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Reform Party (Gibraltar)

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Reform Party
LeaderLyana Armstrong-Emery
Founded21 March 2000; 24 years ago (2000-03-21)
Dissolved2005; 19 years ago (2005)
IdeologyGreen politics
Eco-socialism
Political positionLeft-wing
European affiliationGreens–European Free Alliance
UK affiliationGreen
ColoursGreen

The Gibraltar Reform Party was a political party in Gibraltar. It was a left-leaning party which described itself as green and for social justice.

Originally formed as the Independent Liberal Forum on 21 March 2000, the name was subsequently changed to the later one. The last party leader was Lyana Armstrong-Emery.

The party's broad aim was a decentralisation of power. On the constitutional status of Gibraltar, the party supported a new status, calling for Gibraltar's establishment as a devolved autonomous territory, integrated within a decentralised federal Britain. The party also called for the creation of a local Parliament for Gibraltar, a member of parliament (MP) to sit in the British House of Commons in Westminster, and a Member of the European Parliament (MEP) to represent Gibraltar in the European Parliament.

The Reform Party forged links with both the Green Party of England and Wales and Mebyon Kernow.[citation needed] Lyana Armstrong-Emery was voted by the party to take the position on the joint list agreed with the Green Party for the European Elections.[1]

The party ceased operations in 2005 owing to a failure to garner wide public support.

Election results

[edit]
Election year # of
overall votes^
% of
overall vote^
# of
overall seats won^
±^
2003 578 1.0
0 / 15
New

Gibraltar is part of the South West England constituency in the European parliament and its major parties form joint ticket alliances with the major UK parties. In 2004, the only EU election that it participated in before its dissolution, Reform had been in an alliance with the Green Party.

Party Year Votes (Gib.) Votes (SW Eng) % (Gib.) % (SW Eng) Change (SW Eng) Seats Change
Green 2004 1,058 103,821 8.70 7.2 -1.1
0 / 7
Steady

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Maguire, Kevin (15 April 2004). "How the Rock won a voice in UK's Euro-poll". The Guardian. Retrieved 6 July 2024.
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