^ abMagone, José (3 July 2013). Contemporary European Politics: A Comparative Introduction. Routledge. p. 533. ISBN978-1-136-93397-4. Several smaller leftwing parties were able to improve their electoral positions in the past decade. ... One such party is the Dutch Socialist Party ..., which has its origins in Marxism–Leninism and Maoisim, but which has moderated its ideology towards democratic socialism.
Mudde, Cas (16 January 2024). "Can Europe's new 'conservative left' persuade voters to abandon the far right?". The Guardian. The Dutch Socialist party (SP) campaigned on an "old left" platform combining traditional leftwing economic positions, for example on healthcare, with demands for a temporary stop on migrant workers and a popular leader, Lilian Marijnissen, attacking "identity politics". But it lost yet again, while the (combined) far right won a postwar record number of votes. In some countries this "leftwing conservative" approach has led to a fall in far-right support: for example, it benefited the Danish Social Democrats.
de Jong, Alex (29 January 2021). "Waarom het niet goed gaat met de SP". Sociaal & Groen (in Dutch). Dat de SP geen grotere rol speelt in dergelijke bewegingen is niet het gevolg van een gebrek aan middelen. Dit is eerder een strategie, gemotiveerd door het prioriteren van verkiezingsresultaten en een afweging van wat de partijleiding denkt dat de meeste stemmen zal opleveren. Antiracistische en klimaatveranderingsmaatregelen worden verondersteld te 'controversieel' te zijn bij SP-kiezers. Voormalig SP-raadslid Mahmut Erciyas beschrijft dit als een 'gecombineerde strategie van sociaal-economisch progressivisme én cultureel conservatisme'. [That the SP does not play a bigger role in such movements is not due to a lack of resources. Rather, this is a strategy, motivated by prioritising election results and weighing up what the party leadership thinks will garner the most votes. Anti-racist and climate change measures are assumed to be too ‘controversial’ among SP voters. Former SP councillor Mahmut Erciyas describes this as a ‘combined strategy of socio-economic progressivism as well as cultural conservatism’.]
Thomeczek, Jan Philipp (2024). "The Voting Potential of Bündnis Sahra Wagenknecht". Political Studies Review. SAGE Publishing: 2. doi:10.1177/14789299241264975. So far, left-authoritarian voters in Germany faced a dilemma: no party represented in the German Bundestag combines economically left-wing positions with culturally conservative stances (Steiner and Hillen, 2021). However, around 20% of German voters hold such left-authoritarian attitudes (Steiner and Hillen, 2019). Parties with a similar profile exist in other countries (e.g. the Dutch Socialist Party).
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