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National Liberal Party (Romania, 1875)

National Liberal Party
Partidul Național Liberal
AbbreviationPNL
FoundersIon C. Brătianu
Ion Ghica
Mihail Kogălniceanu
C.A. Rosetti
Founded24 May 1875 (1875-05-24)
Dissolved1947[a]
1950[b]
Succeeded byNational Liberal Party (1990)
NewspaperRomânul (1875–84)
Voinţa naţională (1884–1914)
Viitorul (1914–38, 1944–45[a])
Liberalul (1946–47)[a]
Drapelul (1944–48)[b]
Youth wingNational Liberal Youth
Ideology
Political positionCentre[1]
SloganPrin noi înșine!
(Through ourselves alone!)

  1. ^ a b c Brătianu faction
  2. ^ a b Tătărescu/Bejan faction

The National Liberal Party (Romanian: Partidul Național Liberal, PNL) was the first organised political party in Romania, a major force in the country's politics from its foundation in 1875 to World War II. Established in order to represent the interests of the nascent local bourgeoisie, until World War I it contested power with the Conservative Party, supported primarily by wealthy landowners, effectively creating a two-party system in a political system which severely limited the representation of the peasant majority through census suffrage. Unlike its major opponent, the PNL managed to preserve its prominence after the implementation of universal male suffrage, playing an important role in shaping the institutional framework of Greater Romania during the 1920s.

History

1926 electoral map highlighting the landslide victory of the National Liberal Party in that year's legislative election.
1937 electoral map showcasing the success of the National Liberal Party in that year's legislative election.

Dominated throughout its existence by the Brătianu family, the party was periodically affected by strong factionalism. Among the many splits during the party's early history a notable one was that led by party founder C. A. Rosetti, whose followers, supporting rapid and more extensive social reforms, created the Radical Party in the late 1880s. In domestic matters, the National Liberal party supported the development of the local bourgeoisie, seeking to expand the Romanian industry through government subsidies and a protectionist trade policy. Party elites controlled major Romanian-owned enterprises and a significant part the local finance sector, including the National Bank of Romania. The PNL was also openly antisemitic, as it opposed the giving of the Romanian citizenship to the Romanian Jews.[2] Antisemitism was carried into the PNL's mainstream, and was officially enforced under the premierships of Ion C. Brătianu. During his first years in office, Brătianu reinforced and applied old discrimination laws, insisting that Jews were not allowed to settle in the countryside (and relocating those that had done so), while declaring many Jewish urban inhabitants to be vagrants and expelling them from the country. According to the 1905 Jewish Encyclopedia: "A number of such Jews who proved their Romanian birth were forced across the Danube, and when [the Ottoman Empire] refused to receive them, were thrown into the river and drowned. Almost every country in Europe was shocked at these barbarities. The Romanian government was warned by the powers; and Brătianu was subsequently dismissed from office". Cabinets formed by the Conservative Party, although including Junimea's leaders, did not do much to improve the Romanian Jews' condition – mainly due to PNL opposition. Antisemitism continued to be enacted under the leadership of Dimitrie Sturdza, who was resentful of "aliens"[3] (in line with the anti-Jewish policies of his party), and supported blocking non-Romanians from a large number of social positions. Sturdza was a notorious antisemite, supporting measures such as the expulsion of Romanian Jews, and he was known for his opposition towards the naturalization of the Jews in Romania. He and the PNL are responsible for the exile of Romanian Jewish intellectuals Moses Gaster and Lazăr Şăineanu.[4]

At the beginning of the 20th century, PNL, joined by many former leaders of the Romanian Social Democratic Workers' Party, advocated an extension of the electoral franchise and a limited agrarian reform, though this did not prevent a National Liberal government from violently repressing the 1907 Peasants' revolt. Adopting a nationalist discourse, before World War I the party championed the cause of ethnic Romanians living outside the borders, primarily those in Austro-Hungarian-ruled Transylvania; its irredentism varied in degree, with a more pragmatic approach being preferred while in government. Traditionally Francophile, in foreign policy PNL supported cooperation with the Triple Entente, against King Carol's preference for the Central Powers. The party's stance had a major influence in Romania's decision to join the First World War on the side of the Allies, which ultimately led to Romanian rule over Bessarabia, Bukovina and Transylvania. Ion I. C. Brătianu was, like his father, openly antisemitic and opposed the granting of Romanian citizenship to Jews.[5][6] After World War I, however, antisemitism disappeared from the Liberals' political program, even forming alliances with Jewish politicians. Despite this, seeing the post-War Minority Treaties as an encroachment on the country's sovereignty, between the World Wars PNL governments pursued a strong policy of centralisation, dismissing calls for autonomy coming from the newly attached provinces and seeking to limit the influence of the national minorities, as well as that of foreign capital. In foreign policy, it supported the cordon sanitaire against the Soviet Union, also cracking down on the local workers' movement.

Though initially opposed to the restoration of deposed King Carol II, it became increasingly supportive of his authoritarian policies, with PNL governments paving the way to a royal dictatorship in the 1938. Another major split was caused in 1930 by opposing attitudes towards the restoration of Carol II: Gheorghe I. Brătianu contested Vintilă Brătianu's decision to oppose the King and created parallel organisations, claiming the party's name and legacy. After Vintilă's death, his faction came under the control of Ion Gh. Duca and Gheorghe Tătărescu, realigned with Carol and led several governments, while Gheorghe's continued as a separate party, in opposition to the former's government. The two however reunited shortly before the dissolution of all parties in 1938. Formally disbanded along all political parties in 1938, party structures were preserved unofficially, with many party members also enlisting in Carol's National Renaissance Front. The growing power of Nazi Germany in the 1930s led some factions, primarily the one controlled by Gheorghe I. Brătianu, to seek a rapprochement with the former war enemy from 1936 onward; during World War II, PNL leaders supported Romania's participation in the Axis-led invasion of the Soviet Union, while maintaining contacts with the Western Allies, ultimately backing the realignment with the latter in August 1944. Tolerated by the totalitarian government of Ion Antonescu, it eventually joined King Michael I and the Communist, National Peasants' and Social Democratic parties in overthrowing the dictator in the closing phase of World War II, enabling the reorganisation of the party in 1944. Part of the first post-war grand coalition governments, it lost its importance as the new Communist-led coalition government used the denazification process in order to remove PNL supporters from government posts.

The last major split was motivated by the attitude towards the Communist-dominated left-wing alliance in the aftermath of World War II: while Dinu Brătianu, the party's president, opposed the increasing Communist influence, Tătărescu, the general secretary, favoured an alliance with it, hoping to preserve some influence in the Soviet-dominated political context. Both factions claimed the name and legacy of the original party, and, after a period of ambiguity, went on to create parallel organisations. Faced with a severe restriction of its activity by the Communist-dominated government, the first faction dissolved itself in late 1947. The second faction continued to be part of the governing coalitions until November 1947; nevertheless, Tătărescu's opposition to the policy of extensive economic planning pursued by the government led to his replacement as party leader with Petre Bejan. Forced into submission, the faction did not have any political activity after 1950. Deprived of their economic base, members of both factions also suffered political persecution after 1948. With the Communist-dominated government gaining the upper hand in local politics and starting to crack down on opposition, the party decided to cease political activity in the late 1947, effectively disbanding itself. After the overthrow of the Communist party rule in 1989, a new party was founded under the same name and assumed the National Liberal legacy. After the war, the Dinu Brătianu faction supported Anglo-American interests, while Tătărescu's sought a more pragmatic approach towards the Big Three and friendly relation with the Soviets.

Scissions and mergers

Parties seceded from PNL

Parties absorbed by PNL

Party leaders

  Also served as Prime Minister
Name
Born - Died
Portrait Term start Term end Duration
1 Ion C. Brătianu
(1821–1891)
24 May 1875 4 May 1891 15 years, 345 days
2 Dimitrie Brătianu
(1818–1892)
21 May 1891 8 June 1892 1 year, 18 days
3 Dimitrie Sturdza
(1833–1914)
20 November 1892 10 January 1909 16 years, 51 days
4 Ion I. C. Brătianu
(1864–1927)
11 January 1909 24 November 1927 18 years, 317 days
5 Vintilă Brătianu
(1867–1930)
24 November 1927 21 December 1930 3 years, 27 days
6 Ion G. Duca
(1879–1933)
28 December 1930 29 December 1933 3 years, 1 day
7 Dinu Brătianu
(1866–1950)
4 January 1934 November 1947 13 years, 301 days

Electoral history

Legislative elections

Election Votes % Assembly Senate Position Aftermath[a]
1876 PNL government (1876–1879)
1879 PNL government (1879–1883)
1883 PNL government (1883–1884)
1884 PNL government (1884–1888)
1888 Opposition to PC government (1888–1891)
1891
60 / 183
Supporting PC government (1891–1892)
1892
32 / 183
18 / 112
 2nd  Opposition to PC government (1892–1895)
1895
177 / 183
 1st  PNL government (1895–1899)
1899 Opposition to PC government (1899–1901)
1901 PNL government (1901–1905)
1905 PNL government (1905–1906)
Opposition to PC government (1906–1907)
1907
166 / 183
90 / 102
 1st  PNL government (1907–1910)
1911 81,139[b] 37.8
10 / 183
16 / 110
 2nd  Opposition to PC government (1910–1912)
1912
35 / 183
24 / 110
 3rd  Opposition to PC government (1912–1914)
1914
145 / 188
82 / 117
 1st  PNL government (1914–1918)
1918 did not compete
0 / 174
0 / 112
Extra-parliamentary opposition to PC government (1918)
PNL government (1918–1919)
1919
103 / 568
54 / 216
 2nd  Opposition to PNR government (1919–1920)
1920
16 / 372
1 / 166
 3rd  Opposition to PP government (1920–1921)
1922
222 / 372
111 / 148
 1st  PNL government (1922–1926)
1926 192,399 7.5
16 / 387
0 / 115
 3rd  Opposition to PP government (1926–1927)
1927 1,704,435 62.7
318 / 387
92 / 113
 1st  PNL government (1927–1928)
1928 185,939 6.7
13 / 387
0 / 110
 2nd  Opposition to PNȚ government (1928–1931)
Supporting PND minority government (1931)
1931 1,389,901[c] 48.9
80 / 387
11 / 113
 1st  Supporting PND minority government (1931–1932)
Opposition to PNȚ government (1932)
1932 407,023 14
28 / 387
1 / 113
 2nd  Opposition to PNȚ government (1932–1933)
1933 1,518,864 52
300 / 387
105 / 108
 1st  PNL government (1933–1937)
1937 1,103,353 36.5
152 / 387
97 / 113
 1st  Opposition to PNC minority government (1937–1938)
Parliament suspended Extra-parliamentary opposition to Miron Cristea's monarchist government (1938–1939)
1939 party banned
0 / 258
0 / 88
Extra-parliamentary opposition to FRN monarchist government (1939–1940)
Parliament suspended Extra-parliamentary opposition to LAM government (1940–1941)
Extra-parliamentary opposition to Ion Antonescu's military government (1941–1944)
FND-PNL-PNȚ government (1944–1945)
Extra-parliamentary opposition to FND government (1945–1946)
1946 259,068 3.8
3 / 414
Senate abolished  4th  Opposition to BPD government (1946–1947)

Notes:

a Almost always the government was named before parliamentary elections and confirmed afterwards;
b Votes received in alliance with PCD;
c Votes received by National Union coalition. Coalition members: PNL, PGR, LA, and PND.

References

  1. ^ Hitchins, Keith. Rumania, 1866-1947. Kiribati, Clarendon Press, 1994. pp 24.
  2. ^ Rădăcinile antisemitismului românesc - Yad Vashem https://www.yadvashem.org/yv/pdf-drupal/en/report/romanian/1.1_Roots_of_Romanian_Antisemitism.pdf
  3. ^ Gaster 1911.
  4. ^ "Moses Gaster, o figură pe nedrept uitată". 12 September 2014.
  5. ^ Bogdan, Caranfilof. ""Iuda sub vremuri". O contribuție la istoria antisemitismului românesc".
  6. ^ "Rădăcinile antisemitismului românesc" (PDF). yadvashem.org (in Romanian). Retrieved 18 June 2023.

Sources

 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainGaster, Moses (1911). "Sturdza s.v. Demetrius [Dimitrie] Sturdza". In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.

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