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Euskal Herritarrok - Wikipedia

  • ️Fri May 23 2003

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Basque Citizens

Euskal Herritarrok

SpokespersonArnaldo Otegi
FoundedSeptember 1998
Banned23 May 2003 (by the Supreme Court of Spain)
Merger ofHerri Batasuna
Batzarre (until 2000)
Zutik (until 2000)[1]
Merged intoBatasuna
A minority faction formed the Aralar Party
Headquartersc/ Juan de Bilbao, nº 17, Donostia
IdeologyBasque nationalism
Socialism
Ezker abertzalea
Left-wing nationalism
Basque independence
Feminism
Ecologism
Revolutionary socialism
Political positionLeft-wing
Basque Parliament (1998-2001)

14 / 75

Parliament of Navarre (1999-2003)

8 / 55

European Parliament (1999-2004)

1 / 64

Town councillors (1999-2003)

890 / 4,635

Euskal Herritarrok (English: Basque Citizens, EH) was a Basque independentist and socialist political party in the Basque Country.[2] EH was banned in 2003 by the Supreme Court of Spain on the grounds that it sympathized with ETA.[3]

In February 2000, Batzarre and Zutik left EH after the rupture of the ETA 1998-2000 truce, due to the absence of any condemnation of that fact by EH. In June 2000 a sector of Herri Batasuna also decided to split and form the Aralar Party, that openly and fully rejected ETA and its rupture of the truce.[4]

Regional parliaments

[edit]

Basque Parliament
Election Leading candidate Votes % Seats +/–
1998 Arnaldo Otegi 224,001 17.66 (#3)

14 / 75

3
2001 143,139 10.04 (#4)

7 / 75

7

Parliament of Navarre

[edit]

Parliament of Navarre
Election Leading candidate Votes % Seats +/–
1998 Pernando Barrena 47,271 15.58 (#3)

8 / 50

3

European Parliament

[edit]

European Parliament
Election Leading candidate Votes % Seats +/–
1998 Koldo Gorostiaga 306,923 1.45 (#8)

1 / 64

1
Local councils
Election Spain +/– Basque Country Navarre
Votes % Seats Votes % Seats Votes % Seats
1999 272,446 1.28 (#8)

890 / 65,201

890 228,169 19.63 (#2)

679 / 2,540

44,299 14.94 (#3)

211 / 1,677

General Assemblies
Election Votes % Seats +/–
1999 228,528 19.73 (#2)

29 / 153

29
  1. ^ Santaren, Enrique (3 September 1998). "HB deja sus siglas y se integra en una amplia plataforma electoral". El Mundo (in Spanish). Bilbao. Archived from the original on 25 June 2001. Retrieved 17 May 2019.
  2. ^ Nordsieck, Wolfram. "Basque (Spain)". Parties and Elections in Europe. Archived from the original on 13 August 2004.
  3. ^ Europa Press (29 March 2003). "El Supremo cree que ilegalizar Batasuna protege la democracia porque 'es complemento de ETA'". El Mundo (in Spanish). Madrid: Mundinteractivos, S.A. Retrieved 17 May 2019.
  4. ^ Muez, Mikel (7 October 2001). "Las 'tres caras' de la izquierda 'abertzale' en Navarra". El País (in Spanish). Pamplona: Prisa. Retrieved 17 May 2019.