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Workers' Party of Belgium
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{{Distinguish||text=Partij van de Arbeid, a Dutch social democratic party with the same abbrevation in Dutch}}







factoids
| name = Workers' Party of Belgium| native_name = Partij van de Arbeid van BelgiëParti du Travail de BelgiquePartei der Arbeit Belgiens160px)(File:Workers' Party of Belgium logo (2022, Dutch).svg|160px)PTBPAB}}| founder = Ludo Martens| president = Raoul Hedebouw| leader1_title = Vice President| leader1_name = David Pestieau| leader2_title = National Secretary| leader2_name = Peter MertensAll Power To The Workers)| headquarters = Boulevard Maurice Lemonnier / Maurice Lemonnierlaan 1711000, BrusselsComac (youth movement)>ComacMarianne)RedFox)REDFOX >URL=HTTPS://NL.REDFOX.BE/ WEBSITE=NL.REDFOX.BE, NL, | newspaper = Solidaire / Solidair| membership_year = 2023DATE=2023-01-01 URL=HTTPS://BUSINESSAM.BE/KERSTGESPREKKEN-RAOUL-HEDEBOUW-PVDA/ WEBSITE=BUSINESS AM, nl-BE, class=nowrap|
|MarxismBOOK, Gomez, Raul, Radical left voters in Western Europe, 2023, Abingdon, Oxon, 9781000728576,weblink JOURNAL, Vandenberghe, Maxime, Power-Sharing and the Paradox of Federalism: Federalization and the Evolution of Ethno-Territorial Conflict in the Case of Belgium (1979–2018), Ethnopolitics, 3 May 2022, 22, 5, 485–506, 10.1080/17449057.2022.2045828, free, 1854/LU-8752231, free,
|SocialismWEB, Nordsieck, Wolfram, 2019, Belgium,weblink Parties and Elections in Europe, NEWS, O'Sullivan, Feargus, Brussels' Plan for Car-Free Streets Hits a Few Bumps,weblink 27 December 2022, Bloomberg, 17 November 2022, en, NEWS, Hope, Alan, Flemish parliament resolves to fight LGBTQI+ discrimination,weblink 27 December 2022, The Brussels Times, 2021-05-17, en, }}
Left-wing politics>Left-wingFREEDOM HOUSE >TITLE=FREEDOM IN THE WORLD. 2019 : THE ANNUAL SURVEY OF POLITICAL RIGHTS & CIVIL LIBERTIES PUBLISHER=ROWMAN & LITTLEFIELD ISBN=9781538134573 URL=HTTPS://BOOKS.GOOGLE.COM/BOOKS?ID=-A1ODWAAQBAJ DATE=31 AUGUST 2018 ISBN=978-1786433640 URL=HTTPS://WWW.FRANCE24.COM/EN/20181015-GREENS-MAKE-HISTORIC-GAINS-BELGIUM-LOCAL-ELECTION QUOTE=THE ELECTION’S OTHER BIG WINNER IN THE BELGIAN CAPITAL WAS THE LEFTWING WORKERS PARTY (PTB/PVDA), ESPECIALLY IN THE CITY’S FORMER INDUSTRIAL DISTRICTS., toFar-left politicsNIELSEN DATE=25 MAY 2019 WORK=EUOBSERVER URL=HTTPS://EUOBSERVER.COM/POLITICAL/144986 QUOTE=AMONG THE NEW HOPEFULS FOR ITS 21 SEATS IN THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT IS MARC BOTENGA, A WALLOON FROM THE FAR LEFT WORKERS' PARTY OF BELGIUM (PTB)., DORPE >FIRST1=SIMON FIRST2=LAURENS FIRST3=HANNE TITLE=FAR-RIGHT SURGE IN TRIPLE ELECTION SHOCKS BELGIUM URL=HTTPS://WWW.POLITICO.EU/ARTICLE/BELGIUM-FAR-RIGHT-SURGE-ELECTIONS-2019/ QUOTE=THE FAR-LEFT WORKERS' PARTY IS SET TO WIN BIG ACROSS THE COUNTRY TOO, WINNING AROUND 8 PERCENT OF VOTES NATIONALLY., International Meeting of Communist and Workers' Parties>IMCWP| european = The Left in the European Parliament – GUE/NGLHTTPS://WWW.POLITICO.EU/2019-EUROPEAN-ELECTIONS/BELGIUM/WEBSITE=POLITICO, 16 February 2022, Belgian Chamber of Representatives>Chamber of Representatives12{{party color|Workers' Party of Belgium}}}}Belgian Senate>Senate5{{party color|Workers' Party of Belgium}}}}| seats3_title = Flemish Parliament4{{party color|Workers' Party of Belgium}}}}| seats4_title = Walloon Parliament10{{party color|Workers' Party of Belgium}}}}| seats5_title = Brussels Parliament11{{party color|Workers' Party of Belgium}}}}| seats6_title = Parliament of the French Community13{{party color|Workers' Party of Belgium}}}}| seats7_title = European Parliament1{{party color|Workers' Party of Belgium}}}}| seats8_title = Benelux Parliament2hex={{party color|Workers' Party of Belgium}}}}#EF4135{{party colorborder=silver}} Dark red (customary){{URLweblink}}>{{URLweblink}}>{{URL|international.ptb-pvda.be}}}}| country = Belgium}}The Workers' Party of Belgium (, PTB; , PVDA; {{literally|Labour Party of Belgium}}) is a Marxist and socialist political party in Belgium. It is the only Belgian party represented in parliament that is a fully national party, representing both Flanders and Wallonia. Having historically been a small party, the PTB-PVDA has gained momentum since the 2010s, continuously scoring better at the elections, particularly in Wallonia and working-class communities in Brussels.WEB, Cerulus, Laurens, 2 January 2017, The party that's pulling the Belgian left to the left,weblink Politico, WEB, Socialism Today – The rise of the Workers' Party of Belgium,weblink www.socialismtoday.org, WEB, 20 October 2018, Radical left makes breakthrough in Belgium,weblink Green Left Weekly,

History

{{More citations needed section|date=June 2017}}The Workers' Party of Belgium originated in the student movement at the end of the 1960s. Students (organized in the student union SVB – Studenten VakBeweging), mainly from the Catholic University of Leuven, turned towards the working-class movement. They considered the politics of the existing Communist Party of Belgium revisionist, i.e. too much turned toward social-democratic politics (represented in Belgium by the Belgian Socialist Party). They were influenced by the ideas of the Communist Party of China, guerrilla movements in Latin America, the movement against the Vietnam War, and the Leuven-Vlaams movement, all perceived as aspects of a worldwide struggle against colonial or neo-colonial oppression and for civil or workers' rights.Their support and participation in an important strike in the coalmines turned the movement into a political party. They founded a periodical, AMADA (Alle Macht Aan De Arbeiders – All Power To The Workers), which became the first name of their party. In 1979 the first congress was held, which adopted a Maoist programme and changed the name into PVDA-PTB. Ludo Martens became the first president, and remained an important ideologist of the party until his death in 2011.The PTB-PVDA used to host the International Communist Seminar until 2014 which had become one of the main worldwide gatherings of communist parties.

Recent developments

{{More citations needed section|date=June 2017}}Following its electoral defeat in 2003, the PVDA-PTB fundamentally changed its working methods and communication. On one hand, the PVDA-PTB said it would refocus on working with factory workers as well as on field work in the communities where it operates. On the other hand, the PVDA-PTB said it would officially break with what it calls its sectarian past to get closer to the concrete demands of citizens. This is reflected particularly by the demands put forward on very concrete issues, e.g. lower prices for medication, the reduction of VAT on energy products from 21% to 6%, an increase of the minimum pension, better control of rents or the lower cost of trash bags.In preparation for the Belgian elections of June 2007, the Solidarity newspaper and the website of the party were merged in order to reach a wider public. The structures have also been "open" to a broader layer of activists.On 2 March 2008, the work of the Eighth Congress of the PVDA-PTB was completed with a closing meeting at the Vrije Universiteit Brussel. This Congress was conducted with the theme of "party renewal." A new Central Committee was elected, which in turn elected a new Bureau of the Party. (File:Workers Party of Belgium propaganda in Brussels.jpg|thumb|Campaign poster in Brussels in 2008)This 'shift' seems to have produced some positive results, such as an increase in membership and a rebound of the electoral score of the PVDA-PTB in recent elections. The last elections in May 2019 showed more progress: a breakthrough was realised at the Flemish and European level. Since 2018 the party is also represented in the municipal councils of larger cities in Flanders, Wallonia and Brussels.In September 2014, the party had more than 8,000 members, in 2020 the number had grown to 20,000. Its monthly publication "Solidaire / Solidair" has between 3,000 and 5,000 subscribers. COMAC, its youth movement, is active in all the universities in Belgium and in secondary schools (in Flanders, Wallonia and Brussels). The PVDA-PTB is also known for its 11 Medicine for the people medical centres,WEB, Médecine pour le Peuple – Accueil,weblink Médecine pour le Peuple, which provide free access to primary health care.The newspaper Solidarity, and Medicine for the People organize "ManiFiesta", a yearly festival of solidarity between the communities and the left in Belgium. The first edition was held in Bredene (by the sea) on 25 September 2010 and brought together 6,000 people from both North and South of Belgium. The fourth edition in 2013 attracted 10,000 people.NEWS, September 23, 2012, Met 8.000 op ManiFiesta 2012,weblink DeWereldMorgen, nl,

Ideology and positions

{{Expand section|date=September 2022}}The party is Marxist, and has been labeled as populist, radical left, and far-left, although the latter has been less used starting in the 2010s.JOURNAL, 10.3389/fpos.2022.862949, free, The Labor Party of Belgium (PTB-PVDA): A Modern Radical Left Party?, 2022, Delwit, Pascal, Frontiers in Political Science, 4, The party is the most left-wing party represented in the Belgian Federal Parliament.The party advocates for strengthening workers' rights, increasing pensions, and decreasing the retirement age to 65, and supports expanding social programs and the welfare state. It supports increasing taxes on the wealthy and corporations.WEB,weblink The party that's pulling the Belgian left to the left, 2 January 2017, It is opposed to austerity and neoliberalism.A central part of the party's program is the "social climate revolution", which seeks to combat both climate change and social inequality.WEB,weblink Le PTB présente son plan pour une révolution climatique sociale, www.ptb.be, fr, Although the party is in favor of greater ecological policies, the party has been nicknamed the "Party of the Automobile", for its opposition to restrictions on individual car use, including opposing low emissions zones in Antwerp city center,NEWS,weblink Groen clasht met PVDA over LEZ: "U bewijst dat u gezondheid toch niet zo belangrijk vindt", 25 April 2017, Gazet van Antwerpen, nl, paid parking in Schaerbeek,WEB,weblink Nos amis ont le droit de nous rendre visite sans devoir payer pour se garer ! Onze vrienden hebben het recht om ons te bezoeken zonder dat ze hoeven te betalen om te parkeren!, 4 January 2020, schaerbeek.ptb.be, and increased fines for illegal parking in Liège. Despite this, the party also advocates for expanding public transit and making public transit free.

Foreign policy

The party abstained from the vote condemning the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine in the Chamber of Representatives. According to PTB MP Nabil Boukili, "the diplomatic way is the only possible way to avoid a war". Party spokesman Raoul Hedebouw said he condemns the invasion of Ukraine but does not think NATO should be part of the solution.WEB, La Chambre condamne la guerre en Ukraine, le PTB s'abstient,weblink 2022-03-27, RTBF, fr, According to political scientist Steven Van Hecke, in terms of foreign policy, parties such as the PVDA have both a pacifist and a socioeconomic agenda. For its socioeconomic aganda the PVDA often looks back nostalgically to Soviet communism, where the emphasis was on respect for the working class and rejection of market capitalism. Radical opposition parties tend to be dogmatic and reluctant to change course, according to Van Hecke, because they like to present themselves as principled. For example the PVDA has difficulty distancing itself from China.WEB,weblink "We veroordelen de inval in Oekraïne, maar...": of hoe extreemrechts en extreemlinks elkaar tegenkomen, VRT NWS, March 3, 2022, nl,

Historical

Historically the party supported Marxism–LeninismWEB, Walkowiak, Philippe, 12 June 2019, La Wallonie face à Mao, sauce lapin,weblink RTBF, and Maoism, although the party dropped references to Lenin and Mao, as well as references to other authoritarian regimes in the late 2000s and early 2010s. According to political scientist Pascal Delwit, the PVDA does still hold a Marxist-Leninist line internally, but not to the outside world.WEB,weblink Politicoloog Delwit onthult ware gelaat extreemlinks: "PVDA danst op twee benen", De Morgen, 21 March 2014, nl,

Electoral results

The general elections of 2007 saw the party obtaining 0.88% in the Flemish electoral district and 0.81% in Wallonia.In the regional elections in 2009, the PVDA-PTB gained 1.04% of the vote in Flanders (+0.48%) and 1.24% of the vote in Wallonia (+0.62%). For the European elections on the same day, the results were: 0.98% in the Dutch-speaking electoral college (+0.37%) and 1.16% in the French-speaking electoral college (+0.35%).In the general elections of June 2010, the party saw further growth. In Flanders it now represents 1.3% (+0.4%) of the votes for the Chamber of Representatives and 1.4% (+0.5%) for the Senate. Especially in the cities progress was noted with high scores in Antwerp (4.1%) and Liège (4.2%). The highest scores were gained in the cantons of Herstal (9.8%), Assenede (7.5%) and Seraing (7.3%); all places where the PVDA-PTB traditionally is strong.The municipal and provincial elections in 2012 were considered a breakthrough on a local level for the PVDA-PTB. The party won 52 seats in total; 31 in municipal councils, 4 in provincial councils, and 17 in the district councils.The federal and regional elections in 2014 saw further success for the party. They elected two deputies to the Chamber of Representatives,WEB, Resultats>Chambre,weblink 28 May 2014, Le Soir, two others to the Walloon Parliament,WEB, Resultats>Parlement Wallon,weblink 28 May 2014, Le Soir, and finally four to the Brussels Parliament.WEB, Resultats> Parlement Bruxellois,weblink 28 May 2014, Le Soir, (File:Workers Party of Belgium logo dutch.png|thumb|upright|Previous logo of the Workers' Party, showing the party's previous slogan which translates to "People Before Profit".)An opinion poll released in July 2017 suggested the party was the most popular party in Wallonia at the time, with 25% of respondents indicating they intended to vote for the party. The second-most popular party was the Mouvement Réformateur, part of the governing coalition, with 23%. The poll indicated that the Workers' Party would win 26 seats in the Belgian Chamber of Representatives if the next federal election were held immediately, putting it in tied first place with the Flemish N-VA.NEWS, 3 July 2017, La fusée PTB dans la stratosphère, le Parti socialiste s'écrase totalement,weblink L'Echo, The party generally increased its vote share in the 2018 local elections, and won over 15% of the vote in several French-speaking cities.Le PTB ferait un "belle percée" dans les villes en Wallonie RTBF, Retrieved 15 October 2018. In French.In the 2019 Belgian federal election, the party scored well and gained 10 seats.WEB, Belgium Worker's Party obtains excellent results in federal, regional and European elections,weblink Fight Back! News, 27 May 2019, The party did well in Wallonia (13.8% overall there), scoring over 16% in Liège Province, over 15% in Hainaut Province, and also over 12% in Brussels-Capital Region.WEB, Elections 2019 – PTB*PVDA,weblink www.rtl.be, It achieved at least 22% of the votes in both Charleroi and La Louvière cities. Its strongest showing in Flanders was 12.71% in Antwerp city, while in Wallonia, it's strongest showing was in Herstal with 27.55% of the votes.WEB, mai 2019, Rédaction en ligne-26, Les résultats électoraux du PTB,weblink PTB, The PTB was also the fourth largest party in the European election the same day in the Francophone areas, winning 14.59% and giving it one seat.WEB, DH.be, 27 May 2019, Voici vos nouveaux élus dans la région de Charleroi,weblink www.dhnet.be,

Chamber of Representatives{|class"wikitable" style"text-align:right;"

! Election! Votes! %! Seats! +/-! Government! 1991| 30,491| 0.50hex={{party color|Workers' Party of Belgium}}}}| Extra-parliamentary}}! 1995| 34,247| 0.60hex={{party color|Workers' Party of Belgium}}}}| {{steady}} 0Extra-parliamentary}}! 1999| 30,930| 0.50hex={{party color|Workers' Party of Belgium}}}}| {{steady}} 0Extra-parliamentary}}! 2003| 20,825| 0.20hex={{party color|Workers' Party of Belgium}}}}| {{steady}} 0Extra-parliamentary}}! 2007| 56,167| 0.80hex={{party color|Workers' Party of Belgium}}}}| {{steady}} 0Extra-parliamentary}}! 2010| 101,088 | 1.60hex={{party color|Workers' Party of Belgium}}}}| {{steady}} 0Extra-parliamentary}}! 2014| 251,289| 3.72hex={{party color|Workers' Party of Belgium}}}}| {{increase}} 2Opposition}}! 2019| 584,458| 8.612hex={{party color|Workers' Party of Belgium}}}}| {{increase}} 10Opposition}}">

Senate{|class"wikitable" style"text-align:right;"

! Election! Votes! %! Seats! +/-! 2003| 18,699| 0.10hex={{party color|Workers' Party of Belgium}}}}| ! 2007| 54,807| 0.80hex={{party color|Workers' Party of Belgium}}}}| {{steady}} 0! 2010| 105,060 | 1.60hex={{party color|Workers' Party of Belgium}}}}| {{steady}} 0

Regional

">

Brussels Parliament{|class"wikitable" style"text-align:right;"

! Election! Votes! %! Seats! +/-! Government! 2004| 2,221 | 0.60hex={{party color|Workers' Party of Belgium}}}}| Extraparliamentary}}! 2009| 4,038 | 0.90hex={{party color|Workers' Party of Belgium}}}}| {{steady}} 0Extraparliamentary}}! 2014| 15,782| 3.94hex={{party color|Workers' Party of Belgium}}}}| {{increase}} 4Opposition}}! 2019| 55,289| 13.511hex={{party color|Workers' Party of Belgium}}}}| {{increase}} 7Opposition}}">

Flemish Parliament{|class"wikitable" style"text-align:right;"

! Election! Votes! %! Seats! +/-! Government! 2004| 22,874| 0.60hex={{party color|Workers' Party of Belgium}}}}| Extraparliamentary}}! 2009| 42,849| 1.00hex={{party color|Workers' Party of Belgium}}}}| {{steady}} 0Extraparliamentary}}! 2014| 106,114| 2.50hex={{party color|Workers' Party of Belgium}}}}| {{steady}} 0Extraparliamentary}}! 2019| 225,593| 5.34hex={{party color|Workers' Party of Belgium}}}}| {{increase}} 4Opposition}}">

Walloon Parliament{|class"wikitable" style"text-align:right;"

! Election! Votes! %! Seats! +/-! Government! 2004| 12,216| 0.60hex={{party color|Workers' Party of Belgium}}}}| Extraparliamentary}}! 2009| 24,875 | 1.20hex={{party color|Workers' Party of Belgium}}}}| {{steady}} 0Extraparliamentary}}! 2014| 117,500| 5.72hex={{party color|Workers' Party of Belgium}}}}| {{increase}} 2Opposition}}! 2019| 278,343| 13.710hex={{party color|Workers' Party of Belgium}}}}| {{increase}} 8Opposition}}">

European Parliament{|class"wikitable" style"text-align:right;"

! Election! Votes! %! Seats! +/-! 1984| 43,637| 0.80hex={{party color|Workers' Party of Belgium}}}}| ! 1989| 29,778| 0.50hex={{party color|Workers' Party of Belgium}}}}| {{steady}} 0! 1994| 59,270| 1.00hex={{party color|Workers' Party of Belgium}}}}| {{steady}} 0! 1999Results for PVDA only.| 22,038 | 0.30hex={{party color|Workers' Party of Belgium}}}}| {{steady}} 0! 2004| 44,452 | 0.70hex={{party color|Workers' Party of Belgium}}}}| {{steady}} 0! 2009| 68,540 | 1.00hex={{party color|Workers' Party of Belgium}}}}| {{steady}} 0! 2014| 234,718| 3.50hex={{party color|Workers' Party of Belgium}}}}| {{steady}} 0! 2019| 566,274| 8.41hex={{party color|Workers' Party of Belgium}}}}| {{increase}} 1

Elected politicians

European deputies
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