• 3 References. Toggle the table of contents. Independent Movement for the National Reconstruction / Party of the Portuguese Right. 2 languages.
  • ...Sağ Partisi ( MIRN-PDP , Portekizce : Movimento Independente para a Reconstrução Nacional / Partido da Direita Portuguesa) Portekizli siyasi bir partiydi .
  • Yayın zamanı: önceki gün
    ...scheduled for 9 October, on Wednesday met in Lisbon with the Portuguese far right party Chega (a name which could be translated into English as "Enough!')
  • After finishing school Pavelic became a lawyer and also a politician of the Croatian Party of Rights, fighting for the right for an independent Croatia.
  • ...Democratic Party (PDC), Independent Movement for National ReconstructionParty of the Portuguese Right (MIRN), the Party of Progress...
  • ...extreme-right party family, this Portuguese exceptionalism came to an end after the electoral breakthrough of the Chega party in the 2019 general elections.
    Bulunamadı: reconstruction
  • ...nationalist right (Party of Christian Democracy, Independent Movement for National Reconstruction/Party of the Portuguese Right, National Front), which...
  • Shortly after the formation of the National Assembly, rumors of a military coup incited riots in Paris, including the storming of the Bastille for munitions and supplies.
    Bulunamadı: reconstruction
  • 1.2.5 Return of the Multiparty System and New Republic (1979-). 2 List of Political Movements. ... Partido Português (Portuguese Party) (1822-1831).
  • Meeting in plenary session on 2 April 1976, the Constituent Assembly does hereby pass and decree the following Constitution of the Portuguese Republic
  • How did the Portuguese Communist Party (PCP), loyal to the Soviet Union deep into the second half of the 20th century, react to a social revolution in 1974-5?
  • The Portuguese celebrate the national holiday of Freedom Day on 25 April every year to celebrate the revolution. Contents. 1 Overview.
  • The chronological scattering in the analysis of the Portuguese radical right accounts for the gap, in Portugal, between two distinct types of extreme right.