Unity Party (Hungary)

{{short description|Ruling party of Hungary (1922–1944)}}

{{see also|Unity Party (Hungary, 2009)}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=March 2024}}

{{Infobox political party

| name = Unity Party

| native_name = Egységes Párt

| native_name_lang = hu

| colorcode = {{party color|Unity Party (Hungary)}}

| logo = Party of National Unity Hungary logo.svg

| caption = Logo of the party seen during the early to late 1930s.

| leader = István Bethlen {{small|(1922–1932)}}
Gyula Gömbös {{small|(1932–1936)}}
Béla Imrédy {{small|(1938–1939)}}
Miklós Kállay {{small|(1942–1944)}}

| founder = István Bethlen

| foundation = {{start date|df=y|1922|2|2}}

| dissolved = {{end date|df=y|1944|3|23}}

| merger = KNEP (partial) and OKGFP

| headquarters = Budapest, Hungary

| ideology = {{ubl|class=nowrap|

|Szeged IdeaStanley G. Payne. A history of fascism, 1914-1945. Oxon, England, UK: Routledge, 2005. pp. 269.Miklós Lackó. "Arrow-cross men, national socialists, 1935-1944", Studia historica, Magyar Tudományos Akadémia. Volume 61. Akadémiai Kiadó, 1969. Pp. 65.

|{{•}} Hungarian nationalism

|{{•}} Christian nationalism

|{{•}} National conservatism{{Cite book|page=99|title=From Counterrevolution to Consolidation?|first=Ville|last=Häkkinen|year=2019|publisher=JYU}}

|{{•}} Social conservatism

|{{•}} Agrarianism

|{{•}} Corporatism

|{{•}} Anti-communism

|{{•}} Antisemitism}}

| position = {{small|1922–1932:}}
Right-wingSthttps://mult-kor.hu/ki-volt-grof-bethlen-istvan-miniszterelnok-20161005
{{small|1932–1944:}}
Far-right

| flag = Flag of Party of National Unity Hungary.svg

| country = Hungary

}}{{Conservatism in Hungary}}

The Unity Party ({{langx|hu|Egységes Párt}}), officially the Catholic-Protestant Farmers, Smallholders, and Civic Party or Christian Farmers, Smallholders and Civic Party ({{Langx|hu|Keresztény-Keresztyén Földmíves-, Kisgazda- és Polgári Párt}}), was the ruling party of Kingdom of Hungary from 1922 to 1944.

It was founded in early 1922, and in the same year they won an electoral landslide in the parliamentary election.Gregory Curtis Ference. Chronology of 20th-century eastern European history. Gale Research, Inc., 1994. Pp. 226. Initially, the party was conservative and agrarian but in the early 1930s its fascist faction grew to become the largest, and shortly after they established a militia.Philip Morgan. Fascism in Europe, 1919-1945. London, England, UK: Routledge, 2003. Pp. 76-77. The main leader of the fascist faction was Gyula Gömbös, who served as the prime minister from 1932 to 1936. When he came to power, the party was renamed to National Unity Party ({{langx|hu|Nemzeti Egység Pártja|links=no}}).

Gömbös declared the party's intention to achieve "total control of the nation's social life".Philip Morgan. Fascism in Europe, 1919-1945. London, England, UK: Routledge, 2003. Pp. 76. In the 1935 Hungarian Election, Gömbös promoted the creation of a "unitary Hungarian nation with no class distinctions".F. L. Carsten. The rise of fascism. Berkeley and Los Angeles, California, USA: University of California Press, 1982. Pp. 173. The party won a huge majority of the seats of the Hungarian parliament in the Hungarian election of May 1939.Peter F. Sugar, Péter Hanák. A History of Hungary. First paperback edition. Bloomington, Indiana, USA: Indiana University Press, 1994. Pp. 341. It won 72 percent of the parliament's seats and won 49 percent of the popular vote in the election.Georgi Karasimeonov. Cleavages, parties, and voters: studies from Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland, and Romania. Greenwood Publishing Group, 1999. p. 70. This was a major breakthrough for the far-right in Hungary. The party promoted nationalist propaganda and some of its members sympathized with the Nazi Arrow Cross Party. In 1939, the party was renamed to the Party of Hungarian Life ({{langx|hu|Magyar Élet Pártja|links=no}}).

It was also called "the Government Party" since it was the governing party of the Kingdom of Hungary during the existence of the Horthy era.{{cite book|title=A History of Fascism, 1914-1945|last=Payne|first=Stanley G.|authorlink=Stanley G. Payne|publisher=Routledge|date=1996|isbn=0203501322}} A faction of the most pro-Nazi members led by the party's former leader Béla Imrédy split from the party October 1940 to form the {{Interlanguage link|Party of Hungarian Renewal|qid=Q65215568}} (Magyar Megújulás Pártja) that sought to explicitly "solve" the "Jewish Problem."

Electoral results

= [[National Assembly (Hungary)|National Assembly]] =

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center; line-height:16px;"
rowspan="2" style="width:60px;"| Election

! colspan="3"| Votes

! colspan="2"| Seats

! rowspan="2" style="width:30px;"| Rank

! rowspan="2" style="width:145px;"|Government

! rowspan="2"| Leader

style="width:75px;"| #

! style="width:45px;"| %

! style="width:48px;"| ±pp

! style="width:100px;"| #

! style="width:40px;"| +/−

1922

| 623,201

| 38.2%

| {{increase}}38.2

| {{Composition bar|140|245|{{party color|Unity Party (Hungary)}}}}

| {{increase}} 140

| 1st

| {{yes2|Unity Party }}

| István Bethlen

1926

| 482,086

| 42.2%

| {{increase}}4.0

| {{Composition bar|161|245|{{party color|Unity Party (Hungary)}}}}

| {{increase}} 21

| 1st

| {{yes2|Unity Party }}

| István Bethlen

1931

| 603,576

| 40.0%

| {{decrease}}2.2

| {{Composition bar|149|245|{{party color|Unity Party (Hungary)}}}}

| {{decrease}} 12

| 1st

| {{yes2|Unity Party }}

| István Bethlen

1935

| 879,474

| 44.6%

| {{increase}}4.6

| {{Composition bar|164|245|{{party color|Unity Party (Hungary)}}}}

| {{increase}} 15

| 1st

| {{yes2|Party of National Unity }}

| Gyula Gömbös

1939

| 1,824,573

| 49.5%

| {{increase}}4.9

| {{Composition bar|181|260|{{party color|Unity Party (Hungary)}}}}

| {{increase}} 17

| 1st

| {{yes2|Party of Hungarian Life }}

| Pál Teleki

References