Review: “Czech Parties – Part 5 & Part 6”
(A critical appraisal of the two most recent installments in the series examining the contemporary Czech party landscape.)
To understand Part 6, we must first see why the five-party system failed.
By 2021, the five old parties controlled less than 50% of Chamber of Deputies seats. The rest belonged to new parties – the true “Part 6.” czech parties 5 part 6
Unlike the old five parties (ideologically structured, hierarchical, long-established), Part 6 players share distinct traits:
| Feature | Old Parties (1–5) | Part 6 Parties | |---------|------------------|----------------| | Ideology | Stable left-right | Fluid, issue-based | | Leadership | Collective/oligarchic | Charismatic/business | | Voter base | Class or religion-based | Negative consensus (anti-elite) | | EU stance | Pro-European | Euro-critical to exit | | Internal structure | Membership heavy | Light membership, social media driven | Review: “Czech Parties – Part 5 & Part
Part 6 is not a single party – it’s a political space that grows whenever trust in the original five erodes.
Czech politics has a long tradition of satirical and single-issue parties dating back to the 1990s “Beer Party” (Strana Pivní). ČSSD (Czech Social Democratic Party) – Once a
Advocating for a legislative assembly for Moravia and the reintroduction of Moravian nationality in censuses, Moravané achieved 0.3% in the last election. It cooperates with the European Free Alliance.
The Czech Republic, a landlocked country in Central Europe, has a dynamic political landscape. The political scene is characterized by a variety of parties, each with its own ideology, voter base, and political agenda.
Czech parties tend to have a casual dress code. Dress comfortably, and don't be afraid to get a bit messy.