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The Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization – Democratic Party for Macedonian National Unity (Macedonian: Внатрешна македонска револуционерна организација – Демократска партија за македонско национално единство), abbreviated as VMRO-DPMNE (Macedonian: ВМРО–ДПМНЕ), is a ...
Renamed VMRO-Bulgarian National Movement in 1998, the organization gradually transformed into a right-wing populist party. [16] For the 2001 Bulgarian parliamentary election, VMRO signed a coalition agreement with the George's Day Movement. The right-wing project received 3.63 percent of the vote, just shy of the 4.00 percent threshold.
A minor political party carrying the name IMRO is the Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization–People's Party (VMRO-NP). Although a separate structure since the split in 2004, the political line of VMRO-NP is reminiscent of VMRO-DPMNE's and its members maintain close ties with the latter's party structure.
VMRO–NP was founded on 4 July 2004 by former VMRO–DPMNE leader Ljubčo Georgievski due to personal and ideological differences with his successor Nikola Gruevski. Vesna Janevska became the party's first president. [3] In the 2006 parliamentary election, VMRO–NP won 6.1% of the vote and 6 seats in the Assembly.
Election Name Members 1998: VMRO-DPMNE, Democratic Alternative, League for Democracy [] 2002: VMRO-DPMNE, Liberal Party 2006: For a Better Macedonia: VMRO-DPMNE, Liberal Party, Socialist Party, Democratic Union, Party for the Movement of the Turks [], Union of Roma, Party of Democratic Action [], Party of the Vlachs, European Party of Macedonia, Party of the Greens [], People's Movement of ...
Macedonian Action/MAAK-Conservative Party (МААК-Конзервативна Партија), with VMRO-DPMNE; Macedonian Progressive Party (Македонска Напредна Партија), with VMRO-DPMNE; Union of Tito's Left Forces (Сојуз на Титови Леви Сили), with VMRO-DPMNE
Dragan Bogdanovski was born on 18 September 1929 in Klečevce, Kumamovo region, Kingdom of Yugoslavia. [1] [2] He graduated from a secondary agricultural school and studied at the Faculty of Agriculture in Zemun, where he was sentenced to four-month imprisonment in Belgrade in 1949 for nationalist activities. [1]
Nikola Gruevski (Macedonian: Никола Груевски, pronounced ['nikɔla 'ɡruɛfski] ⓘ; born 31 August 1970) is a former Macedonian politician who served as Prime Minister of Macedonia from 2006 until his resignation, which was caused by the 2016 Macedonian protests, and led the VMRO-DPMNE party from 2004 to 2017.