Active Slovenia - Merge With Zares

Merge With Zares

In 2007, the party merged with the social-liberal political party Zares, founded the same year by a split in the Liberal Democracy of Slovenia.

Political parties in Slovenia
Parliamentary parties
  • Positive Slovenia (28)
  • Slovenian Democratic Party (26)
  • Social Democrats (10)
  • Civic List (7)
  • Slovenian People's Party (6)
  • Democratic Party of Pensioners of Slovenia (5)
  • New Slovenia (4)
Seats of the European Parliament
  • Slovenian Democratic Party (3)
  • Social Democrats (2)
  • New Slovenia (1)
  • Liberal Democracy of Slovenia (1)
  • Zares (1)
Extra-parliamentary parties
  • Democratic Labour Party (Slovenia)
  • Democratic Party of Slovenia
  • Forward Slovenia
  • Greens of Slovenia
  • Humana Party
  • Liberal Democracy of Slovenia
  • Movement for Slovenia
  • Party of Equal Opportunities Slovenia
  • Party for Sustainable Development of Slovenia
  • Party of Slovenian People
  • Slovenian National Party
  • Slovenian Pirate Party
  • Youth Party – European Greens
  • Zares
  • Akacija
  • Christian Socialists of Slovenia
  • Slovenia is Ours
  • Lipa
Former parties
  • Active Slovenia
  • League of Communists of Slovenia (known also as the Communist Party of Slovenia)
  • National Democratic Party
  • Slovene Christian Democrats
  • Slovenian Democratic Union
  • Portal:Politics
  • List of political parties
  • Politics of Slovenia

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Famous quotes containing the words merge with and/or merge:

    We don’t know when our name came into being or how some distant ancestor acquired it. We don’t understand our name at all, we don’t know its history and yet we bear it with exalted fidelity, we merge with it, we like it, we are ridiculously proud of it as if we had thought it up ourselves in a moment of brilliant inspiration.
    Milan Kundera (b. 1929)

    Traditionally in American society, men have been trained for both competition and teamwork through sports, while women have been reared to merge their welfare with that of the family, with fewer opportunities for either independence or other team identifications, and fewer challenges to direct competition. In effect, women have been circumscribed within that unit where the benefit of one is most easily believed to be the benefit of all.
    Mary Catherine Bateson (b. 1939)