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Russian Right Wing Movement Calls For New Coalition Based Liberal Party
Interfax - 1.10.12 - JRL 2012-7

Moscow, 10 January: The Union of Right Forces movement (SPS) calls for creating a new liberal party on the basis of a broad coalition.

"It is clear that a right-liberal party that the country needs must be built on the basis of the broadest coalition with the participation of the maximum possible number of democratic organizations, regardless of their legal status and with the participation of citizens that are not members of any organizations but who share democratic ideas and who are trusted in the society," an SPS statement that was published on Tuesday (10 January) said.

The statement said that "not a single party and not a single movement should claim monopoly here" and that "SPS is ready to take part in such a process, bringing all of its political and personnel resources for the benefit of a common cause".

"At the same time, if the unification process is cut off as it regretfully happened repeatedly before, SPS, which has a developed regional network and people with great political experience and ties inside and outside the country, will immediately use opportunities that will be offered by the expected new laws and turn into a fully-fledged political party," the authors of the document, members of the presidium of the SPS movement Leonid Gozman, Anatoliy Yermolin, Aleksey Kara-Murza, Boris Nadezhdin and Viktor Nekrutenko, said.

Keywords: Russia, Government, Politics - Russia News - Russia

 

Moscow, 10 January: The Union of Right Forces movement (SPS) calls for creating a new liberal party on the basis of a broad coalition.

"It is clear that a right-liberal party that the country needs must be built on the basis of the broadest coalition with the participation of the maximum possible number of democratic organizations, regardless of their legal status and with the participation of citizens that are not members of any organizations but who share democratic ideas and who are trusted in the society," an SPS statement that was published on Tuesday (10 January) said.

The statement said that "not a single party and not a single movement should claim monopoly here" and that "SPS is ready to take part in such a process, bringing all of its political and personnel resources for the benefit of a common cause".

"At the same time, if the unification process is cut off as it regretfully happened repeatedly before, SPS, which has a developed regional network and people with great political experience and ties inside and outside the country, will immediately use opportunities that will be offered by the expected new laws and turn into a fully-fledged political party," the authors of the document, members of the presidium of the SPS movement Leonid Gozman, Anatoliy Yermolin, Aleksey Kara-Murza, Boris Nadezhdin and Viktor Nekrutenko, said.