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Swing Left has created sub-chapters, including 31st Street Swing Left, which focuses on the Maryland, Virginia, and D.C area; [7] 31st Street Swing Left focuses on funding campaigns of swing-candidates in their jurisdiction. [8] In May 2017, Onward Together named Swing Left as one of the groups whose work it would support. [9]
An election rally for the Indonesian Democratic Party of Struggle, 1999. The Indonesian political party system is regulated by Act No. 2 of 2008 on Political Parties. [3] The law defines political party as "a national organisation founded by like-minded Indonesian citizens with common goals to fulfill common interests and to defend the unity of the Unitary State of the Republic of Indonesia as ...
General elections were held in Indonesia on 17 April 2019. [1] [2] For the first time in the country's history, the president, the vice president, members of the People's Consultative Assembly (MPR), and members of local legislative bodies were elected on the same day with over 190 million eligible voters.
The party subsequently filed a written complaint. [31] Following mediations brokered by Bawaslu between the party and the KPU on 20 and 21 December, Bawaslu instructed the electoral commission to repeat the verification process for Ummah Party. [32] The party declared as qualified to participate in the election on 30 December. [33] [34]
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The Indonesian Democratic Party of Struggle (Indonesian: Partai Demokrasi Indonesia Perjuangan, PDI-P) is a centre to centre-left secular-nationalist political party in Indonesia. Since 2014, it has been the ruling and largest party in the House of Representatives (DPR), having won 110 seats in the latest election.
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There are several socialist political parties with the name Left Party: Estonian Left Party, in Estonian: Eesti Vasakpartei, 1990–2008;