | 11,392,381 | 11,464,488 | 99.37 | -0.63 | 75 | 75 | 100.00 | +0 |
Relative Graph
This graph shows the percentage of seats the party achieved in each election, relative to its maximum.
Absolute Graph
This graph shows the percentage of seats the party achieved in each election in the entire legislature.
National Graph
This graph shows the share of seats the party achieved in each election in the entire legislature, together with the share of other parties.
Legislation
You can view the party's proposed bills here.
Legislative Agenda
This party has to vote on the following bills:
Voting Record
This is the voting[?] record of the Progressive Party.
Bill | Created | Voting started | Vote | Bill Status | Result |
Pontesi Intelligence Agency Act | February 2154 | February 2154 | passed | ||
Fighting Child Abuse Bill | January 2154 | January 2154 | passed | ||
Private Health Bill | January 2154 | January 2154 | passed | ||
Firework Sales Bill | January 2154 | January 2154 | passed | ||
Investment Bill | January 2154 | January 2154 | passed | ||
Freeing the Market | November 2153 | November 2153 | defeated | ||
Head of State | October 2153 | October 2153 | defeated | ||
Military Reform Act | October 2153 | October 2153 | passed | ||
Constitutional Amendments Act | October 2153 | October 2153 | defeated | ||
Flag Act | September 2153 | September 2153 | defeated | ||
Labor Rights Act | September 2153 | September 2153 | defeated | ||
Sales Tax Elimination | September 2153 | September 2153 | passed | ||
Defense Act | September 2153 | September 2153 | defeated | ||
Trade Union Reform Act | September 2153 | September 2153 | passed | ||
The FHP Platform Statement | August 2153 | August 2153 | defeated | ||
Constituency Realignment Act | August 2153 | August 2153 | defeated | ||
Death Penalty Abolition Act | August 2153 | August 2153 | passed |
Random fact: Particracy does not allow real-life brand names (eg. Coca Cola, McDonalds, Microsoft). However, in the case of military equipment brand names it is permitted to use simple number-letter combinations (eg. T-90 and F-22) borrowed from real life, and also simple generic names, like those of animals (eg. Leopard and Jaguar). |
Random quote: "In Germany they first came for the Communists and I didn't speak up because I wasn't a Communist. Then they came for the Jews, and I didn't speak up because I wasn't a Jew. Then they came for the trade unionists and I didn't speak up because I wasn't a trade unionist. Then they came for the Catholics, and I didn't speak up because I was a Protestant. Then they came for me--and by that time no one was left to speak up." - Pastor Martin Niemoller |