Einhornist List: Difference between revisions
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* More emphasis on Hurmu's Nordic heritage, language, and culture | * More emphasis on Hurmu's Nordic heritage, language, and culture | ||
* Deeper relationship, cooperation and integration between Hurmu and Normark | * Deeper relationship, cooperation and integration between Hurmu and Normark, and other Norse-speaking states ([[Lysstyrer]], [[Varmland]]), and between Hurmu and [[Jääland]] | ||
* Less [[WANC]]–skeptic, though not overly enthusiastic about the socialist states in it. | |||
* Less [[WANC]]–skeptic | |||
In spite of these differences occasioning their sitting under a separate list in the Senate, the {{PAGENAME}} remains affiliated with the [[Coalition for Democratic Humanism]] in the context of the global national-sector structure of the Humanist movement. | |||
{{Hurmu article}}[[Category:Political parties in Hurmu]] | {{Hurmu article}}[[Category:Political parties in Hurmu]] | ||
{{N&H article}}[[Category:Order of the Holy Lakes]] | {{N&H article}}[[Category:Order of the Holy Lakes]] | ||
[[Category:Political | [[Category:Political parties]] |
Latest revision as of 12:55, 10 May 2022
The Einhornist List, formed in 1704 to compete the Order of the Holy Lakes' 1707 Senate elections, aligns itself with the Einhorn Society of Normark. Its political views are quite similar to the Humanist List's, with the differences as follows:
- More emphasis on Hurmu's Nordic heritage, language, and culture
- Deeper relationship, cooperation and integration between Hurmu and Normark, and other Norse-speaking states (Lysstyrer, Varmland), and between Hurmu and Jääland
- Less WANC–skeptic, though not overly enthusiastic about the socialist states in it.
In spite of these differences occasioning their sitting under a separate list in the Senate, the Einhornist List remains affiliated with the Coalition for Democratic Humanism in the context of the global national-sector structure of the Humanist movement.