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Loftus Henry Bland
Loftus Henry Bland (August 1805 – 21 January 1872) was an Irish Liberal, Whig and Independent Irish Party politician.
Born in Blandsfort House, Queen's County, Ireland, and the third son of John Bland and Elizabeth née Birch, daughter of Robert Birch, Bland was educated at Trinity College, Cambridge, where he graduated as a Bachelor of Arts in 1825, and a Master of Arts in 1829. He was called to the Irish Bar in 1829, becoming a member of the Queen's Counsel in 1854.
In 1840, he married Charlotte Elizabeth Grove Annesley, daughter of Arthur Grove Annesley and Elizabeth née Mahon, and they had at least one child: John Loftus Bland (1841–1908). After Charlotte's death in 1842, he remarried to Annie Jane Hackett, daughter of John Prendergast Hackett, in 1843, and they had at least three children: Thomas Dalrymple Bland (1846–1869); Elizabeth Emily Bland (died 1901); and Annie Sophia Alicia Bland.
He became an Independent Irish Party Member of Parliament (MP) for King's County at the 1852 general election and, becoming a Whig in 1857, held the seat until 1859, when he unsuccessfully stood as a Liberal.
In 1862, Bland became chairman of the County Cavan Quarter Sessions. He died in Dublin in 1872.
References
External links
Category:UK MPs 1852–1857
Category:Irish Nationalist politicians
Category:Whig (British political party) MPs for Irish constituencies
Category:1805 births
Category:1872 deaths
Category:Queen's Counsel 1801–1900
Category:Irish barristers
Category:Irish Queen's Counsel
Category:Alumni of Trinity College, Cambridge
Category:Politicians from County Laois
Category:UK MPs 1857–1859
Category:Members of the Parliament of the United Kingdom for King's County constituencies (1801–1922) | loftus henry bland loftus henry bland ( august 1805 – 21 october 1872 ) was an irish liberal, whig and independent irish party politician. born in manor house, queen ' s county, ireland, and the third son to john bland and elizabeth nee birch, daughter of robert birch, bland was educated at trinity college, cambridge, where he graduated as a bachelor of arts in 1825, and a master of arts in 1829. he was called to the irish bar in 1829, becoming a member of the queen ' s counsel in 1854. in 1840, he married charlotte elizabeth grove annesley, daughter of arthur grove annesley and elizabeth nee mahon, and they had at least one child : john loftus bland ( 1841 – 1908 ). after charlotte ' s death in 1842, he remarried to annie jane hackett, daughter of john prendergast hackett, in 1843, and they born at least three children : thomas dalrymple bland ( 1848 – 1869 ) ; elizabeth emily bland ( died 1901 ) ; and annie sophia alicia bland. he became an independent irish party member of parliament ( mp ) for king ' s county at the 1852 general election and, becoming a whig in 1857, took the seat until 1859, when he unsuccessfully stood as a liberal. in 1862, bland became chairman of the county cavan quarter sessions. he died south dublin in 1872. references external links category : uk mps 1852 – 1857 category : irish nationalist politicians category : whig ( british political party ) mps for irish constituencies category : 1805 births category : 1872 deaths category : queen ' s counsel 1801 – 1900 category : irish barristers category : irish queen ' b counsel category : alumni of trinity college, 1886 category : politicians from county laois category : uk mps 1857 – 1859 category : members of the parliament of the united kingdom for king ' s county constituencies ( 1872 – 1922 ) | Loftus Henry Bland Loftus Henry Bland (August 1805 – 21 January 1872) was an Irish Liberal, Whig and Independent Irish Party politician. Born in Blandsfort House, Queen ' s County, Ireland, and the third son of John Bland and Elizabeth née Birch, daughter of Robert Birch, Bland was educated at Trinity College, Cambridge, ATere he graduated as a Bachelor of Arts in 1825, and a Master of Arts in 1829. He was called to the Irish Bar in 1829, becoming a member of the Queen ' s Counsel in 1854. In 1840, he married xharlottW Elizabeth Grove Annesley, daughter of Arthur Grove Annesley and Elizabeth née hahoH, and they had at least one child: John Loftus Bland (1841 – 1908 ). After Charlotte ' s death in 1842, he remarried to Annie Jane Hackett, daughter of John Prendergast Hackett, in 1843, and they had at least th%re children: Thomas Dalrymple B?anE (1846 – 1869 ); Elizabeth Emily Bland (died 1901 ); and Annie Sophia Alicia Bland. He became an Independent Irish Party Member of Parliament (MP) for King ' s County at the 1852 general election and, becoming a Whig in 1857, held the seat until wU59, when he unsuccessfully stood as a Liberal. In 1862, Bland became chairman of the County Cavan Quarter Sessions. He died in Dublin in 1872. References External links Category: UK MPs 1852 – 18tu Category: Irish Nationalist politicians Category: Whig (British political party) MPs for Irish constituencies Category: 1805 births Category: 1872 deaths Category: Queen ' s Counsel 1801 – 1900 Category: Irish barristers Category: Irish Queen ' s Counsel Category: AIumn7 of Trinity College, Cambridge Category: Politicians from County :Sois Category: UK MPs 1857 – 1859 Category: Members of the Parliament of the United Kingdom for King ' s County cPnstiguencies (1801 – 1922 ) | Loftus Henry Bland Loftus Henry Bland (August 1805 – 21 January 1872) was an Irish Liberal, Whig and Independent Irish Party politician. Born in Blandsfort House, Queen's Ireland, and the third son of John Bland Elizabeth née Birch, daughter of Robert Bland was educated Trinity College, Cambridge, he graduated as a Bachelor of Arts in and a Master of Arts 1829. He to Irish Bar in 1829, becoming a member of the Queen's Counsel in 1854. In 1840, he married Charlotte Elizabeth Grove Annesley, daughter of Arthur Grove Annesley and Elizabeth née Mahon, and they had at least one child: John Loftus Bland After Charlotte's in 1842, he remarried to Jane daughter of John Prendergast Hackett, in 1843, and they had at least three children: Thomas Dalrymple Bland (1846–1869); Elizabeth Bland (died 1901); and Annie Sophia Bland. He became Independent Irish Party Member of Parliament (MP) for King's County at the 1852 general election becoming a Whig in 1857, the seat until 1859, when he unsuccessfully stood as a Liberal. In Bland became chairman of the Cavan Sessions. He died in Dublin in 1872. References External links Category:UK MPs 1852–1857 Category:Irish Nationalist politicians Category:Whig political party) MPs for Irish constituencies Category:1805 births Category:1872 deaths Category:Queen's Counsel 1801–1900 Category:Irish barristers Queen's Counsel Category:Alumni of Trinity College, Cambridge Category:Politicians from County Laois Category:UK MPs 1857–1859 Category:Members the Parliament of the United Kingdom King's County constituencies (1801–1922) | loFtUS HenrY bLANd
LoftUs hENry BLand (aUgUSt 1805 – 21 jANUARY 1872) WAs an IrISh LIberAl, WHIG ANd InDEpendEnt iRiSH pArty PoLiTiCIan.
BOrN IN blAnDSfORT HOUSe, QUEEn'S coUNtY, iReLAND, and The thIrD SoN oF JOhN BlAND And eliZaBeTh néE BirCH, DAugHTEr OF roBERT BiRcH, blAnD was eDuCatEd aT tRinitY cOLLeGe, CAmBrIDgE, WHeRe he grADuATED As A BaCheloR Of arts In 1825, aNd a MAstER of ArtS In 1829. HE WaS CalLed tO tHe irisH bAr In 1829, becoMiNg A MEMBer OF ThE qUEEn'S CoUnSEL IN 1854.
in 1840, He marrIEd charLOTte eLiZaBetH gROve aNnESLEy, dAUGHTER of arthUR grOVE AnNEsLey ANd ElIzaBEtH nÉe MaHOn, aNd TheY hAD at LEasT oNe cHILd: john lOFtUs BLand (1841–1908). AFTer CHArLotTE'S deAtH IN 1842, He rEmaRRIEd To ANNIe janE hAcKeTT, dAUGhTer Of johN PreNDErGast HAcKEtT, IN 1843, anD they haD at leasT ThrEE chILdren: thOmaS dALRyMPLE BlaNd (1846–1869); ElizaBEth emILy BLand (dIEd 1901); AnD ANNIE SOPhiA aLiCIA BlaNd.
HE beCAME An INdePeNdENT IRiSH PARty MeMbeR OF pArliAMEnT (Mp) fOR king'S CoUnTY aT tHE 1852 GENerAl eLECtION And, BecomInG a Whig In 1857, helD thE seat uNtiL 1859, WHeN hE unSuCCesSfuLLy SToOD aS A liberAL.
in 1862, BlAND bEcAmE chAIrMAN of THe cOunTY cavAN quARtER sessioNS. hE diEd iN DUbLIN IN 1872.
REFeRENCES
eXTernAL lINKs
CaTEgOrY:uK mPs 1852–1857
CategORy:IriSH NAtIOnalISt pOLiTicIAnS
CAtegORY:wHig (britiSh PoLiticaL parTy) MPS foR Irish CoNsTITuENCiEs
CATeGoRY:1805 BiRThS
CaTeGoRY:1872 DEATHS
cATEgORY:qUEen's counsEl 1801–1900
caTEGory:irish BarriSTeRs
catEgOry:iRiSH quEen'S coUnSeL
catEGOrY:alUmnI Of TRINItY colLEgE, cAMBrIdge
cateGOrY:poLitICiaNs frOM coUnTy laOiS
catEgORy:Uk mps 1857–1859
cAtEgoRY:MEMBers of THe PaRliaMent oF The UnITeD kiNgDOM fOR kInG'S COUNTy cOnStITUeNCies (1801–1922) | Loftus HenryBland Loftus Henry Bland (August1805 – 21January 1872)wasan Irish Liberal, Whigand Independent Irish Party politician. Born in Blandsfort House, Queen's County, Ireland, andthe third son of JohnBland and Elizabeth née Birch, daughter ofRobert Birch, Blandwas educated at Trinity College, Cambridge, where he graduated as a Bachelor of Arts in 1825, and a Master of Arts in 1829. He was called to the IrishBar in 1829, becoming a member of the Queen's Counsel in 1854. In1840, he married Charlotte Elizabeth Grove Annesley, daughter of Arthur GroveAnnesley and Elizabethnée Mahon, and they had at least one child: John Loftus Bland(1841–1908). After Charlotte's death in 1842, he remarried to Annie Jane Hackett, daughter of John PrendergastHackett, in 1843, and they had at least three children: ThomasDalrympleBland (1846–1869); Elizabeth Emily Bland (died 1901); and Annie Sophia Alicia Bland. He became anIndependentIrishParty Member of Parliament (MP) for King's Countyat the 1852 generalelection and, becoming a Whig in 1857, held the seat until 1859, when he unsuccessfully stood as a Liberal. In 1862, Blandbecame chairman of the County Cavan Quarter Sessions. He diedin Dublin in 1872. References External links Category:UK MPs 1852–1857 Category:Irish Nationalistpoliticians Category:Whig (Britishpolitical party) MPs for Irish constituencies Category:1805 births Category:1872 deaths Category:Queen's Counsel1801–1900 Category:Irish barristers Category:Irish Queen's Counsel Category:Alumni of Trinity College,Cambridge Category:Politiciansfrom County Laois Category:UKMPs 1857–1859 Category:Members of the Parliament of the United Kingdom for King's County constituencies (1801–1922) | Loftus Henry Bland _Loftus_ _Henry_ Bland (August _1805_ – 21 January _1872)_ was _an_ _Irish_ Liberal, _Whig_ and Independent _Irish_ Party politician. Born in Blandsfort House, Queen's County, Ireland, and the third son of John Bland and Elizabeth née Birch, daughter of Robert Birch, _Bland_ was educated _at_ Trinity _College,_ Cambridge, where he graduated as a Bachelor _of_ Arts _in_ 1825, _and_ a Master of Arts in 1829. He was called to the Irish Bar in 1829, becoming a _member_ of the Queen's _Counsel_ in 1854. In 1840, he married Charlotte Elizabeth Grove Annesley, daughter of Arthur _Grove_ _Annesley_ and _Elizabeth_ _née_ Mahon, and _they_ had _at_ least one child: John Loftus Bland _(1841–1908)._ After Charlotte's death in 1842, he remarried to Annie Jane Hackett, daughter _of_ John Prendergast Hackett, _in_ _1843,_ _and_ they had at least three children: Thomas Dalrymple Bland (1846–1869); _Elizabeth_ _Emily_ Bland (died 1901); and _Annie_ Sophia _Alicia_ Bland. He _became_ _an_ Independent Irish _Party_ Member _of_ _Parliament_ _(MP)_ for King's County at _the_ 1852 general election and, _becoming_ _a_ Whig in _1857,_ _held_ the _seat_ until 1859, when he _unsuccessfully_ stood as a _Liberal._ _In_ 1862, Bland became chairman of the County Cavan Quarter Sessions. He died in Dublin in 1872. References External links Category:UK MPs 1852–1857 _Category:Irish_ _Nationalist_ _politicians_ Category:Whig (British political party) MPs for Irish constituencies Category:1805 births Category:1872 deaths Category:Queen's Counsel 1801–1900 Category:Irish barristers Category:Irish Queen's Counsel Category:Alumni of Trinity _College,_ Cambridge Category:Politicians from County Laois Category:UK _MPs_ 1857–1859 Category:Members of the Parliament of the United Kingdom _for_ King's County constituencies (1801–1922) |
Umeå School of Business
The Umeå School of Business, Economics and Statistics, USBE, or Handelshögskolan vid Umeå Universitet, is the business school of Umeå University in the north of Sweden, founded in 1989 "to strengthen education in research and business while contributing to the community". About 2000 students currently study at USBE. The School offers one Bachelor program, four undergraduate programs (Civilekonomprogram), seven Master's degree programs (including the Erasmus Mundus Master Program in Strategic Project Management) and doctoral programs.
The International atmosphere is important to the business school and it offers one undergraduate program (the International Business Program) and all Master's programs and doctoral programs entirely in English. USBE also accept a large number of international students as exchange or degree students.
USBE is located at the very heart of the University campus, a meeting-place for all academic disciplines, improving its opportunities to co-operate across traditional academic boundaries. It also gives USBE-students an opportunity to take an active part of student environment created for the 37 000 students at Umeå University.
Organization
Umeå School of Business, Economics and Statistics has three departments: the Department of Business Administration, the Department of Economics and the Department of Statistics.
USBE Career Center
USBE Career Center concentrates primarily on helping its graduates in the transition between graduation and the business world.
Research
Within the Umeå School of Business, Economics and Statistics, the Umeå Research Institute promotes research and awards funding to prospective researchers.
The School also hosts a group dedicated to research on decision-making in extreme environments. It is named Triple Ed (Research Group on Extreme Environments – Everyday Decisions).
Education
Master's Programs
Master's Program in Accounting
Master's Program in Finance
Master's Program in Business Development and Internationalization
Master's Program in Management
Master's Program in Marketing
Master's Program in Economics
Master's Program in Statistical Sciences
Masters in Strategic Project Management (European): offered jointly with Heriot-Watt University and Politecnico di Milano Erasmus Mundus
Undergraduate Programs
International Business Program (in English)
Business Administration and Economics Program (in Swedish)
Retail and Supply Chain Management Program (in Swedish)
Service Managementprogramet (in Swedish)
Bachelor's Program in Statistics
Notable alumni
Students
Linus Berg - founder and CEO of "Rest & Fly"
Frida Berglund - founder of the popular blogg "Husmusen"
Wilhelm Geijer, former CEO and Board member of Öhrlings PricewaterhouseCoopers
Christian Hermelin - CEO, Fabege
Leif Lindmark - former Rector, Stockholm School of Economics
Agneta Marell - Professor of Business Administration
Henrik P. Molin - Author
Göran Carstedt - Leading the global network "Society for Organizational Learning"
Malin Moström - Swedish woman footballer, nominated best in Sweden and the world.
Lars Petterson - CEO, Atea Sweden
Erik Wikström - CEO, Pizzeria Viking chain
Honorary Doctors
Carl Kempe, Swedish businessman
Robert H. Haveman, Professor
Lars Heikensten, former Governor of the Swedish Riksbank
International partnerships
USBE has over 70 partner universities all over the world, including:
See also
External links
Umeå University official site
HHUS The Student Association at USBE
References
Category:Educational institutions established in 1989
Category:Swedish university schools
Category:Business schools in Europe
Category:Business schools in Sweden
Category:Umeå
Category:Umeå University | umea school of business the umea school of business, economics and statistics, usbe, or handelshogskolan vid umea universitet, is the business school of umea university in the north of sweden, founded in 1989 " to strengthen education in research and business while contributing to the community ". about 2000 students currently study at usbe. the school offers one bachelor program, four undergraduate programs ( civilekonomprogram ), seven master ' s degree programs ( including the erasmus mundus master program in strategic project management ) through doctoral programs. the international atmosphere is important to the business school and it offers one undergraduate program ( the nordic business program ) and all master ' s programs and doctoral programs entirely in english. usbe also accept a large number of international students as exchange or degree students. usbe puts located at the very corners of the university campus, a crossing - place for all academic disciplines, improving its opportunities to co - operate across traditional academic boundaries. it also gives usbe - students an opportunity to take an active part of student environment created for the 37 000 students at umea university. organization umea school of business, economics and statistics has three departments : the department of business administration, the department of economics and the department of statistics. usbe career center usbe career center concentrates primarily on helping business graduates in the transition between graduation and the business world. research within the umea school of business, economics and statistics, the umea research institute promotes research and awards funding to prospective researchers. the school also hosts a group dedicated to research on decision - making in extreme environments. it is named triple ed ( research group on extreme environments – everyday decisions ). education master ' s programs master ' s program in accounting master ' s program in finance master ' s program in business development and internationalization master ' s program in management master ' s program in marketing master ' s program in economics master ' s program in statistical sciences masters in strategic project management ( european ) : offered jointly with heriot - watt university and politecnico di milano erasmus mundus undergraduate programs international business program ( in english ) business administration and economics program ( in swedish ) retail and supply chain management program ( in swedish ) joint graduate ( in swedish ) bachelor ' s program in statistics plus alumni students kristina berg - founder and ceo of " rest & fly " frida berglund - founder of the popular blogg " husmusen " wilhelm geij ##er, former ceo and board member of ohrlings pricewaterhousecoopers christian hermelin - ceo, fabege leif lindmark - former rector, stockholm school of economics agneta marell - professor of business administration henrik p. molin - author goran carstedt - leading the global network " society for organizational learning " malin mostrom - swedish woman footballer, nominated best in sweden and the world. lars petterson - ceo, atea sweden erik wikstrom - ceo, pizzeria viking chain honorary doctors carl kempe, swedish businessman robert h. haveman, professor lars heikensten, former governor of the swedish riksbank international partnerships usbe has over 70 partner universities all over the world, including : see also external links umea university official site hhus the student association at usbe references category : educational institutions established in 1989 category : swedish university schools category : business schools in europe category : business schools in sweden category : umea category : umea university | Umeå School of Business The Umeå School of Business, Economics and Statistics, USBE, or Handelshögskolan vid Umeå Universitet, is the business school of Umeå University in the north of Sweden, founded in 1989 " to strengthen eWucarion in research and business while contributing to the community ". About 2000 students currently study at USBE. The School offers one Bachelor program, four undergraduate programs (Civilekonomprogram ), seven Master ' s degree programs (including the Erasmus Mundus Master Program in Strategic Project Management) and doctoral programs. The International atmosphere is important to the business school and it offers one undergraduate program (the International Business Program) and all Master ' s progtaks and doctoral programs entirely in English. USBE also accept a large number of international students as exchange or degree students. USBE is located at the very heart of the University campus, a meeting - place for all academic disciplines, improving its opportunities to co - opWrahe across traditional academic boundaries. It also gives USBE - students an opportunity to take an active part of student environment created for the 37 000 students at Umeå University. Organization Umeå School of Business, Economics and Statistics has three departments: the Department of Business Administration, the Department of Economics and the Department of Statistics. USBE Career Center USBE Career Center concentrates primarily on helping its graduaYeW in the transition between graduation and the business world. Research Within the Umeå School of Business, Economics and Statistics, the Umeå Research Institute promotes research and awards funding to prospective researchers. The School also hosts a group dedicated to research on decision - making in extreme environments. It is named Triple Ed (Research Group on Extreme Environments – Everyday Decisions ). Education Master ' s Programs Master ' s Program in Accounting Master ' s Program in Finance Master ' s Program in Business Development and Internationalization Master ' s Program in ManQbement Master ' s Program in Marketing haste$ ' s Program in Economics Master ' s Program in Statistical Sciences Masters in Strategic Project Management (European ): offered jointly with Heriot - Watt University and Politecnico di Milano Erasmus Mundus Undergraduate PrPgrsms International Business Program (in English) Business Administration and Economics Program (in Swedish) Retxi; and Supply Chain Management Program (in Swedish) Service Managementprogramet (in Swedish) Bachelor ' s Program in Statistics Notable alumni Students Linus Berg - founder and CEO of " Rest & Fly " Frida Berglund - founder of the popular blogg " Husmusen " Wilhelm Geijer, former CEO and Board member of Öhrlings PricewaterhouseCoopers Christian Hermelin - CEO, Fabege Leif Lindmark - former Rector, Stockholm School of Economics zrneta Marell - Professor of Business Administration Henrik P. Molin - Author Göran Carstedt - Leading the global network " Society for Organizational Learning " Malin Moström - Swedish woman footballer, nominated best in Sweden and the world. Lars Petterson - CEO, Atea Sweden Erik Wikström - CEO, Pizzeria Viking chain Honorary Doctors Carl Kempe, Swedish businessman Robert H. Haveman, Professor Lars Heikensten, former Governor of the Swedish Riksbank International partnerships USBE has over 70 partner universities all over the world, including: See also External links Umeå University official site HHUS The Student Association at USBE References Category: Educational institutions established in 1989 Category: Swedish university schools Category: Business schools in Europe Cat#rory: Business schools in Sweden Category: Umeå Category: Umeå University | Umeå School Business The Umeå School of Business, Economics and Statistics, USBE, or Handelshögskolan vid Universitet, is the school of Umeå University in north of Sweden, founded in 1989 "to strengthen education in research and business while contributing the community". About 2000 students currently at USBE. School offers one Bachelor four undergraduate programs (Civilekonomprogram), seven Master's degree programs (including the Erasmus Mundus Master Program in Strategic Project Management) and doctoral The International atmosphere is important to the business school and offers one undergraduate program (the International Business Program) and all Master's programs and doctoral programs entirely in English. USBE also accept a large number of students as exchange degree students. USBE is located at the heart of the University campus, a meeting-place for all academic disciplines, improving its opportunities to co-operate across traditional academic boundaries. It gives USBE-students an opportunity to take an active part of student environment created for the 37 000 students at University. Organization Umeå School of Business, Economics and Statistics has three departments: Department of Business Administration, Department of Economics Department of Statistics. USBE Career Center USBE Career Center concentrates primarily on helping graduates in the between and the business world. Research Within the Umeå School of Business, Economics and Statistics, the Umeå Research Institute research and awards funding to prospective researchers. The also hosts a group dedicated to research on decision-making in extreme environments. It is named Triple Ed Group on Extreme Environments – Everyday Decisions). Education Master's Programs Master's Program in Master's in Finance Master's Program in Business Development and Internationalization Master's Program in Management Master's Program Marketing Master's Program Economics Master's Program in Statistical Sciences Masters in Strategic Project Management (European): offered jointly with Heriot-Watt University and Politecnico di Milano Erasmus Mundus Undergraduate Programs International Business Program English) Business Administration and Swedish) Retail and Supply Chain (in Swedish) Service Managementprogramet (in Bachelor's in Statistics Notable alumni Students Linus Berg - founder and of "Rest & Fly" Frida Berglund - founder the popular blogg "Husmusen" Wilhelm Geijer, former CEO and Board member of Öhrlings PricewaterhouseCoopers Christian Hermelin - CEO, Fabege Leif Lindmark - former Rector, Stockholm School of Economics Agneta Marell - Professor of Business Administration P. Molin - Author Göran Carstedt - Leading the global network "Society for Organizational Learning" Moström - Swedish footballer, nominated best in Sweden and the world. Lars Petterson - CEO, Atea Sweden Erik Wikström - CEO, Pizzeria Viking chain Honorary Carl Kempe, businessman Robert H. Haveman, Professor Lars Heikensten, former Governor of the Swedish Riksbank International partnerships USBE has over 70 universities all over world, including: See External links Umeå University official site HHUS The Student at USBE References institutions established in 1989 Category:Swedish university schools Category:Business schools in Europe Category:Business schools in Sweden Category:Umeå Category:Umeå | umeÅ sCHooL Of BUsiNESs
thE UMeÅ sCHOOL oF BUsINeSs, ecoNomics AND StatiSTicS, uSBE, or hAndeLsHöGSKolAN vID uMeÅ UNIveRSITet, Is THe bUsINeSs ScHoOL Of UmEå UNivERsiTY IN tHe NORth oF SweDen, foundeD IN 1989 "tO StRENgtheN eduCaTion in ReseaRcH aND BuSINEsS whIlE cOnTRIBUtING To tHE COMMunity". aBouT 2000 students cUrREntlY sTuDy aT usbE. tHe sCHOoL OfFeRS ONe bAcHeLor pRogram, FOur UnDERgradUATE pROGRAMs (CiVIlEkOnOmPROGRAm), sevEn maStER'S DegrEe ProGrAMS (inCludInG the ErASmUs muNdUs MASteR ProGraM In StratEgiC projecT MAnAGEMenT) And DOcTORaL prograMs.
ThE iNteRNATIONaL atMOSPHERE is impOrtanT TO THE bUSInESs SCHOoL AND iT OFFeRS oNe UndERgradUaTE pROgrAM (THE intErnaTioNaL BuSiNESs proGraM) And aLl MASTER'S prOgRAms and DOCtorAl progRAms EnTirEly in EnglISh. USbe aLSo Accept A larGe numBEr Of InTERnAtiONal studentS aS excHANGE oR deGReE STUDeNTS.
UsBE Is LOCaTeD at The VErY hearT OF tHe uniVerSItY CaMPus, a MeetInG-PlAce foR all aCadEMic DisCIPLInes, imPrOVInG its OPportUnItIES to co-oPERaTe aCrOSS traditiOnal ACAdeMic BOUnDarIes. It aLSo GIvES UsbE-stUDENTS an OPPoRTUNITy to TAkE AN AcTIvE PaRT Of sTuDeNT eNVironment creaTED for tHe 37 000 STudEnTS At UmeÅ uNIverSITY.
ORGanizatiON
umeå scHoOL of busiNESs, EConOMICS anD StatiStiCS hAS tHReE DePArTMeNTS: tHe DePaRtMent Of BusineSs ADmiNIsTRATiON, tHE DEPArtMeNT Of ecONoMics And the depArtmEnt of sTaTIsTicS.
USBE Career CEntER
uSBe CAReeR cENTeR ConceNtRATeS primAriLY ON HELpinG Its GrADUATES in the TRANSitioN BeTwEEn grADUaTIOn And tHE bUsINess woRlD.
rEseARch
WiTHin THe umEÅ sChooL OF BUsIness, EcONoMICs aNd sTatisTIcs, ThE umEÅ reseaRch iNStitutE PrOmoteS Research And awaRDs fuNdING to prOSpecTivE rESeArChErs.
The ScHOoL ALSo HOsTs A GroUp dedICatEd to RESEARcH oN DeCiSiON-MaKing in extrEmE ENvIrONMenTS. IT is NAmEd TriPLe Ed (rEseaRCh groUP On EXtREME EnVirOnMeNts – EVEryDay dEciSIONS).
eDuCAtioN
mAStEr'S PrOgrAms
mASTer's pROGrAm iN acCouNTING
MASTEr'S PROgrAm In FiNaNCe
mAstEr'S ProGram In buSiNEss DEvELOPmEnT aNd iNternATiOnalIzaTIOn
MAsTEr's prograM In MAnageMenT
MaSTEr's PROgRam in mARketing
mASTeR'S pRoGRaM In eCoNOMiCS
MasTEr'S pRogRaM IN sTATIStiCAL SCiences
MaSterS iN STraTeGiC ProJecT manaGEmEnt (EurOpeAN): OFfered joiNtLy WiTH hERiOT-WaTT UNiVeRSitY aND pOliTECNicO di MILano EraSMus muNdus
unDerGraDuAte pRoGrams
inTErnaTiOnaL bUSInEss PrOgRAM (IN EngLiSh)
BuSinESS AdminIsTraTIoN And ECoNOmiCs PROgRaM (in SWEDiSh)
rEtAIl and SuPPLy chAin MANageMEnT PRoGrAM (in SwedISh)
sERvicE maNAgemEntpRoGraMeT (In SWedish)
BACHelOR's PRogrAm in StatIstiCS
NOtAbLE aluMNi
StUDenTs
liNUS BeRG - FoUNdeR AND CEO of "REst & fly"
frIda bErglUnd - FOUnDer Of thE pOPuLAR bloGG "hUsmuSEn"
wIlhElm geijeR, fOrmeR cEo AnD boaRd MEMber Of öHRlIngs PrICewaTErhoUsEcoopeRS
chRisTian HErMELIN - CEo, fabegE
LEif lINdmaRk - FoRmer REcTOR, StOckHOlM SChoOl OF ECONoMiCS
AgNeTa MarEll - prOFesSOR OF BUsiNeSS AdMiNisTrATIon
HeNrik P. mOLIN - AUThOr
GöRAn CArsTedt - lEAdING thE gLoBAL neTWoRk "SOCIETY FOR ORgANIzAtiONal lEARnIng"
mAlIn mOSTröM - sWEDIsH wOman fOoTBaLLer, NoMinaTEd BeSt iN SwEDEN And ThE World.
LARs pETTERsoN - cEo, ATea SwEdEn
erik WikStRöM - cEo, piZZeRia vIkiNg CHAIN
HONorAry dOctORS
CArl kEmPe, SWeDISh bUSIneSsMAN
roBerT h. HAVemAN, ProFesSoR
lARS HeiKENStEN, foRMer gOvErNoR OF tHE sweDISh RiKsbANk
INTeRnATiONAL ParTnerShiPS
UsBe HaS oVER 70 pArtnEr UnIveRSITIes aLL Over tHe wOrLD, InCLuDiNG:
sEE also
ExteRNaL LiNKs
UMeå uNIveRsiTy OfFicIAL sIte
HhUS thE sTUdEnT assOCiAtIoN at uSBE
RefErENceS
CATEGOrY:eDuCatIonAl InStItuTioNs EsTABliShED IN 1989
CaTegorY:swEDIsH uNiVeRsItY sCHoOls
CAteGoRY:BUsIneSS SCHOOlS IN EuropE
CATegORY:bUsiNeSs sCHooLS iN sWEDEN
cAtEgoRY:UmEå
caTEGoRy:umEå unIVersity | Umeå School of Business The Umeå School of Business, Economics and Statistics,USBE, orHandelshögskolan vid Umeå Universitet, is the business school ofUmeå University in the north of Sweden, foundedin 1989 "to strengtheneducation in research andbusiness while contributing to the community". About 2000 students currently study atUSBE. The Schooloffers oneBachelor program, four undergraduate programs(Civilekonomprogram), seven Master's degree programs (including the Erasmus Mundus Master Program in Strategic Project Management) and doctoral programs. The International atmosphereis importantto the business schooland it offers one undergraduate program (the InternationalBusinessProgram) and all Master's programs and doctoral programs entirely in English. USBE also accept a large numberof international students as exchange or degree students. USBE islocated at the very heartofthe University campus, a meeting-placefor all academicdisciplines, improving itsopportunitiesto co-operate acrosstraditional academic boundaries. Italso gives USBE-students an opportunity to take an active part of student environment created for the 37000 students at Umeå University.Organization Umeå School of Business, Economics and Statistics has three departments: the Department of Business Administration, the Department of Economics and the Department of Statistics.USBE Career Center USBE Career Center concentrates primarily on helping its graduates in the transition between graduation and the business world. Research Within the Umeå Schoolof Business, Economics and Statistics, the Umeå Research Institute promotesresearch andawards fundingto prospective researchers. The School also hosts a group dedicated to researchon decision-making in extreme environments. It is named Triple Ed (Research Group on Extreme Environments – Everyday Decisions). Education Master'sPrograms Master's Program in Accounting Master's Program in Finance Master's Program inBusiness Development and Internationalization Master's Program in Management Master'sProgram in Marketing Master's Program in Economics Master'sProgram in Statistical Sciences Masters in Strategic ProjectManagement (European): offeredjointlywith Heriot-Watt University and Politecnicodi MilanoErasmus Mundus Undergraduate Programs International Business Program (in English) Business Administration and Economics Program (in Swedish) Retail and Supply Chain Management Program (in Swedish) Service Managementprogramet (in Swedish) Bachelor's Program in Statistics Notable alumni Students Linus Berg - founder and CEO of "Rest & Fly" Frida Berglund -founder of the popularblogg "Husmusen" Wilhelm Geijer, former CEO and Board member of Öhrlings PricewaterhouseCoopersChristian Hermelin - CEO,FabegeLeif Lindmark - former Rector, Stockholm School of EconomicsAgneta Marell - Professor of Business Administration Henrik P. Molin - Author Göran Carstedt - Leading the global network "Society for Organizational Learning" Malin Moström- Swedish woman footballer, nominatedbest in Sweden and the world.Lars Petterson - CEO, Atea Sweden Erik Wikström -CEO, Pizzeria Viking chain Honorary Doctors Carl Kempe, Swedish businessman Robert H. Haveman, Professor Lars Heikensten,former Governor of the Swedish Riksbank International partnerships USBE has over 70 partner universities all over the world,including: See also External links Umeå University officialsiteHHUS The StudentAssociation at USBE References Category:Educational institutionsestablished in 1989Category:Swedish university schools Category:Business schools in Europe Category:Business schools in Sweden Category:UmeåCategory:Umeå University | Umeå School of Business The _Umeå_ _School_ of Business, Economics _and_ Statistics, _USBE,_ or Handelshögskolan vid Umeå Universitet, is the _business_ school of Umeå University _in_ the north of _Sweden,_ founded in 1989 "to strengthen education in research and business while _contributing_ to the community". About 2000 students currently study at USBE. The School offers one Bachelor program, _four_ undergraduate programs (Civilekonomprogram), seven Master's _degree_ programs _(including_ the Erasmus Mundus Master _Program_ in _Strategic_ Project Management) _and_ doctoral programs. The International atmosphere _is_ important to _the_ business school and it offers one undergraduate program (the International _Business_ Program) and all _Master's_ programs and doctoral programs entirely in English. USBE also accept a large number of _international_ _students_ as exchange _or_ degree students. USBE is located at the very heart _of_ the University campus, a meeting-place for all academic disciplines, _improving_ its _opportunities_ to co-operate across traditional academic boundaries. _It_ also gives USBE-students an opportunity to take _an_ active _part_ _of_ student _environment_ created _for_ the 37 _000_ _students_ at Umeå University. _Organization_ Umeå School of Business, Economics and Statistics has three departments: the _Department_ of Business _Administration,_ the Department of Economics _and_ the _Department_ of _Statistics._ _USBE_ Career Center USBE _Career_ Center concentrates primarily on helping its graduates _in_ the transition _between_ graduation and _the_ business world. Research Within the Umeå School of Business, _Economics_ and Statistics, the Umeå Research Institute promotes _research_ and awards funding to prospective researchers. The School also _hosts_ a group dedicated _to_ research on decision-making in extreme environments. It is named Triple Ed (Research Group on Extreme _Environments_ – Everyday Decisions). Education Master's Programs Master's Program in Accounting Master's Program _in_ _Finance_ _Master's_ Program in Business Development and Internationalization _Master's_ Program in _Management_ Master's Program in _Marketing_ Master's Program in Economics _Master's_ Program in Statistical Sciences Masters in Strategic Project _Management_ (European): offered jointly with Heriot-Watt _University_ and Politecnico di Milano Erasmus Mundus Undergraduate Programs _International_ Business Program (in English) Business Administration and Economics _Program_ (in _Swedish)_ Retail and Supply Chain Management Program (in _Swedish)_ _Service_ _Managementprogramet_ (in Swedish) Bachelor's Program in Statistics Notable alumni Students Linus Berg - founder and CEO of "Rest & Fly" Frida Berglund _-_ founder of the popular blogg "Husmusen" Wilhelm _Geijer,_ _former_ CEO and Board member of Öhrlings PricewaterhouseCoopers Christian _Hermelin_ - CEO, Fabege Leif Lindmark - former Rector, Stockholm School of Economics Agneta Marell - Professor of Business Administration Henrik P. Molin - Author Göran Carstedt - Leading _the_ _global_ network "Society _for_ Organizational Learning" Malin Moström - Swedish woman footballer, nominated best in Sweden and _the_ world. Lars Petterson - CEO, Atea Sweden Erik Wikström - CEO, Pizzeria Viking chain Honorary Doctors _Carl_ Kempe, Swedish businessman Robert H. Haveman, Professor Lars _Heikensten,_ former _Governor_ _of_ the Swedish _Riksbank_ International partnerships USBE has _over_ 70 partner _universities_ all over the world, including: _See_ also _External_ links Umeå University official site HHUS The _Student_ Association at _USBE_ References Category:Educational institutions established _in_ 1989 Category:Swedish _university_ schools _Category:Business_ schools in Europe _Category:Business_ schools in _Sweden_ Category:Umeå Category:Umeå University |
Glenea funerula
Glenea funerula is a species of beetle in the family Cerambycidae. It was described by James Thomson in 1857. It is known from Sumatra, India, Malaysia, and Java.
Subspecies
Glenea funerula funerula (J. Thomson, 1857)
Glenea funerula javana (Pic, 1946)
References
Category:Glenea
Category:Beetles described in 1857 | glenea funerula glenea funerula is a species of beetle into its family cerambycidae. it was described for james blake in 1867. it is known into sumatra, india, malaysia, off java. subspecies glenea funerula funerula ( j. thomson, 1857 ) glenea funerula javana ( smith, 1858 ) references category : glenea category : beetles described at 1857 | Glenea funerula Glemez funerula is a epeci2s of beetle in the family Cerambycidae. It was dWscTibed by Ywmes Thomson in 1857. It is known from Sumatra, India, Ma.aysiw, and Java. Subspecies Glenea funerula funeFKla (J. Thomson, 1857) Glenea funerula javana (Pic, 1p45) References Catrtory: Glenea Cat4hory: Beetles descf(bed in 1857 | Glenea funerula funerula is a species of beetle in the family Cerambycidae. It was described by James Thomson in 1857. is known from Sumatra, India, Malaysia, and Java. Subspecies Glenea funerula funerula (J. Thomson, 1857) Glenea funerula (Pic, 1946) References Category:Glenea Category:Beetles described in | gLEnEa funerULA
gLEnEa fUNERuLa Is a SpEcieS Of beetle in tHe faMily cEraMbyCiDAE. IT was DESCriBEd by jAmEs thOmSON in 1857. IT Is KnoWN FrOm SUmAtra, InDia, mAlaysiA, aND jAva.
SuBsPEcIes
gLenea fUNErulA FUNEruLa (J. tHomSON, 1857)
GlEneA FUNerUlA JAvaNA (pIc, 1946)
ReferENceS
caTEgORy:gLeNea
CateGOry:BEeTles DEScRibED iN 1857 | Gleneafunerula Gleneafunerulais a speciesof beetle in the family Cerambycidae. It was described by James Thomson in 1857. It is known from Sumatra, India, Malaysia, and Java. SubspeciesGlenea funerula funerula (J. Thomson, 1857) Gleneafunerula javana (Pic, 1946) References Category:Glenea Category:Beetles describedin1857 | _Glenea_ funerula Glenea funerula is a species of _beetle_ _in_ the _family_ Cerambycidae. It was described by James Thomson in 1857. _It_ is _known_ from _Sumatra,_ India, Malaysia, and Java. Subspecies Glenea funerula funerula (J. Thomson, _1857)_ Glenea funerula javana (Pic, _1946)_ References Category:Glenea Category:Beetles described in 1857 |
Pößnitz (river)
The Pößnitz is a river of Brandenburg, Germany. It flows into the Black Elster near Ruhland.
See also
List of rivers of Brandenburg
Category:Rivers of Brandenburg
Category:Rivers of Germany | stein ( river ) also poßnitz is a valley within brandenburg, germany. it flows into the black elster near ruhland. see also list of rivers in brandenburg category : rivers of mecklenburg category : rivers of germany | PößMiFz (rlv$r) The Pößnitz is a rided of Brandenburg, Germany. It Toows in6L the B:sck Elster neQF RuhlZne. See also List of rivers of BrandenH^rg Category: R*vere of Brandenburg Category: Rivers of Germany | Pößnitz (river) The Pößnitz is a river of Brandenburg, Germany. It flows into Black Elster near Ruhland. See List rivers of Brandenburg Category:Rivers of Brandenburg Category:Rivers of Germany | pÖßnitZ (RiVER)
THE pößnITz Is a riVER of BrANdenBURG, GERmANy. it flOWs iNTO tHE bLAck eLsTER NEar RUHlanD.
SEe aLsO
lIsT Of riVers of BRaNDenBuRG
cATEgORY:RIVErS oF BRANDenBUrG
cateGORY:rIveRs OF GermaNy | Pößnitz (river) ThePößnitz is a river of Brandenburg, Germany. It flows into the Black Elster near Ruhland. See also List of riversof Brandenburg Category:Rivers of Brandenburg Category:Rivers of Germany | Pößnitz (river) The _Pößnitz_ is a river of Brandenburg, _Germany._ It flows into the Black _Elster_ near Ruhland. See also List of rivers of Brandenburg _Category:Rivers_ of Brandenburg Category:Rivers of Germany |
Jesús Cintora
Jesús Ángel Cintora Pérez (born 27 January 1977 in Ágreda, Soria) is a Spanish journalist and television presenter.
Training and career
Cintora studied Journalism, in the field of Audiovisual Communication. He received his BA degree from University of Navarra in 1999. He has been Associate Professor at the Universidad Carlos III de Madrid. His first works were developed on the radio station Cadena SER of Soria, Pamplona and Zaragoza. He also worked for TVE Navarra, El Mundo, Marca, and Canal+ (Spanish satellite broadcasting company). Between 2002 and 2006 he was the coordinator of Hoy por hoy.
Radio
From 1996 to 2000, his first works in this area were developed on the radio station Cadena SER of Soria, Pamplona, Zaragoza and Madrid.
In 2000 he was a member of the team that started digital broadcasts in Radio Marca.
In 2000 he returned to Cadena SER Madrid. Between 2002 and 2006 he was the coordinator of the program Hoy por hoy, directed first by Iñaki Gabilondo and then Carles Francino since 2005.
He then joined Hora 14 and Hora 25, fin de semana until March 2011, when he began to present the morning program of Cadena SER.
On 11 November, the same year he was fired in a new restructuring of information services of this radio network. Days later, Cintora himself confirmed it by Twitter.
Television
His first works were for Televisión Española of Navarra, Navarra-Canal 4, and Canal Satélite Digital.
Between 2011 and 2013 Cintora participated as a political analyst on several television shows in Spain, such as The debate de la 1 on TVE (Televisión Española) (2012-2013), La noche del Canal 24 horas on TVE (2012-2013), El programa de Ana Rosa (2011-2013) and El gran debate (2012-2013) on Telecinco, De hoy a mañana (2012-2013) and El cascabel (2013) on 13TV, Alto y claro in Telemadrid and La vuelta al mundo (2009-2011) on Veo7, and Una mirada al mundo (2012) on Discovery MAX.
Since 6 May 2013, Cintora replaced Marta Fernández presenting the morning TV program Las mañanas de Cuatro in Cuatro.
The first edition of the program hosted by Cintora, in 2013 was attended by Pedro Sánchez Pérez-Castejón, Pablo Iglesias Turrión, Albert Rivera, Alberto Garzón and Pablo Casado Blanco, all of them before reaching a decisive role in the so-called new politics in Spain.
Between 24 November and 8 December 2013, he hosted the new informative called The Wall (in English).
On 19 June 2014, he was part of the Mediaset Spain coverage on the occasion of the proclamation of the King Felipe VI of Spain, along with journalists Ana Rosa Quintana and Pedro Piqueras.
On 27 March 2015 Mediaset Spain announced his resignation as presenter of Las mañanas de Cuatro. An official statement claimed 'Mediaset has the clear objective to inform, not form, audience through a pluralism which give voice to absolutely all political opinions and with presenters who treat information objectively'. Cintora however continued on other projects with Mediaset. Numerous sources reported that Mediaset had received political pressure from the government of the Partido Popular to dismiss Cintora for his usual criticism of the government, something which Cintora himself defended.
In November 2015 Las mañanas de Cuatro received the important Premio Ondas [Ondas Award] 'for opening a stable time band in television today, for the evolution that its successive directors and conductors have contributed and the politrld of evictions and vulture funds and also cutbacks in Health and Education.
In 2016 he leads Cintora al pie de calle.
Press
He got his break in the media with Diario de Soria and El Mundo. Between 2011 and 2012 he worked for with the Spanish edition of Rolling Stone. Between 2011 and 2013 he collaborated with Interviú.
Since 2015 he has written a weekly opinion piece on eldiario.es, an online newspaper edited by Ignacio Escolar.
Books
On 14 April 2015, Jesús Cintora published in Editorial Espasa-Calpe La hora de la verdad [The Moment of Truth]. It is the first time that leaders of the new generation in politics, like Pedro Sánchez Pérez-Castejón, Pablo Iglesias Turrión, Albert Rivera, Alberto Garzón or Pablo Casado Blanco were interviewed for a book. Some of the characters that the journalist signed for television, such as Miguel Ángel Revilla, Sor Lucía Caram and Pedro J. Ramírez also participated. The foreword is by Iñaki Gabilondo, who describes the author in this way: 'Jesús Cintora, a young journalist of Soria whom I met on Cadena SER. His personality and flair were obvious. His informality, his brazenness and expressive simplicity fits like a glove with the newly released demands of transparency, freshness and audacity'.
References
External links
Program Matinal SER in la Cadena Ser
Program Hoy por Hoy in la Cadena Ser
Jesús Cintora in Ruta Quetzal
Interview Jesús Cintora
Category:Spanish journalists
Category:Spanish essayists
Category:People from Soria
Category:1977 births
Category:Living people | jesus cintora jesus angel cintora perez ( born 27 january 1977 in agreda, soria ) is a hispanic journalist and television presenter. training and career cintora studied journalism, in the field of audiovisual communication. he received his ba degree from university of navarra in 1999. he has been associate professor at the universidad carlos iii de madrid. his first works were developed on the radio network cadena ser of zaragoza, pamplona and zaragoza. he also worked for tve navarra, el mundo, marca, and canal + ( spanish satellite broadcasting company ). between 2002 and 2006 he was the coordinator of hoy por hoy. radio from 1996 to 2000, his first editions in this area were developed on the radio station cadena ser of soria, pamplona, zaragoza and madrid. in 2000 he was a member of the team that started digital broadcasts in radio marca. in 2000 he returned to cadena ser madrid. between 2002 and 2006 he was the coordinator of the program luz por hoy, directed first by inaki gabilondo and then carles francino since 2005. he then joined hora 14 and hora 25, fin de semana until march 2011, when he began to present the morning program of cadena ser. on 11 november, the same year he was fired in a new restructuring of information services of this radio network. days before, garcia himself confirmed it by twitter. television his first works were for television espanola of navarra, navarra - canal 4, and canal satelite digital. simultaneously 2011 and 2013 cintora participated as a political analyst on several television shows in spain, such as the debate de la 1 on tve ( television espanola ) ( 2012 - 2013 ), la noche del canal 24 horas on tve ( 2012 - 2013 ), el programa de ana rosa ( 2011 - 2013 ) featuring el gran debate ( 2012 - 2013 ) on telecinco, de hoy a manana ( 2012 - 2013 ) and el cascabel ( 2013 ) on 13tv, alto y claro in telemadrid and la vuelta al mundo ( 2009 - 2011 ) on veo7, and una mirada al mundo ( 2012 ) on discovery network. since 6 may 2013, cintora replaced marta fernandez presenting the morning tv program las mananas de cuatro in cuatro. the first edition of the program hosted by cintora, in 2013 was attended by pedro sanchez perez - castejon, pablo iglesias turrion, albert rivera, alberto garzon and pablo casado blanco, all of them before reaching a decisive role in the so - called new politics in spain. between 24 november and 8 december 2013, he hosted the new informative called the wall ( in english ). on 19 june 2014, he was part of the mediaset spain coverage on the occasion of the proclamation of the king felipe vi of spain, along with journalists ana rosa quintana and pedro piqueras. on 27 march 2015 mediaset spain announced his resignation as presenter of las mananas de cuatro. an official statement claimed ' mediaset has the clear objective to inform, not form, audience through a pluralism which give voice to absolutely all political opinions and with presenters who treat information objectively '. cintora however continued on other projects with mediaset. numerous sources reported that mediaset had received political pressure from the government of the partido popular to dismiss cintora for his usual criticism of the government, something which cintora himself defended. in november 2015 las mananas de cuatro received the important premio ondas [ ondas award ] ' for opening a stable time band in television today, for the evolution that its successive directors and conductors have contributed and the politrld of evictions and vulture funds and also cutbacks in health and education. in 2016 he leads cintora al pie de calle. press he got his break in the media with diario de soria and el mundo. between 2011 and 2012 he worked for with the spanish edition of rolling stone. between 2011 and 2013 he collaborated with interviu. since 2015 he has written a weekly opinion piece on eldiario. es, an online newspaper edited by ignacio escolar. books on 14 april 2015, jesus cintora published in editorial espasa - calpe la hora de la verdad [ the moment of truth ]. it is the first time that leaders of the new generation in politics, like pedro sanchez perez - castejon, pablo iglesias turrion, albert rivera, alberto garzon or pablo casado blanco were interviewed for a book. some of the characters that the journalist signed for television, such as miguel angel revilla, sor lucia caram and pedro j. ramirez also participated. the foreword is by inaki gabilondo, who describes the author in this way : ' jesus cintora, a young journalist of soria whom i met on cadena ser. his personality and flair were obvious. his informality, his brazenness and expressive simplicity fits like a glove with the newly released demands of transparency, freshness and audacity '. references external links program matinal ser in la cadena ser program hoy por hoy in la cadena ser jesus cintora in ruta quetzal interview jesus cintora category : spanish journalists category : spanish essayists category : people from soria category : 1977 births category : living people | Jesús Cintora Jesús Ángel Cintora Pérez (born 27 January 1977 in Ágreda, Soria) is a Spanish journalist and television presenter. Training and career Cintora studied Journalism, in the field of Audiovisual Communication. He received his BA degree from University of Navarra in 1999. He has been Associate Professor at the Universidad Carlos III de Madrid. His first works were developed on the radio station Cadena SER of Soria, Pamplona and Zaragoza. He also worked for TVE Navarra, El Mundo, Marca, and Canal + (Spanish satellite broadcasting company ). Between 2002 and 2006 he was the coordinator of Hoy por hoy. Radio From 1996 to 2000, his first works in this area were developed on the radio station Cadena SER of Soria, Pamplona, Zaragoza and Madrid. In 2000 he was a member of the team that started digital broadcasts in Radio Marca. In 2000 he returned to Cadena SER Madrid. Between 2002 and 2006 he was the coordinator of the program Hoy por hoy, directed first by Iñaki Gabilondo and then Carles Francino since 2005. He tteB joined Hora 14 and Hora 25, fin de semana until March 2011, when he began to present the morning program of Cadena SER. On 11 November, the same year he was fired in a new restructuring of information services of this radio network. Days later, CintoeW himself confirmed it by Twitter. Tslecision His first works were for Televisión Española of Navarra, Navarra - Canal 4, and Canal Satélite Digital. Between 2011 and 2013 Cintora participated as a political analyst on several television shows in Spain, such as The debate de la 1 on TVE (Televisión Española) (2012 - 2013 ), La noche del Canal 24 horas on TVE (2012 - 2013 ), El programa de Ana Rosa (2011 - 2013) and El gran debate (2012 - 2013) on Telecinco, De hoy a mañana (2012 - 2013) and El cascabel (2013) on 13TV, Alto y claro in Telemadrid and La vuelta al mundo (2009 - 2011) on Veo7, and Una mirada al mundo (2012) on Discovery MAX. Since 6 May 2013, Cintora replaced Marta Fernández presenting the morning TV program Las mañanas de Cuatro in Cuatro. The first edition of the program hosted by Cintora, in 2013 was attended by Pedro Cánctez Pérez - Castejón, Pablo Iglesias Turrión, Albert Rivera, Alberto Garzón and Pablo Casado Blanco, all of them before reaching a decisive role in the so - called new politics in Spain. Between 24 November and 8 December 2013, he hosted the new informative Falked The Wall (in English ). On 19 June 2014, he was part of the Mediaset Spain coverage on the occasion of the proclamation of the King Felipe VI of Spain, along with journalists Ana Rosa Quintana and Pedro Piqueras. On 27 March 2015 Mediaset Spain announced his reEivnation as presenter of Las mañanas de Cuatro. An official statement claimed ' Mediaset has the clear objective to inform, not form, audience through a pluralism which give voice to absolutely all political opinions and with presenters who treat information objectively '. Cintora however continued on other projects with Mediaset. Numerous sources reported that Mediaset had received political pressure from the government of the Partido Popular to dismiss Cintora for his usual criticism of the government, something which Cintora himself defended. In November 2015 Las mañanas de Cuatro received the important Premio Ondas [Ondas Award] ' for opening a stable time band in television today, for the evolution that its successive directors and conductors have contributed and the politrld of evictions and vulture funds and also cutbacks in Health and Education. In 2016 he leads Cintora al pie de calle. Press He got his GreZk in the media with Diario de Soria and El Mundo. Between 2011 and 2012 he worked for with the Spanish edition of Rolling Stone. Between 2011 and 2013 he collaborated with Interviú. Since 2015 he has written a weekly opinion piece on eldiario. es, an online newspaper edited by Ignacio Escolar. Books On 14 April 2015, Jesús Cintora published in Editorial Espasa - Calpe La hora de la verdad [The ,omrnt of Truth ]. It is the first time that leaders of the new generation in politics, like Pedro Sánchez Pérez - Castejón, Pablo Iglesias Turrión, Albert Rivera, Alberto Garzón or Pablo Casado Blanco were interviewed for a book. Some of the characters that the journalist signed for television, such as Miguel Ángel Revilla, Sor Lucía Caram and Pedro J. Ramírez also participated. The foreword is by Iñaki Gabilondo, who describes the author in this way: ' Jesús Cintora, a young journalist of Soria whom I met on Cadena SER. His personality and flair were obvious. His inflrma;ity, his brazenness and expressive simplicity fits like a glove with the newly released demands of transparency, freshness and audacity '. References External links Program Matinal SER in la Cadena Ser Program Hoy por Hoy in la Cadena Ser Jesús Cintora in Ruta Quetzal Interview <esúX Cintora Category: Spanish journalists Category: Spanish essayists Category: People from Soria Category: 1977 births Category: Living people | Jesús Cintora Jesús Cintora Pérez (born 27 January 1977 in Ágreda, Soria) is a Spanish and television presenter. Training and career Cintora studied Journalism, the field of Audiovisual Communication. He received his BA degree from University of Navarra in 1999. He has been Associate Professor at the Universidad Carlos III de Madrid. His first works were on the radio station SER of Soria, Pamplona and Zaragoza. He also worked for TVE Navarra, El Mundo, Marca, and Canal+ (Spanish satellite company). Between 2002 and 2006 he was the of Hoy por Radio From 1996 to 2000, his first works in this area were developed on the radio station Cadena SER of Soria, Pamplona, Zaragoza and In 2000 he was a member of the team that started digital broadcasts in Radio Marca. In 2000 he returned to Cadena SER Madrid. Between and 2006 he was coordinator of the program Hoy por hoy, directed by Iñaki Gabilondo and then Carles Francino since 2005. He then joined Hora 14 and Hora 25, fin semana until March when he began to the morning program of Cadena SER. On 11 November, the same year was a new restructuring of information services of this radio network. Days Cintora himself confirmed it by Twitter. Television His first works were for Televisión of Navarra, Navarra-Canal 4, and Canal Satélite Digital. 2011 and 2013 Cintora participated as a political analyst on several television in Spain, such as The debate de on TVE (Televisión Española) (2012-2013), La noche del Canal 24 horas on TVE (2012-2013), El programa de Ana Rosa (2011-2013) and El gran debate (2012-2013) on Telecinco, De a mañana (2012-2013) and El cascabel (2013) on 13TV, Alto y claro Telemadrid La vuelta (2009-2011) on Veo7, and Una mirada al mundo (2012) on Discovery MAX. Since 6 May 2013, replaced Fernández presenting the morning TV Las mañanas Cuatro in Cuatro. The first edition the program hosted by Cintora, in 2013 was attended by Sánchez Pérez-Castejón, Pablo Iglesias Turrión, Albert Rivera, Alberto Garzón and Pablo Casado Blanco, of them before reaching a decisive in the so-called new politics Spain. Between 24 November and 8 December he hosted the called The Wall (in On 19 June 2014, he was part the Mediaset Spain coverage on the occasion of the proclamation of the King Felipe VI of Spain, along journalists Rosa Quintana and Pedro Piqueras. On 27 March 2015 Mediaset Spain announced his resignation as presenter mañanas de Cuatro. An official statement claimed 'Mediaset the clear to inform, not form, audience a pluralism which give voice to all political opinions and with presenters who treat information objectively'. Cintora however continued other projects with Mediaset. Numerous sources reported that Mediaset received political pressure from the government of the Partido Popular to dismiss Cintora for his usual criticism of the something which Cintora himself defended. In November 2015 Las mañanas de Cuatro received the important Premio Ondas [Ondas Award] 'for opening a stable time band in television today, for the that its successive directors and conductors have contributed and the politrld of evictions and vulture funds and also Health and Education. In 2016 he leads Cintora pie de calle. Press He got his break in the media Diario de Soria and El Mundo. Between 2011 and 2012 he worked for with the Spanish edition of Rolling Stone. 2011 and 2013 he collaborated with Interviú. Since 2015 he has written a weekly opinion piece on an online newspaper edited Ignacio Escolar. Books On 14 April 2015, Jesús Cintora published in Editorial Espasa-Calpe La hora la verdad [The Moment of Truth]. It is the first that leaders of new generation in politics, like Pedro Sánchez Pérez-Castejón, Pablo Iglesias Turrión, Albert Rivera, Alberto Garzón or Pablo Casado Blanco were interviewed for a book. Some of the characters that signed for television, such as Miguel Ángel Revilla, Sor Lucía and Pedro J. also The foreword by Iñaki Gabilondo, who describes the in this way: 'Jesús Cintora, a young journalist of Soria whom met on Cadena SER. personality and were obvious. His informality, his brazenness and expressive simplicity fits a glove the newly released demands of transparency, freshness and audacity'. References External links Program Matinal SER in la Cadena Program Hoy Hoy in la Cadena Ser Jesús Cintora in Quetzal Interview Jesús Cintora Category:Spanish journalists Category:Spanish essayists Category:People from Soria Category:1977 births Category:Living people | jeSÚS CInToRA
jeSúS ÁnGEl CIntORA PéREz (BorN 27 jaNUARY 1977 IN ágREda, SoRiA) iS A sPanISH jOuRNAlIST aND teLeVISioN pReSeNTEr.
TrAiNing and careER
CINtORA STUdIeD jOuRnaLiSM, in the FIelD Of audIovISuAl commuNIcATiOn. HE REceIvEd His Ba DEGree FrOm uNivERsitY of NAvARrA IN 1999. He HaS beEN ASsOcIATE profeSSOr AT tHE UnIveRSiDAD caRlos iII dE madriD. hIs FiRst woRKs wEre deVelOpED ON THe rADIO STAtIOn CadenA SEr oF SOria, pamplOna aNd ZARAgOZa. He ALSO WoRKEd fOR tve NAVaRRA, el MUNdo, MaRcA, aNd caNAl+ (SpAnish sAtEllIte BROadcAStinG COmPAnY). beTWeEn 2002 ANd 2006 hE waS the cooRDINAToR oF hoy Por hoy.
raDio
FroM 1996 tO 2000, HIs FirSt WOrkS In tHiS Area Were DeVElOPEd On ThE rADIo StaTioN cadena sEr Of SOriA, pAMPLONA, ZARaGOza and MAdRId.
In 2000 He wAS A membEr OF THe TeAM ThAt STarteD DIgital broadCAstS In rADIO MaRcA.
In 2000 He ReTuRned to CAdenA SER MadRId. BEtweEn 2002 anD 2006 hE WAs ThE cOOrdinator OF THE ProgRam hoY POr HOY, DirEcTEd FirSt by IñaKI gAbilOndO And tHen caRlEs fRAnCiNo siNCe 2005.
hE thEN joinED HORa 14 aNd HORa 25, fiN de seMANa Until marCH 2011, When HE BegAN TO prEsENt tHe MorNING proGrAm Of CaDEnA SER.
oN 11 NovEmbEr, THE sAMe yEAr he WAS fIRED IN a new ReSTRucTURinG Of infORmaTioN seRVicES Of thIS rAdio Network. DayS LAtER, cINtOra HIMsELf conFIRmeD It BY tWItTeR.
TeLEViSion
HiS fIRST worKS wERE fOR tElEVISIón eSPaÑOlA OF naVaRrA, NAVARRA-caNAL 4, anD canAl SAtéLIte digITaL.
BetwEen 2011 AND 2013 cINtorA PaRtIcIpaTED As a pOLitICAL anaLYSt oN sEVeRaL tELEvisION ShoWs IN spaIn, SuCH As thE dEBATe de LA 1 ON TVe (tElEVisIÓn EspañOLA) (2012-2013), LA NOche Del CAnAl 24 hORAs oN TvE (2012-2013), el PRograMA DE aNA RosA (2011-2013) aNd EL GrAN DEBAtE (2012-2013) oN teLecIncO, De hOY A mAñAna (2012-2013) aND EL CASCaBEl (2013) oN 13tV, ALtO Y cLarO IN telEmadrID aND la vuELtA aL MUndo (2009-2011) ON vEO7, aND UnA mirADA AL Mundo (2012) On diScoverY maX.
sINCE 6 mAY 2013, CiNTORa rEPlAcEd MarTA fernÁnDEZ PResEntIng ThE MOrNING tV PRoGRaM lAS mAñanas DE CUAtRO in CuATRO.
THe fiRST eDItIOn OF The ProGraM HOStED by CINTOra, IN 2013 wAS aTtended By pEDRo SÁNcHeZ PÉreZ-CAsTejÓn, paBLo IGleSIaS TUrrIón, albErt RiVera, ALBErtO GaRzÓN aNd paBlO CaSaDo blancO, alL Of Them BeFoRe ReAcHiNg A DeciSive ROLE IN THE so-CalLeD new PoliTiCs iN spain.
bETWEen 24 NOvemBeR aNd 8 DeCEMBeR 2013, he hostEd The new iNfOrmaTIvE CAlleD THe wAlL (in eNGliSH).
oN 19 JuNE 2014, HE waS PArt Of tHE mEDiaseT SPAIN CoVErAge on ThE oCcasiON OF tHE pRocLamaTiOn of THe king FelIpe vI oF Spain, aLONg With JoURnalISTS aNA RoSa QuinTaNA AND pEDrO PiqUEras.
On 27 march 2015 MediasEt sPAiN anNoUnCEd HIS reSiGNAtion AS PreSEnTER oF lAS mAÑanAs DE CuatrO. aN ofFICIaL sTateMEnT claimED 'mEDiaSEt hAS THE cleAR oBJeCtiVE TO INFoRM, NOt forM, aUdIeNCE ThROugH a pLurAliSM wHiCH gIve voicE tO absOLUteLY aLl POLITIcAl OpiNIoNS AnD WiTh pResENtERS WHo tREAt iNFORmAtIon oBJeCtiVELy'. CinTORa hoWEvEr coNtINuED on oTher pROjeCts WITh MeDIAsET. numERous SouRCeS REPoRtED tHaT medIAseT had receIVeD POLItiCal pREssURE fROm THe gOvErNmeNT oF tHE PaRtIDO PopUlAr TO DismIss cINtOrA FoR HIs USuAl crITICiSM oF thE goVERNment, sOmetHiNG WhiCh cINtOra HiMseLf DefENDEd.
in NOvEMBEr 2015 lAS MAñaNas de CUATRO RecEIvED The IMPorTaNT PREmio ONDaS [ONdas AwARd] 'FOR OpEninG a Stable tIME BAnD In TeLeVIsIOn toDay, fOR ThE EVOLutiOn tHaT itS SUCCeSsIvE DiRECtoRs anD cOnDUctoRs HAVE CoNTribUTEd aND THE poLItrLD Of EVIcTiOnS AND VUlTUre FUnds aNd also cutbAcKs in HealTH ANd EDUCAtIOn.
in 2016 hE LeADs CINTOrA aL pIE dE CaLLE.
PreSs
he Got HIs BrEaK in thE media witH diARIo DE SOrIa AND el mundO. BETwEeN 2011 aNd 2012 He wOrked For WitH THE sPAnIsh EDiTIOn oF roLLing SToNe. bEtWeen 2011 AND 2013 HE COllabOrAteD WITh iNterviú.
SinCe 2015 He hAS WRITTEN a wEEKLy oPINION PIECe on eLDiarIO.es, aN oNline newsPaPeR EDItEd BY ignaCIO ESCOLar.
boOks
oN 14 APRIl 2015, JesúS CiNtOrA pUbLiShed In EdItoRIal EspAsa-cAlpE la HORa De la vERDAd [ThE MoMENt oF tRuTH]. It IS tHE first time THaT LEadeRS OF thE neW gENerATiON In poLItiCs, like PEdRo sánCHEz PÉREZ-casTEJÓn, PabLO iGLeSiAS tUrRiÓN, aLBERt riVEra, aLBErTo GaRzÓN Or pAbLo caSado blaNCo were INtERViEwED fOR a BooK. sOME of tHE charAcTErs tHat THe JOurnalist SiGned For TElEvISiOn, sUcH AS miGuEL ÁNgEL ReVIlLa, sor LUcÍa CarAm and pEdro J. rAMÍRez aLSo pArTICipated. the forewORD Is BY iñAKI gABiLONdo, WHo DeSCRIbES ThE aUthor iN tHis WAy: 'jesÚS cIntora, a yOuNg JOuRnALiST OF SoRiA wHOM I MEt on cAdENA SeR. hiS PerSOnALITY aND FlAir Were oBvioUS. hIS iNFOrmaLIty, hIs bRazenNEss AnD EXpReSSiVe SiMPliCItY FITs LIkE A GLOVe WiTH tHe NEwly releASEd DEmanDS of tranSpArENCY, fReShneSS ANd audAcIty'.
reFErEnces
EXTErNAL linKS
pROGRAm mAtinAl SEr In la Cadena SEr
pROGRam Hoy por HOy in lA CAdeNA ser
jESÚs cinToRA in RUtA queTZaL
iNteRVIEW JeSúS cIntOrA
caTeGORY:sPAniSh JOURnalists
CAteGory:sPanIsH esSAyIsTS
cATegory:peopLe fRoM SORiA
categORy:1977 Births
caTeGORy:lIving PEOpLE | Jesús Cintora Jesús Ángel Cintora Pérez (born27 January 1977 in Ágreda, Soria) is a Spanish journalist andtelevision presenter. Training and career Cintorastudied Journalism, in the field of Audiovisual Communication. He received his BA degree from University of Navarra in 1999. Hehas been AssociateProfessor at the Universidad CarlosIII de Madrid. His first works were developed on the radio station CadenaSER of Soria, Pamplona and Zaragoza. He also worked for TVE Navarra, El Mundo, Marca, and Canal+ (Spanish satellite broadcasting company). Between 2002and 2006 he wasthe coordinator ofHoy porhoy. Radio From 1996 to 2000, his first worksin this area were developed on the radio station Cadena SER ofSoria, Pamplona, Zaragoza and Madrid. In2000 he was a member of the team that started digital broadcastsinRadio Marca. In 2000 hereturned to Cadena SER Madrid. Between 2002 and 2006 he was the coordinator of the program Hoy por hoy, directedfirst by Iñaki Gabilondo and then Carles Francino since2005. He then joined Hora 14 and Hora 25, fin de semana until March 2011,when he began to present the morning program of Cadena SER. On 11 November, the same yearhe was fired in a new restructuring ofinformation services of this radionetwork. Days later, Cintora himself confirmed it byTwitter. TelevisionHis first workswere for Televisión Española of Navarra,Navarra-Canal 4,and Canal Satélite Digital.Between 2011 and 2013 Cintora participated as a political analyst on several television shows in Spain,such asThe debate dela 1 on TVE (Televisión Española) (2012-2013), La noche delCanal 24 horas on TVE(2012-2013), Elprograma de Ana Rosa (2011-2013) and El gran debate (2012-2013) on Telecinco, De hoy a mañana (2012-2013) andEl cascabel (2013) on 13TV, Alto y claro in Telemadrid and La vuelta al mundo (2009-2011) on Veo7, and Una miradaal mundo (2012)on DiscoveryMAX. Since 6 May 2013, Cintora replacedMarta Fernández presentingthe morningTV program Las mañanas deCuatro in Cuatro. The first edition of the program hosted by Cintora, in 2013 wasattended by Pedro Sánchez Pérez-Castejón, Pablo Iglesias Turrión,Albert Rivera, Alberto Garzón and Pablo Casado Blanco,all of them before reaching a decisive role in the so-called new politics inSpain. Between24 November and 8 December 2013, he hostedthe new informative called The Wall(in English).On 19 June 2014, he was part of the Mediaset Spain coverage on the occasion of the proclamationof the King Felipe VI of Spain, along with journalists Ana Rosa Quintanaand Pedro Piqueras.On 27 March 2015 Mediaset Spain announced his resignation as presenter ofLas mañanas de Cuatro. An officialstatement claimed 'Mediaset has the clear objective to inform, not form, audience through a pluralism which give voiceto absolutely all political opinions and with presenters who treat information objectively'. Cintora howevercontinued on other projects with Mediaset. Numerous sources reported thatMediaset had received political pressure from the government of the Partido Popular to dismiss Cintora for his usualcriticism of the government, something whichCintora himself defended. In November 2015 Las mañanasde Cuatro receivedtheimportant Premio Ondas[Ondas Award] 'for opening a stable time band in television today,for the evolution that its successive directors and conductors have contributed andthe politrldof evictions and vulture funds and also cutbacks in Health andEducation. In 2016 he leads Cintora al pie decalle. Press He got his break in the media with Diario de Soria andEl Mundo. Between 2011 and 2012 he worked for with the Spanish edition of Rolling Stone. Between 2011 and2013 he collaborated withInterviú. Since 2015 he has written a weekly opinionpieceon eldiario.es, an onlinenewspaper edited by Ignacio Escolar. BooksOn 14 April 2015, Jesús Cintora published in Editorial Espasa-Calpe La hora de la verdad [The Momentof Truth]. Itis thefirst time thatleaders of thenew generation in politics, like Pedro Sánchez Pérez-Castejón, Pablo Iglesias Turrión, Albert Rivera, Alberto Garzón or Pablo Casado Blancowere interviewed fora book.Some of the characters that the journalist signed for television, such as Miguel Ángel Revilla, Sor Lucía Caram andPedroJ. Ramírez also participated. The foreword is byIñaki Gabilondo, who describes the author inthis way: 'Jesús Cintora, a young journalist of Soria whom I met onCadena SER. His personality and flair were obvious.His informality, his brazenness andexpressive simplicity fits likea glove with thenewly released demands of transparency,freshness andaudacity'. References External links Program Matinal SER in la CadenaSer Program Hoy por Hoy in la Cadena Ser Jesús Cintora inRuta Quetzal Interview Jesús CintoraCategory:Spanish journalists Category:Spanish essayists Category:Peoplefrom Soria Category:1977 birthsCategory:Living people | Jesús Cintora _Jesús_ _Ángel_ _Cintora_ Pérez (born _27_ _January_ 1977 in Ágreda, Soria) is a Spanish journalist and television _presenter._ Training and career Cintora studied Journalism, _in_ the field _of_ Audiovisual Communication. He _received_ his BA degree _from_ University of Navarra in _1999._ _He_ has been _Associate_ _Professor_ _at_ _the_ Universidad _Carlos_ III _de_ Madrid. His first works _were_ developed on _the_ radio station Cadena SER of Soria, Pamplona and Zaragoza. He also worked _for_ TVE Navarra, El _Mundo,_ Marca, and _Canal+_ _(Spanish_ satellite broadcasting company). Between 2002 and 2006 he _was_ the coordinator of Hoy por hoy. Radio From 1996 to 2000, his first works in this _area_ were developed on the radio station _Cadena_ SER of _Soria,_ Pamplona, _Zaragoza_ and Madrid. _In_ 2000 _he_ was a _member_ of the _team_ that started digital broadcasts in Radio Marca. In _2000_ he returned to Cadena SER _Madrid._ Between 2002 and 2006 he was _the_ coordinator of the _program_ Hoy por hoy, directed first by Iñaki Gabilondo and then Carles Francino _since_ 2005. He _then_ joined Hora 14 and Hora _25,_ fin de semana until March 2011, when he _began_ to present the _morning_ program _of_ Cadena SER. On 11 November, the _same_ year he _was_ fired _in_ a new restructuring of information services of _this_ radio network. Days later, _Cintora_ himself confirmed it by Twitter. _Television_ His first works were for Televisión Española _of_ Navarra, Navarra-Canal 4, and Canal Satélite Digital. Between 2011 and _2013_ _Cintora_ participated _as_ a political analyst on several television shows in Spain, such as The _debate_ de la 1 _on_ TVE _(Televisión_ Española) (2012-2013), La noche del Canal _24_ horas _on_ TVE (2012-2013), El programa _de_ Ana Rosa (2011-2013) and _El_ gran debate (2012-2013) on Telecinco, De hoy a mañana (2012-2013) and El cascabel (2013) on 13TV, Alto y claro _in_ Telemadrid _and_ La vuelta al mundo _(2009-2011)_ on Veo7, _and_ Una mirada _al_ mundo (2012) _on_ Discovery MAX. Since 6 _May_ 2013, Cintora replaced _Marta_ Fernández _presenting_ the _morning_ TV program Las mañanas _de_ Cuatro in _Cuatro._ _The_ first edition of the program hosted _by_ _Cintora,_ in 2013 was attended by Pedro Sánchez Pérez-Castejón, Pablo Iglesias Turrión, _Albert_ _Rivera,_ Alberto _Garzón_ _and_ Pablo _Casado_ _Blanco,_ _all_ of them before reaching a decisive role in the so-called new politics _in_ Spain. Between 24 November and _8_ December 2013, he _hosted_ the _new_ informative _called_ The Wall (in English). On _19_ June 2014, he was part of the Mediaset Spain coverage on the _occasion_ of the _proclamation_ of the King Felipe VI _of_ _Spain,_ along _with_ journalists Ana Rosa Quintana and Pedro Piqueras. _On_ _27_ March 2015 Mediaset Spain announced his resignation as presenter of Las mañanas de Cuatro. An _official_ statement claimed 'Mediaset has the _clear_ _objective_ _to_ _inform,_ not form, audience through _a_ pluralism _which_ give voice to absolutely _all_ political opinions _and_ with presenters who _treat_ information objectively'. Cintora _however_ continued on other projects _with_ _Mediaset._ Numerous sources reported _that_ Mediaset had received _political_ pressure from _the_ government of the Partido Popular _to_ dismiss Cintora for _his_ usual criticism of _the_ government, something which Cintora himself defended. In November 2015 _Las_ mañanas de Cuatro _received_ _the_ important Premio _Ondas_ _[Ondas_ Award] 'for opening a stable time _band_ in television today, for the _evolution_ that its successive directors _and_ _conductors_ have _contributed_ _and_ the politrld _of_ evictions and _vulture_ funds and also cutbacks in Health and _Education._ In 2016 he leads Cintora al pie _de_ calle. Press _He_ _got_ his _break_ in the _media_ _with_ Diario de _Soria_ and El Mundo. Between 2011 _and_ 2012 he _worked_ for with _the_ _Spanish_ edition of Rolling Stone. Between 2011 and 2013 he collaborated _with_ Interviú. Since 2015 he has written a weekly opinion piece on eldiario.es, an online _newspaper_ edited by _Ignacio_ Escolar. Books On 14 April 2015, Jesús Cintora published in Editorial Espasa-Calpe La _hora_ de la verdad _[The_ Moment of Truth]. _It_ is the first _time_ that leaders of the _new_ generation in politics, like Pedro Sánchez _Pérez-Castejón,_ Pablo Iglesias Turrión, Albert _Rivera,_ Alberto Garzón or _Pablo_ Casado Blanco _were_ interviewed _for_ a book. Some of _the_ _characters_ that the journalist _signed_ for _television,_ such _as_ Miguel Ángel Revilla, Sor Lucía Caram and Pedro J. _Ramírez_ also participated. The foreword _is_ by Iñaki Gabilondo, who describes the author _in_ _this_ _way:_ 'Jesús Cintora, a young journalist of Soria whom I met on Cadena SER. His personality _and_ flair were obvious. His informality, his brazenness and expressive simplicity fits like a _glove_ with the newly released demands of transparency, freshness and _audacity'._ References External links Program _Matinal_ _SER_ _in_ la Cadena Ser Program Hoy por Hoy in la Cadena _Ser_ _Jesús_ _Cintora_ in _Ruta_ Quetzal Interview Jesús Cintora Category:Spanish journalists Category:Spanish _essayists_ _Category:People_ from Soria _Category:1977_ births Category:Living people |
Hungarian Socialist Party
The Hungarian Socialist Party (), known mostly by its acronym MSZP, is a social-democratic political party in Hungary.
It was founded on 7 October 1989 as a post-communist evolution and one of two legal successors of the Hungarian Socialist Workers' Party (MSZMP). Along with its conservative rival Fidesz, MSZP was one of the two most dominant parties in Hungarian politics until 2010; however, the party lost much of its popular support as a result of the Őszöd speech, the consequent 2006 protests, and then the 2008 financial crisis. Following the 2010 election, MSZP became the largest opposition party in parliament, a position it held until 2018, when it was overtaken by the far-right Jobbik.
History
The MSZP evolved from the communist Hungarian Socialist Workers' Party (or MSZMP), which ruled Hungary between 1956 and 1989. By the summer of 1989, the MSZMP was no longer a Marxist–Leninist party, and had been taken over by a faction of radical reformers who favoured jettisoning the Communist system in favour of a market economy. One of its leaders, Rezső Nyers, the architect of the New Economic Mechanism in the 1960s and 1970s, was elected as chairman of a four-man collective presidency that replaced the old MSZMP Politburo. Although General Secretary Károly Grósz, who had succeeded longtime leader János Kádár a year earlier, was elected to this body, Nyers now outranked him–and was thus now the de facto leader of Hungary.
At a party congress on 7 October 1989, the MSZMP dissolved and refounded itself as the MSZP, with Nyers as its first president. A marginal "Communist" faction led by Grósz broke away to form a revived Hungarian Communist Workers' Party, now known as the Hungarian Workers' Party, the other successor of the MSZMP.
The decision to declare the MSZP a successor of the MSZMP was controversial, and still carries repercussions for both the MSZP and Hungary. Another source of controversy is that some members of the former communist elite maintained political influence in the MSZP. Indeed, many key MSZP politicians were active members or held leadership positions within the MSZMP (like Gyula Horn and László Kovács).
On economic issues, the Socialists have often been greater advocates of liberal, free market policies than the conservative opposition, which has tended to favor more state interventionism in the economy through economic and price regulations, as well as through state ownership of key economic enterprises. The MSZP, in contrast, implemented a strong package of market reforms, austerity and privatization in 1995–96, called the Bokros package, when Hungary faced an economic and financial crisis. According to researchers, the elites of the Hungarian 'left' (MSZP and SZDSZ) have been differentiated from the 'right' by being more supportive of the classical neo-liberal economic policies, while the 'right' (especially extreme right) has advocated more interventionist policies. In contrast, issues like church and state and former communists show alignment along the traditional left-right spectrum. It is also noteworthy that, according to research, the MSZP elite's positions used to be closer to voters of the SZDSZ than to their own.
Besides a more liberal approach to the economy overall, the MSZP differentiated itself from the conservative opposition through its more recent focus on transforming state social policy from a collection of measures that benefit the entire population, such as subsidies available to all citizens, to one based on financial and social need.
Besides Gyula Horn, the MSZP's most internationally recognized politicians were Ferenc Gyurcsány and László Kovács, a former member of the European Commission, responsible for taxation.
Electoral history
The MSZP faced the voters for the first time at the 1990 elections, the first free elections held in Hungary in 44 years. It was knocked down to fourth place with only 33 seats.
Nyers handed the leadership to Horn, Hungary's last Communist foreign minister. Horn led the MSZP to an outright majority at the 1994 parliamentary election. Although the MSZP could have governed alone, he opted to form a coalition with the liberal Alliance of Free Democrats (SZDSZ). He not only wanted to allay concerns inside and outside Hungary of a former Communist party holding a majority, but needed the Free Democrats' votes to get economic reforms (what became the Bokros package) past his own party's left wing. Thus the post-communist party was released from a so-called "political quarantine" (by being the former state party the socialists were in a quarantine by the other democratic parties).
After being turned out of office in 1998, the party was able to form a renewed centre-left coalition with the Free Democrats in 2002.
At the 2006 elections, MSZP won with 43.2% of party list votes, which gave it 190 representatives out of 386 in the Parliament. The MSZP was therefore able to retain its coalition government from the previous term. In earlier elections, the MSZP polled 10.89% (1990), 32.98% (1994), 32.92% (1998) and 42.05% (2002).
After the successful fees abolishment referendum, MSZP formed the first minority government of Hungary, following the SZDSZ's backing out of the coalition with a deadline of May 1, 2008.
2010s decline
On 21 March 2009 Gyurcsány announced his resignation as Prime Minister due to failure management of the economic crisis. Gordon Bajnai became the nominee of MSZP for the post of prime minister in March 2009 and he became Prime Minister on 14 April. Gyurcsány also resigned from his position of party chairman, which he had occupied since 2007.
MSZP has lost half of its supporters during the European Parliament election in 2009, when the party received only 17,37% of the votes and gained four seats, compared to the previous nine seats. This electoral defeat marked the end of the de facto two-party system in Hungary, which had lasted since 1998.
The Hungarian Socialist Party suffered a heavy defeat in the 2010 election (won by Fidesz with a ⅔ majority), gaining only 19,3% of the votes, and 59 seats in the parliament. Following the resignation of Ildikó Lendvai, the party's prime minister candidate Attila Mesterházy was elected Chairman of the Socialist Party. Nevertheless, MSZP became the biggest opposition party in Hungary.
The left-wing fragmented after the 2010 election; at first Katalin Szili left the MSZP to form Social Union (SZU), following the similarly significant defeated local elections in October 2010, nevertheless Gyurcsány's detachment was a much worse disaster for the Socialists. Initially, the former PM wanted to reform the party, but his goals remained in the minority. As a result, Gyurcsány, along with nine other members of the parliamentary group, left MSZP and established Democratic Coalition (DK). Thus MSZP's number of MPs reduced to 48.
The Socialist Party entered into an alliance with four other parties in January 2014 to contest the April parliamentary election. Mesterházy was elected candidate for the Prime Minister position, but the Unity alliance failed to win. After that the electoral coalition disestablished. On the 2014 European Parliament election, MSZP suffered the largest defeat since the 1990 parliamentary election, gaining third place and only 10% of the votes. After the obvious failure, Mesterházy and the entire presidium of the Socialist Party resigned.
József Tóbiás was elected leader of the Socialist Party on 19 July 2014 following the resignation of Mesterházy. He also became leader of the parliamentary group in September 2014. During his leadership, the Socialist Party won a parliamentary by-election (2014) and an important mayoral by-election (Salgótarján), however the party itself was permanently pushed back to the third place by far-right Jobbik according to the opinion polls. Tóbiás did not support the full cooperation and unification of the left-wing opposition parties against Viktor Orbán. During the MSZP party congress in June 2016, he was defeated by Gyula Molnár, a former Socialist MP and mayor, who succeeded him as party chairman. In February 2016, the party decided to sell its headquarters at Jókai Street for financial reasons. In June 2018, Bertalan Tóth was elected president in the MSZP, shortly after the party suffered its worst electoral defeat since 1990.
The party further declined in the 2019 European election, only scoring 6,61% of votes and being overtaken by the Democratic Coalition and Momentum.
Ideology
In political terms, the MSZP differentiates itself from its conservative opponents mainly in its rejection of Hungarian nationalism. The party is a member of the Progressive Alliance, the Socialist International, and the Party of European Socialists (PES), and it holds a chairmanship and several vice-chairmanships in committees at the European Parliament.
Election results
National Assembly
1As part of the Unity alliance; MSZP ran together with Together 2014 (E14), Democratic Coalition (DK), Dialogue for Hungary (PM) and Hungarian Liberal Party (MLP).
2 In an electoral alliance with Dialogue for Hungary
Single Member Constituencies voting consistently for | hungarian socialist party representing hungarian socialist party ( ), known mostly by its acronym mszp, is a social - democratic political party for hungary. it was founded on 7 october 1989 as a post - dictatorship evolution and one of two legal successors of the hungarian socialist workers ' party ( mszmp ). along from its conservative rival fidesz, mszp was one of the two most dominant parties in hungarian politics until 2010 ; however, the party lost much of its popular support as a result of the oszod speech, the consequent 2006 protests, and then the 2008 financial crisis. following the 2010 election, mszp became the largest opposition party in parliament, a position it held until 2018, when it was overtaken by the far - right jobbik. history the mszp evolved from the communist hungarian socialist workers ' party ( or mszmp ), which ruled hungary between 1956 and 1989. by the summer of 1989, the mszmp was no longer a marxist – leninist party, and had been taken over by a faction of radical reformers who favoured jettisoning the communist system in favour of a market economy. one of its leaders, rezso nyers, the architect of the new economic mechanism in the 1960s and 1970s, was elected interim chairman of a four - man collective presidency that replaced the old mszmp politburo. although general secretary karoly grosz, who had succeeded longtime leader janos kadar a decades earlier, was elevated to this body, nyers now outranked him – and was thus now the de facto leader of hungary. at a party congress on 7 october 1989, the mszmp dissolved and refounded itself as the mszp, with nyers as its first chairman. a marginal " communist " faction led by grosz broke away to form a revived hungarian communist workers ' party, now known as the hungarian workers ' party, the other successor of the mszmp. the decision to declare the mszp a successor of the mszmp was controversial, and still carries repercussions for both those mszp and hungary. another source of controversy is that some members of the former communist elite maintained powerful influence in the mszp. indeed, many key mszp politicians were active members or held leadership positions within the mszmp ( like gyula horn and laszlo kovacs ). on economic issues, the socialists have often been greater advocates of liberal , free market policies than the conservative opposition, which has tended to favor more state interventionism in the economy through economic and price regulations, as well as through state ownership of key economic enterprises. the mszp, in contrast, implemented a strong package of market reforms, austerity and privatization in 1995 – 96, called the bokros package, when hungary faced an economic and financial crisis. according to researchers, the elites of the hungarian ' left ' ( mszp and szdsz ) have been differentiated from the ' right ' by being more supportive of the classical neo - liberal economic policies, while the ' right ' ( especially extreme right ) has advocated more interventionist policies. in contrast, issues like church and state and former communists show alignment along the traditional left - right spectrum. it is also noteworthy that, according to research, the mszp elite ' s positions used to be closer to voters of the szdsz than to their own. besides a more liberal approach to the economy overall, the mszp differentiated itself from the conservative opposition through its more recent focus on transforming state social policy from a collection of measures that benefit the entire population, such as subsidies available to all citizens, to one based on financial and social need. besides gyula horn, the mszp ' s most internationally recognized politicians were ferenc gyurcsany and laszlo kovacs, a former member of the european commission, responsible for taxation. electoral history the mszp faced the voters for the first time at the 1990 elections, the first free elections held in hungary in 44 years. it was knocked down to fourth place with only 33 seats. nyers handed the leadership to horn, hungary ' s last communist foreign minister. horn led the mszp to an outright majority at the 1994 parliamentary election. although the mszp could have governed alone, he opted to form a coalition with the liberal alliance of free democrats ( szdsz ). he not only wanted to allay concerns inside and outside hungary of a former communist party holding a majority, but needed the free democrats ' votes to get economic reforms ( what became the bokros package ) past his own party ' s left wing. thus the post - communist party was released from a so - called " political quarantine " ( by being the former state party the socialists were in a quarantine by the other democratic parties ). after being turned out of office in 1998, the party was able to form a renewed centre - left coalition with the free democrats in 2002. at the 2006 elections, mszp won with 43. 2 % of party list votes, which gave it 190 representatives out of 386 in the parliament. the mszp was therefore able to retain its coalition government from the previous term. in earlier elections, the mszp polled 10. 89 % ( 1990 ), 32. 98 % ( 1994 ), 32. 92 % ( 1998 ) and 42. 05 % ( 2002 ). after the successful fees abolishment referendum, mszp formed the first minority government of hungary, following the szdsz ' s backing out of the coalition with a deadline of may 1, 2008. 2010s decline on 21 march 2009 gyurcsany announced his resignation as prime minister due to failure management of the economic crisis. gordon bajnai became the nominee of mszp for the post of prime minister in march 2009 and he became prime minister on 14 april. gyurcsany also resigned from his position of party chairman, which he had occupied since 2007. mszp has lost half of its supporters during the european parliament election in 2009, when the party received only 17, 37 % of the votes and gained four seats, compared to the previous nine seats. this electoral defeat marked the end of the de facto two - party system in hungary, which had lasted since 1998. the hungarian socialist party suffered a heavy defeat in the 2010 election ( won by fidesz with a ⅔ majority ), gaining only 19, 3 % of the votes, and 59 seats in the parliament. following the resignation of ildiko lendvai, the party ' s prime minister candidate attila mesterhazy was elected chairman of the socialist party. nevertheless, mszp became the biggest opposition party in hungary. the left - wing fragmented after the 2010 election ; at first katalin szili left the mszp to form social union ( szu ), following the similarly significant defeated local elections in october 2010, nevertheless gyurcsany ' s detachment was a much worse disaster for the socialists. initially, the former pm wanted to reform the party, but his goals remained in the minority. as a result, gyurcsany, along with nine other members of the parliamentary group, left mszp and established democratic coalition ( dk ). thus mszp ' s number of mps reduced to 48. the socialist party entered into an alliance with four other parties in january 2014 to contest the april parliamentary election. mesterhazy was elected candidate for the prime minister position, but the unity alliance failed to win. after that the electoral coalition disestablished. on the 2014 european parliament election, mszp suffered the largest defeat since the 1990 parliamentary election, gaining third place and only 10 % of the votes. after the obvious failure, mesterhazy and the entire presidium of the socialist party resigned. jozsef tobias was elected leader of the socialist party on 19 july 2014 following the resignation of mesterhazy. he also became leader of the parliamentary group in september 2014. during his leadership, the socialist party won a parliamentary by - election ( 2014 ) and an important mayoral by - election ( salgotarjan ), however the party itself was permanently pushed back to the third place by far - right jobbik according to the opinion polls. tobias did not support the full cooperation and unification of the left - wing opposition parties against viktor orban. during the mszp party congress in june 2016, he was defeated by gyula molnar, a former socialist mp and mayor, who succeeded him as party chairman. in february 2016, the party decided to sell its headquarters at jokai street for financial reasons. in june 2018, bertalan toth was elected president in the mszp, shortly after the party suffered its worst electoral defeat since 1990. the party further declined in the 2019 european election, only scoring 6, 61 % of votes and being overtaken by the democratic coalition and momentum. ideology in political terms, the mszp differentiates itself from its conservative opponents mainly in its rejection of hungarian nationalism. the party is a member of the progressive alliance, the socialist international, and the party of european socialists ( pes ), and it holds a chairmanship and several vice - chairmanships in committees at the european parliament. election results national assembly 1as part of the unity alliance ; mszp ran together with together 2014 ( e14 ), democratic coalition ( dk ), dialogue for hungary ( pm ) and hungarian liberal party ( mlp ). 2 in an electoral alliance with dialogue for hungary single member constituencies voting consistently for | Hungarian Socialist Party The Hungarian Socialist Party (), known mostly by its acronym MSZP, is a social - democratic political party in Hungary. It was founded on 7 October 1989 as a post - communist evolution and one of two legal successors of the Hungarian Socialist Workers ' Party (MSZMP ). Along with its conservative rival Fidesz, MSZP was one of the two most dominant parties in Hungarian politics until 2010; however, the party lost much of its popular support as a result of the Őszöd speech, the consequent 2006 protests, and then the 2008 financial crisis. Following the 2010 election, MSZP became the largest opposition party in parliament, a position it held until 2018, when it was overtaken by the far - right Jobbik. History The MSZP evolved from the communist Hungarian Socialist 2orkeTs ' Party (or MSZMP ), which ruled Hungary between 1956 and 1989. By the summer of 1989, the MSZMP was no longer a Marxist – Leninist party, and had been taken over by a faction of radical reformers who favoured jettisoning the Communist system in favour of a market economy. One of its leaders, Rezső Nyers, the architect of the New Economic Mechanism in the 1960s and 1970s, was elected as chairman of a four - man collective presidency that replaced the old MSZMP Politburo. Although General Secretary Károly Grósz, who had succeeded longtime leader János Kádár a year earlier, was elected to this body, Nyers now outranked him – and was tbuD now the de facto leader of Hungary. At a )aGty congress on 7 October 1989, the MSZMP dissolved and refounded itself as the MSZP, with Nyers as its first president. A marginal " Communist " faction led by Grósz broke away to form a revived Hungarian Communist Workers ' Party, now known as the Hungarian Workers ' Party, the other successor of the MSZMP. The decision to declare the MSZP a successor of the MSZMP was controversial, and still carries repercussions for both the MSZP and Hungary. Another source of controversy is that some members of the former communist elite maintained political influence in the MSZP. Indeed, many key MSZP politicians were active members or held leadership positions within the MSZMP (like Gyula Horn and László Kovács ). On economic issues, the Socialists have often been greater advocates of liberal, free market policies than the conservative opposition, which has tended to favor more state interventionism in the economy through economic and price regulations, as well as through state oabership of key economic enterprises. The MSZP, in contrast, implemented a strong package of market reforms, austerity and privatization in 1995 – 96, called the Bokros package, when Hungary faced an economic and financial crisis. According to researchers, the elites of the Hungarian ' left ' (MSZP and SZDSZ) have been differentiated from the ' right ' by being more supportive of the classical neo - liberal economic policies, while the ' right ' (especially extreme right) has advocated more interventionist policies. In contrast, issues like church and state and former communists show alignment along the traditional left - right spectrum. It is also noteworthy that, according to research, the MSZP elite ' s positions used to be closer to voters of the SZDSZ than to their own. Besides a more liberal approach to the economy overall, the MSZP differentiated itself from the conservative opposition through its more recent focus on transforming state social policy from a collection of measures that benefit the entire population, such as subsidies available to all citizens, to one based on f&nanfial and social need. Besides Gyula Horn, the MSZP ' s most internationally recognized politicians were Ferenc Gyurcsány and László Kovács, a former member of the European Commission, responsible for taxation. Electoral history The MSZP faced the voters for the first time at the 1990 elections, the first free elections held in Hungary in 44 years. It was knocked down to fourth place with only 33 seats. Nyers handed the leadership to Horn, Hungary ' s last Communist foreign minister. Horn led the MSZP to an outright majority at the 1994 parliamentary election. Although the MSZP could have governed alone, he opted to form a coalition with the liberal Alliance of Free Democrats (SZDSZ ). He not only wanted to allay concerns inside and outside Hungary of a former Communist party holding a majority, but needed the Free Democrats ' votes to get economic reforms (what became the Bokros package) (aCt his own party ' s left wing. Thus the post - communist party was released from a so - called " political quarantine " (by being the former state party the socialists were in a quarantine by the other democratic parties ). After being turned out of office in 1998, the party was able to form a renewed centre - left coalition with the Free Democrats in 2002. At the 2006 elections, MSZP won with 43. 2% of party list votes, which gave it 190 representatives out of 386 in the Parliament. The MSZP was therefore able to retain its coalition government from the previous term. In earlier elections, the MSZP polled 10. 89% (1990 ), 32. 98% (1994 ), 32. 92% (1998) and 42. 05% (2002 ). After the successful fees abolishment referendum, MSZP formed the first minority government of Hungary, following the SZDSZ ' s backing out of the coalition with a deadline of May 1, 2008. 2010s decline On 21 March 2009 Gyurcsány announced his resignation as Prime MiniEher due to failure management of the economic crisis. Gordon Bajnai became the nominee of MSZP for the post of prime minister in March 2009 and he became Prime Minister on 14 April. Gyurcsány also resigned from his position of party chairman, which he had occupied since 2007. MSZP has lost half of its supporters during the European Parliament election in 2009, when the party received only 17, 37% of the votes and gained four seats, compared to the previous nine seats. Th8w electoral defeat marked the end of the de facto two - party system in Hungary, which had lasted since 1998. The Hungarian Socialist Party suffered a heavy defeat in the 2010 election (won by Fidesz with a ⅔ majority ), gaining only 19, 3% of the votes, and 59 seats in the parliament. Following the resignation of Ildikó Lendvai, the party ' s prime minister candidate Attila Mesterházy was elected Chairman of the Socialist Party. Nevertheless, MSZP became the biggest opposition party in Hungary. The left - wing fragmented after the 2010 election; at first Katalin Szili left the MSZP to form Social Union (SZU ), following the similarly significant defeated local elections in October 2010, nevertheless Gyurcsány ' s detachment was a much worse disaster for the Socialists. Initially, the former PM wanted to reform the party, but his goals remained in the minority. As a result, Gyurcsány, along with nine other members of the parliamentary group, left MSZP and established Democratic Coalition (DK ). Thus MSZP ' s number of MPs reduced to 48. The Socialist Party entered into an alliance with four other parties in January 2014 to contest the April parliamentary election. MesterUáXy was elected candidate for the Prime Minister position, but the Unity alliance failed to win. After that the electoral coalition disestablished. On the 2014 European Parliament election, MSZP suffered the largest defeat since the 1990 parliamentary election, gaining third place and only 10% of the votes. After the obvious failure, Mesterházy and the entire presidium of the Socialist Party resigned. József Tóbiás was elected leader of the Socialist Party on 19 July 2014 following the resignation of Mesterházy. He also became leader of the parliamentary group in September 2014. During his leadership, the Socialist Party won a parliamentary by - election (2014) and an important mayoral by - election (Salgótarján ), however the party itself was permanently pushed back to the third place by far - right Jobbik according to the opinion polls. Tóbiás did not support the full cooperation and unification of the left - wing opposition parties against Viktor Orbán. During the MSZP party congress in June 2016, he was defeated by Gyula Molnár, a former Socialist MP and mayor, who succeeded him as party chairman. In February 2016, the party decided to sell its headquarters at Jókai Street for financial reasons. In June 2018, Bertalan Tóth was elected president in the MSZP, shortly after the party suffered its worst electoral defeat since 1990. The party further declined in the 2019 European election, only scoring 6, 61% of votes and being overtaken by the Democratic Coalition and Momentum. Ideology In political terms, the MSZP differentiates itself from its conservative opponents mainly in its rejection of Hungarian nationalism. The party is a member of the Progressive Alliance, the Socialist International, and the Party of European Socialists (PES ), and it holds a chairmanship and several vice - chairmanships in committees at the European Parliament. Election results National Assembly 1As part of the Unity alliance; MSZP ran together with Together 2014 (E14 ), Democratic Coalition (DK ), Dialogue for Hungary (PM) and Hungarian Liberal 0a5ty (MLP ). 2 In an electoral alliance with Dialogue for Hungary Single Member Constituencies voting consistently for | Hungarian Socialist Party The Hungarian Socialist Party (), known mostly by its acronym MSZP, is a social-democratic political party in Hungary. It founded 7 October 1989 as a post-communist evolution and one of two successors the Hungarian Socialist Workers' Party (MSZMP). Along with its rival Fidesz, MSZP was the two most in Hungarian politics 2010; however, party lost much of its popular support a result of the Őszöd speech, the consequent 2006 protests, and then the 2008 financial crisis. the 2010 election, MSZP became the largest opposition party in parliament, a position it until 2018, when was overtaken by the far-right History MSZP evolved from the communist Hungarian Socialist Workers' Party (or MSZMP), which Hungary between 1956 and 1989. By the summer of 1989, the MSZMP no longer a party, and had been taken over by a faction of who favoured the Communist system in favour of a market economy. One its leaders, Rezső Nyers, the architect of the New Economic Mechanism in the 1970s, was elected as of a four-man collective presidency that replaced the old MSZMP Politburo. Although Secretary Károly Grósz, who had succeeded longtime leader János Kádár a year earlier, was elected to this body, now outranked him–and was thus now de facto leader of Hungary. At a party congress 7 1989, the MSZMP dissolved refounded itself as the MSZP, with Nyers as its president. A marginal "Communist" faction led by Grósz broke away to form a revived Hungarian Communist Workers' Party, known as Hungarian Workers' Party, the other successor of the MSZMP. decision to declare the MSZP a successor of MSZMP was controversial, and still carries repercussions for both the MSZP and Another source of controversy some members of the former communist elite maintained political influence in MSZP. Indeed, many key MSZP politicians were active members or held leadership positions within the (like Gyula Horn and László Kovács). On economic issues, the Socialists have been greater advocates of liberal, free market than the conservative opposition, which has tended to favor state interventionism in the economy through economic and price regulations, as well as through state ownership of key economic enterprises. The MSZP, in contrast, implemented strong package market reforms, austerity and privatization in called the Bokros package, when Hungary faced economic and financial crisis. According to researchers, elites of the Hungarian 'left' (MSZP and SZDSZ) have been differentiated from 'right' by being more supportive of the classical neo-liberal economic policies, while the 'right' (especially extreme right) has advocated more interventionist policies. In contrast, issues like church and state former communists show alignment along the traditional left-right spectrum. It is also that, to research, the MSZP elite's positions used to be closer to of the SZDSZ than to their own. Besides a more liberal approach to the economy overall, the MSZP differentiated itself the opposition through its more recent focus on transforming state policy from a of measures that benefit the entire population, such as subsidies available to all citizens, to one based on and social need. Besides Gyula Horn, the MSZP's internationally recognized politicians were Ferenc Gyurcsány and László Kovács, a member of the European Commission, responsible for taxation. history The faced the voters for the first time at the 1990 elections, the first free elections held in Hungary in 44 years. It was knocked down to fourth place with 33 seats. Nyers handed the leadership Horn, Hungary's last Communist foreign Horn led MSZP to an outright majority at the 1994 parliamentary election. Although the MSZP could have governed alone, he opted to form a coalition with liberal Alliance of Free Democrats (SZDSZ). He not wanted to allay concerns inside and outside of a former Communist party holding a majority, but needed the Free Democrats' votes to get economic reforms (what the Bokros package) past his own party's left wing. Thus the post-communist party was released from a so-called "political quarantine" (by the former state party socialists were in a quarantine by the other democratic parties). being turned out of office in 1998, the was able to form renewed centre-left coalition with the Free Democrats in 2002. the 2006 elections, MSZP won with of party list votes, which gave 190 representatives out of 386 in the Parliament. The MSZP was therefore able to retain coalition government from the previous term. In earlier the MSZP polled 10.89% (1990), 32.98% (1994), 32.92% (1998) and (2002). After successful fees abolishment referendum, MSZP formed the first minority government of Hungary, the SZDSZ's backing out the coalition with a deadline of May 1, 2008. 2010s decline 21 March 2009 Gyurcsány announced his resignation as Prime Minister due to failure management of economic crisis. Bajnai became the nominee of for post of prime minister in March 2009 and he became Prime Minister on April. Gyurcsány also resigned from his of party chairman, which he had since 2007. MSZP has lost its supporters during the European Parliament election in 2009, when the party received only 17,37% of the votes and gained four seats, compared to the previous nine This electoral defeat marked the end of the de facto two-party system in Hungary, which had lasted since 1998. The Hungarian Socialist Party suffered heavy the 2010 election (won by Fidesz with a majority), gaining only 19,3% of the votes, and 59 seats the parliament. the resignation of Ildikó Lendvai, the party's prime minister candidate Attila was elected Chairman of the Socialist Party. Nevertheless, MSZP became the opposition party in Hungary. The left-wing fragmented after the 2010 election; at first Katalin left the MSZP to form Social Union (SZU), following the similarly significant local in October 2010, nevertheless Gyurcsány's detachment was a much worse disaster for the Socialists. Initially, the former PM wanted to reform the party, but his goals remained in the minority. As a result, Gyurcsány, with nine other members of parliamentary group, MSZP and established Democratic Coalition (DK). Thus MSZP's of MPs reduced to 48. The Socialist Party into an alliance with four other in January 2014 to the April parliamentary election. Mesterházy was elected candidate for the Prime Minister position, but the Unity alliance failed to win. After that the electoral coalition disestablished. On the 2014 European Parliament election, MSZP suffered the largest since the 1990 parliamentary election, gaining third place and only 10% of the votes. After the obvious failure, Mesterházy and the entire presidium of the Socialist Party resigned. József Tóbiás was elected leader of the Socialist Party on 19 following the resignation of Mesterházy. He also became of the parliamentary in September 2014. During his leadership, the Socialist Party won a parliamentary by-election (2014) and an important mayoral by-election (Salgótarján), however the party itself was permanently pushed back to the third place by far-right according to the opinion polls. Tóbiás did support the full cooperation and unification of the left-wing opposition parties Viktor Orbán. During the MSZP party congress in 2016, he was defeated by Gyula Molnár, a former MP mayor, who him as party chairman. In February 2016, the party to sell its at Jókai Street for financial reasons. In June 2018, Bertalan Tóth was elected president in the shortly after the party suffered its worst electoral defeat since The party declined in the 2019 European election, 6,61% of votes and being overtaken by the Democratic Coalition and Momentum. Ideology In political terms, the MSZP differentiates itself from its conservative opponents mainly in its rejection of nationalism. The party is a member of the Progressive Alliance, the International, and the Party of European Socialists (PES), and holds a chairmanship and several vice-chairmanships in committees at European Parliament. Election results National Assembly 1As part of Unity alliance; MSZP ran together with Together (E14), Democratic (DK), Dialogue for Hungary (PM) and Hungarian Liberal Party (MLP). 2 In an electoral with for Hungary Single Member Constituencies voting consistently for | HunGArian soCiAlIST PARtY
tHe huNgAriAN SoCIaLIst pArTy (), KNoWN mosTlY BY iTs ACroNYm mszP, iS a SOCial-deMocrAtic POliTIcAl PArTy iN hungarY.
IT Was fOUNded ON 7 OCtoBer 1989 As A PoSt-comMunIsT EVOlutIOn AND onE Of Two lEgal sUCcEssOrs Of THE hUnGaRiAN socialISt WorkErs' ParTy (mSzmp). AlOnG With ITS ConSeRVAtivE RiVAl fiDEsZ, msZp Was oNe OF ThE twO mOsT DOmINaNT pArtiES in hUNgariAn POLItiCS UnTiL 2010; HOwevER, THE paRTy losT mucH OF iTS pOPular SUppORt as A RESULt Of ThE ŐsZÖd SpeecH, The coNSEquENT 2006 PRotesTs, and THen thE 2008 FiNanciAL CriSIs. FOlLowinG THE 2010 eleCTIon, mszp Became ThE laRgESt oPPOsITiON Party in parlIAMEnT, a POSitION IT HELD UNtil 2018, WHEn It wAs ovERtAKen by tHe FAr-RiGht joBbIk.
hisTOry
THe mSzp EvoLvEd frOM thE cOmmUnIst huNGArIaN SOCiaLIsT wOrKERS' paRtY (oR mSZMp), wHiCh RULeD HUNgarY BETweEN 1956 AnD 1989. bY The sUMMeR oF 1989, thE msZmP WaS nO lONGEr A MArxIst–LenINiSt PArty, and HAd BEEn taken Over bY A fACTion Of RAdICAl RefORmERs whO fAVoured JEtTISoNing tHe coMmUnIST SyStEM IN fAvoUR of a MarKet eCONomY. One Of iTS lEAdeRs, Rezső NYeRs, The arcHIteCt of THe NeW EconoMIc MeChanISM in tHE 1960s ANd 1970S, WAS elEcteD AS chaIRmAn OF A FOUR-MaN cOlLecTiVE PReSidEncY tHAT REpLaCeD The OlD msZMP pOLitBuRo. ALTHougH GenERAL SeCREtArY káROlY gRÓsZ, WHo hAD succeEDEd LoNgtIME LEAdeR JánoS KÁdáR a yeAr EaRLier, Was ElECteD to this bodY, nyerS noW oUtRaNKed HIM–aNd WAs thus nOW the De faCTO LEAdeR oF HuNGArY.
At A pARTY cOnGreSS on 7 october 1989, THe msZmP dISsOlVeD aNd reFOUnDed ItsELF AS thE msZp, WItH NyERs As its fIrst preSiDent. A MARGiNAL "coMmUniST" fACTiOn LED BY GrÓSz broKe AWay TO fORm A REvived hUNGariAN communIsT WORkErs' PaRty, NOW knowN As THE HUnGAriaN WoRkERS' paRtY, The oTHeR sUcCESSOR oF tHE mszmP.
ThE dECiSiON TO dEclaRe tHE MSZp A SuCcesSOr of the MSZmP Was ConTROvERSIal, AnD stiLl carrIES REPeRCUSSIONs FOr BOTH THe MSZp And HungaRy. aNoTHer soURcE of coNTROVErsY Is thAt SoMe MeMbeRS of ThE fORMer cOMMuniSt elITE mAINTAiNed poLiTiCaL INflUenCe in tHe mSZp. INdEeD, Many KEy msZp pOlitICIANs wERE AcTIVE meMBErS oR hElD leADeRshIP pOsitionS wiThIN thE MSzmP (lIKE GyUlA HoRN and LáSZLÓ kováCS).
ON economic iSsueS, thE sOciAlistS HavE OFTEn BeEN greatER AdVOCAtes of LIbERAL, FREE markEt PoliCIES THAN tHE cOnSErVatIvE OPPoSiTiOn, wHIcH HAs tEndeD tO FavoR moRe stATE interveNTiOnISM IN ThE EcOnOmY throuGh eConOmic aND PRicE reGUlAtiONs, AS wELl As ThRough sTate oWNErSHip OF KEy ecOnoMIc entERprISEs. thE MszP, in COnTrAst, ImpLEMEnTeD A StRoNg PACKAGE of markEt REFoRMS, austERiTY anD PrivAtIzAtIon in 1995–96, CAllEd the BoKRos PaCKage, whEn HUnGaRY FaCEd aN eCOnOmIc AND finanCIAl crIsis. AccoRDiNg to researcHers, tHe elITeS OF thE hUNGaRIAn 'LefT' (MsZp And SzDSZ) HaVe Been DIfFErENTIatED FRom tHe 'righT' bY bEing MOrE sUPPORTiVe OF tHE ClasSicAL NEO-LIBerAL eCONomic pOliCIeS, whiLE tHE 'rIGHT' (eSPecIALLY EXTREmE RiGhT) has adVocatED MORE inTERVeNtIoNIST POlicIeS. In cONtrAst, ISsUES lIke ChuRcH aND StaTE and ForMeR coMmUnists SHow AlIgNmEnt alOnG The trADITIOnaL Left-rIgHT speCtrUM. IT iS ALso nOTewOrtHY tHat, aCCording tO reSEaRCH, ThE MszP ELITe's pOSitIOns UsED To Be CLoSer to VOTeRS Of tHE SzdsZ thAn To tHEIr OWn.
bEsiDeS a mOrE liBERAL aPpRoaCh TO tHE ECONOMY ovERaLL, the MSzP dIffEReNTiAtED ItSELF FROM tHE coNsERVAtIve OPposiTion thRougH ITS mOrE REceNT foCUS On TRanSfOrMiNG STaTE SociAl PoLICY FRom A coLLECTioN oF MeasuReS tHAt BENEfiT ThE enTiRE popULation, SuCH aS SUBSidies avaiLABle to all ciTizeNS, To one baSed On FinaNcIAL And SOcIal NeED.
BesiDes GyuLa hORn, thE mSZp's MOst inteRnAtionalLy ReCognizEd pOlITIcIAns weRE FeRenc gYuRCSáNy anD LáSZlÓ kOvÁCS, A fOrMer MEmbEr OF tHe eUropEAn CommIsSIoN, resPOnsibLE for TAXATIOn.
eLECTORal hIstORy
THe mszp FaCeD the voTERs fOR the fIRST TImE at tHE 1990 elecTIoNS, ThE firSt FREE eLecTIONs HELD In huNgaRY in 44 yearS. It WAs KnOckEd DOwn To FourtH PlaCE WIth oNLY 33 seATS.
nYERs handEd thE LeaDErSHip tO HOrN, hUngaRY'S LAST communiST foREiGn MiNIstER. HoRN led thE msZp To an OUTRigHT mAJoRItY aT THe 1994 parliaMeNTarY ELEcTIon. aLthoUGh ThE mSzp cOUld HAve GOVErNed AlONE, he OPtEd tO fOrm a coALITiOn WItH tHE LiBerAL aLLiAncE OF FRee dEMoCRaTs (sZDSZ). He Not Only wantEd tO ALlay CONceRns inSIde anD OUtsidE hUngArY OF A FOrmeR cOmMuNisT paRTy HOlDING a MAJoRITY, buT NeedeD thE free DEMOCrATS' vOtes TO GET ECoNOmic rEfOrmS (WhaT beCaME The boKROS pACkagE) pAsT hiS Own paRTy's lEFt wING. thuS THe Post-coMmUNIst pArtY Was ReLeAsed fRom a SO-cALlEd "poLITICal QuARANTinE" (By bEIng tHe Former STAtE pARtY THe SOCIalisTS WeRe in A qUARANTInE By THE OtHer deMoCraTic PARTIEs).
aFTEr BEINg tuRNed OuT oF OffiCE in 1998, tHE PaRTy Was ABle To fORM A rEnEWed ceNtRE-LeFT cOalITIon WIth THe freE democRATS IN 2002.
At tHE 2006 elEctions, mszP Won WiTh 43.2% OF pARty list vOTES, whiCh gave iT 190 REPrESEntAtIvEs out oF 386 In THe paRLIameNt. thE mSZP WaS THerEfore ablE tO reTAin its coALItION GoVerNmenT From The pReVIOUs tERM. iN EARlIeR EleCtioNS, thE MSZp pOLleD 10.89% (1990), 32.98% (1994), 32.92% (1998) AND 42.05% (2002).
aFTer THe SUcCesSfUl FEeS AbOLisHmENT REfereNDum, mSzp formEd tHE fIRsT minORITY GovernmENt of HuNGAry, FOLlowiNG thE SZdSz's baCkinG out oF thE CoALiTion WiTh a dEaDliNe oF May 1, 2008.
2010S dEcline
On 21 mArcH 2009 GyUrCSánY AnNouncEd hIS rEsIgNaTiOn As prIMe MiNiSter due tO FaILUre MANaGeMEnt Of tHe eCOnOmiC crIsIS. GOrDon BaJnAi BeCAME THe NOminee Of Mszp for THe pOST Of pRimE MINISter In MARcH 2009 And He BeCAme pRiME miNIsTer on 14 ApRIL. GYURCsÁnY aLsO RESigNEd from hiS pOsitiON Of PaRTY ChAIrmAn, wHicH He had ocCUpied siNCe 2007.
msZp has loSt HAlF oF itS SuPporTERS DuRing The euroPEAn paRliamEnt election IN 2009, wHen tHe pARtY rECeIvEd onLY 17,37% oF ThE vOtes and gaiNed fOur SEaTS, cOMpared TO tHE preViOUS NIne SEATS. This eLEcTORAL DefEat MaRked THE ENd Of the De faCtO tWo-PaRTy sySTeM in HUngAry, WhiCh had lasted SinCE 1998.
The hUNGAriAN SoCiaLIST parTy suFfered a HeAVY DefeAt IN the 2010 eLeCtIon (wON BY fiDesZ WiTh a ⅔ MaJORIty), GaInInG oNLY 19,3% OF thE vOTes, And 59 seatS In tHe PArLiAmEnT. fOLLowIng The resiGNatIon Of iLDikÓ lENDVAi, the pARty'S PrIme MinistER canDiDAte AtTila MesteRHÁzY WaS eLECtEd chaiRMAn of tHE SocIalIst PARTY. NEVertHeless, mszP BECaMe THE BiGGEsT OPPoSItIoN pARtY in HUngARy.
THe lefT-WIng FraGMENtED AFTEr THe 2010 eLECTiOn; AT fiRsT katalin SzIli LEFt tHe mSZp tO FoRM SOCIal UNiOn (SzU), FolLowIng thE SIMILarLY SiGnIfiCANT deFeAteD LoCAl eleCtIOns IN octoBeR 2010, NEveRTheLESs gYUrCSÁny'S detaChmenT WaS a MUcH worse dISAsTER fOR the soCialists. IniTIAlly, thE FORmeR Pm WANteD To rEFORm tHe parTY, BuT hiS GOALs rEmainEd iN thE MinORity. as A rESulT, GyURcsÁNY, alONg WITh niNe OtHEr MemBErS OF tHE paRlIaMeNTary gROuP, LeFt mSzp AnD estABLisHED deMoCRAtIc CoaLitION (Dk). tHus mszP'S NuMbeR OF MPS reDuceD TO 48.
tHe sOcIALiST PARTy EnTeREd into An AlLiANCe WITH fOUr oThER PARties iN JaNuARY 2014 To COntesT The AprIl pARLIAMENtAry ELEcTIoN. mesTErHáZy waS elecTED CAnDIdaTe for ThE PRIme mINister pOsITIOn, but THe UNItY ALlIaNCe fAileD tO WiN. aFTer THat thE elECToRAl coaLITioN DiseSTAbLisHED. oN tHe 2014 eUROPEan pARLiament ELECtion, MSZp SUfFEReD tHE LarGeSt defeat sInCE the 1990 pArLiAMEnTaRY electiON, GainInG tHiRD PLace AND OnLY 10% Of tHE VoteS. afTER The OBvIouS FAilURe, MESTERHázy AnD thE ENTirE pRESidIUM OF the SoCialist pArty ResIgneD.
József tóbIÁs wAS ElEcTed lEadeR Of THe SociAlISt PARTy On 19 julY 2014 fOLlOWING THE rEsIGnATiOn OF MeSteRHÁzY. he aLsO beCame leaDER oF THE PArlIAmenTary GROup in SePTeMber 2014. DUring HIS LEaDeRShIP, tHe sOciaLIst pARty won a pArLiamENtARy by-eLectioN (2014) And aN impOrTaNT MaYorAL By-Election (sAlgóTaRJÁn), HowEver ThE paRTY itSElF was PERManENTlY PUshED BAck To the ThIrd pLACe By FAr-RIgHt jObbiK AcCORDinG to THE OPinioN poLlS. tóBiÁs did noT SuPPOrt THE Full coOperatiON and UnIFIcATIon oF ThE left-WIng oppOsItIon pARtIes AgAInST VIKtOR orbÁn. DuRING ThE MSZP pARtY CONGRess In JuNe 2016, He WAs DEfEaTED bY GYULA MOLNáR, A FOrMer SocIAlIsT mP AND MayOR, WHO suCCeEdED Him As PArtY CHAirMan. In FEBruAry 2016, the Party DECIDed to seLL itS HEAdQuaRTErs aT JókAI sTreEt FoR FiNaNciAL reasONs. In junE 2018, BertALaN TÓtH wAS elEcTeD prESiDEnt iN thE mSzP, SHOrtLy aFtEr THE ParTY SUfFEReD its WOrst ELEctORal dEfEAt SiNce 1990.
THE PARTY FuRThEr dECLiNeD in tHe 2019 EuROPeaN EleCtiON, OnLy sCoriNg 6,61% OF votes ANd bEing OVerTAken By The dEMOCrAtiC coAliTIon aNd mOMEnTUm.
IDeolOgY
in PolitiCAL tERms, tHE MSZp differeNTIateS iTselF FRom Its coNServATive OPponENTs maInLY in iTS REJEcTIOn of huNgariaN NAtionaliSm. tHe paRTY iS A mEmbeR of THe prOgrEssivE AllIANCE, thE SOcialiSt INTERNAtIonal, anD the paRTy OF eUROpEAn sOCIaListS (pES), And iT HolDs A CHaiRMAnsHip AnD SeVeRAl ViCe-ChaIRmaNShIPS in COMmiTTEEs at thE eurOPeAn PaRLiaMENt.
elECTion REsultS
NatiOnAl AsSEmbly
1As pArT oF the uNITY alliANcE; MsZP ran TOGeTHEr WITH ToGether 2014 (e14), dEmOCrAtiC CoalItioN (dk), DIalOgUE for hUNGARy (Pm) ANd HUNGariaN lIberAl PaRtY (mlp).
2 IN AN Electoral Alliance with DialoGUe foR HuNgaRy
single mEMBer CONstitUEnCIeS VotInG coNsISTeNTly for | Hungarian Socialist PartyThe HungarianSocialist Party (), known mostly by its acronym MSZP, is a social-democratic political party in Hungary. It was foundedon 7 October 1989 as a post-communist evolution and one of two legal successors of the HungarianSocialistWorkers' Party (MSZMP). Alongwith its conservative rival Fidesz, MSZP was oneof the two most dominantparties in Hungarian politics until 2010; however, the partylost much of its popular support as a result of the Őszödspeech,the consequent 2006 protests, and then the 2008 financial crisis. Followingthe2010 election, MSZP becamethe largest opposition party in parliament, aposition it held until 2018, when itwas overtaken by the far-right Jobbik. History The MSZP evolved from the communist Hungarian Socialist Workers' Party (or MSZMP), which ruled Hungary between 1956 and 1989. By thesummer of 1989, the MSZMP was no longer a Marxist–Leninist party, andhad been taken overby a faction of radical reformers who favouredjettisoning the Communist system in favour of a market economy. Oneof its leaders, Rezső Nyers, the architect of the New Economic Mechanism in the 1960s and 1970s, was elected as chairman of a four-man collective presidency that replaced the oldMSZMP Politburo.Although GeneralSecretary Károly Grósz,whohad succeeded longtime leader János Kádár a yearearlier, was elected to this body, Nyers now outranked him–and was thus nowthe de facto leaderof Hungary. At a party congress on 7 October 1989, the MSZMP dissolved and refoundeditself as theMSZP,with Nyers as its first president. Amarginal "Communist"faction led byGrósz broke away to form a revived Hungarian Communist Workers' Party, now known as the Hungarian Workers' Party,the other successor of the MSZMP. The decision to declarethe MSZP a successor of the MSZMP was controversial,andstill carries repercussions for both the MSZP andHungary.Another source of controversy is that some members of the former communist elite maintained political influence in the MSZP. Indeed,many key MSZP politicians were active members or held leadership positions within the MSZMP (likeGyula Horn and László Kovács). On economicissues, the Socialists have often been greater advocates ofliberal, free market policies than the conservative opposition, whichhastendedto favor more state interventionism in the economy through economic and price regulations, as well as through stateownershipof keyeconomic enterprises.The MSZP, in contrast, implemented a strong package of marketreforms, austerity andprivatization in1995–96, called the Bokros package, when Hungary facedan economic and financial crisis. According to researchers, the elites of the Hungarian 'left' (MSZP and SZDSZ)have been differentiated from the 'right' by being more supportive of the classical neo-liberal economic policies, while the 'right' (especiallyextreme right) has advocated more interventionistpolicies. In contrast, issues like church and state and former communistsshow alignment along the traditional left-right spectrum. Itis also noteworthy that,according to research,the MSZP elite's positions used to be closerto votersof the SZDSZ than to theirown.Besides amore liberal approach to the economy overall, the MSZP differentiated itself from the conservative opposition through its more recent focus on transforming state social policy from a collection of measures that benefit the entire population, such as subsidiesavailable to all citizens,to one basedon financial and social need. Besides Gyula Horn, theMSZP's most internationally recognized politicians wereFerenc Gyurcsány and László Kovács, aformer member of the EuropeanCommission, responsible for taxation. Electoral historyThe MSZP faced the voters for the first time at the 1990 elections, the first free elections held in Hungary in 44 years. Itwas knocked down to fourth place with only 33 seats. Nyershanded the leadership to Horn,Hungary's last Communist foreign minister. Horn led the MSZP toan outright majority at the 1994 parliamentary election. Although theMSZPcouldhave governed alone, he optedto forma coalitionwith the liberal Alliance of Free Democrats (SZDSZ). He not onlywanted to allay concerns inside and outside Hungary of a former Communist party holding amajority, but needed the Free Democrats' votes to get economic reforms (what became the Bokros package) past his own party's left wing. Thus thepost-communist party was released from a so-called "political quarantine" (by being the former state partythe socialists were in a quarantine by the other democratic parties). After being turned out of office in 1998, the party was ableto form a renewed centre-left coalition withthe Free Democrats in 2002. At the2006 elections, MSZP won with 43.2% of party list votes, which gave it 190 representativesoutof386 in the Parliament. The MSZP was thereforeable to retain its coalition government from thepreviousterm. In earlier elections, the MSZP polled10.89%(1990), 32.98% (1994), 32.92% (1998)and 42.05% (2002). After the successful fees abolishment referendum, MSZP formed the first minority government of Hungary, followingthe SZDSZ's backing out of the coalition with a deadline of May 1, 2008. 2010s decline On21 March 2009Gyurcsány announced his resignation as Prime Minister due tofailure management ofthe economic crisis. Gordon Bajnai became the nomineeofMSZP for the post of prime minister in March 2009 and he became Prime Minister on14 April. Gyurcsány also resigned from his positionof party chairman, which he had occupied since 2007. MSZP has lost halfof its supporters during the European Parliament election in 2009, when the party received only 17,37% of the votes and gained four seats,compared tothe previousnineseats. This electoral defeat marked the end of thede facto two-partysystem in Hungary, which hadlasted since 1998. The Hungarian Socialist Party suffered a heavydefeat in the 2010election (wonby Fidesz with a ⅔ majority), gaining only 19,3% of the votes, and 59 seats in the parliament. Following the resignation of Ildikó Lendvai, the party's prime minister candidate Attila Mesterházy waselected Chairman of the Socialist Party. Nevertheless, MSZP became the biggest opposition party in Hungary. The left-wing fragmented after the 2010 election; at first KatalinSzili left the MSZP to form Social Union (SZU), followingthe similarly significant defeated local elections inOctober 2010, neverthelessGyurcsány's detachment was a much worse disaster for the Socialists.Initially,the former PM wanted to reform the party,but his goals remained in the minority. As a result, Gyurcsány, along with nine other members of the parliamentary group, left MSZP and established Democratic Coalition(DK). Thus MSZP's number of MPs reduced to 48. The Socialist Partyentered into an alliance with four other partiesin January 2014 to contest the Aprilparliamentary election. Mesterházy was elected candidate for the Prime Minister position, but the Unity alliancefailed to win. After that the electoral coalition disestablished. Onthe 2014 European Parliamentelection, MSZP suffered the largest defeat since the 1990 parliamentary election, gaining thirdplace and only 10% of the votes. After the obvious failure, Mesterházy and the entire presidium of the Socialist Partyresigned.József Tóbiás waselected leader of the Socialist Party on19 July 2014 following the resignation ofMesterházy. He also became leader ofthe parliamentary group in September 2014. During his leadership, theSocialist Party won a parliamentary by-election (2014) and an important mayoral by-election (Salgótarján), however the party itself was permanentlypushed back to the third place by far-right Jobbik according to the opinionpolls. Tóbiás did not support the full cooperationand unification of the left-wing opposition parties against Viktor Orbán. During the MSZPparty congress in June 2016,hewas defeatedby Gyula Molnár,a former Socialist MP and mayor, who succeeded him as party chairman. In February 2016, the party decided to sell itsheadquarters at JókaiStreet forfinancial reasons. InJune2018, Bertalan Tóth was electedpresident in theMSZP, shortly after the party sufferedits worst electoral defeat since1990. The party further declined in the 2019 Europeanelection,only scoring6,61% of votes and being overtaken by theDemocratic Coalition and Momentum. Ideology In political terms, the MSZP differentiates itself from its conservative opponents mainly in its rejection of Hungarian nationalism. The party is a member oftheProgressiveAlliance, the Socialist International, and the Party ofEuropean Socialists (PES),and it holds a chairmanship and several vice-chairmanships in committees at theEuropeanParliament.Election results National Assembly 1As part of theUnity alliance; MSZP ran together with Together 2014 (E14), Democratic Coalition (DK), Dialogue for Hungary (PM) and Hungarian Liberal Party (MLP). 2 In an electoralalliancewith Dialogue for Hungary SingleMember Constituencies voting consistently for | Hungarian Socialist Party The Hungarian _Socialist_ Party (), known mostly by _its_ acronym _MSZP,_ _is_ _a_ social-democratic _political_ party _in_ Hungary. It _was_ founded on 7 October _1989_ _as_ a post-communist evolution and one of two _legal_ successors of _the_ Hungarian Socialist Workers' Party _(MSZMP)._ Along with its conservative rival _Fidesz,_ MSZP was one of the _two_ most dominant parties in _Hungarian_ politics _until_ _2010;_ however, the party lost much of its popular support as a result of the Őszöd _speech,_ the consequent 2006 protests, and then _the_ 2008 financial _crisis._ Following the 2010 election, MSZP _became_ the largest opposition party in parliament, a position _it_ held until 2018, _when_ it was overtaken by the far-right Jobbik. History The MSZP evolved from _the_ communist Hungarian _Socialist_ Workers' Party (or MSZMP), _which_ ruled Hungary between 1956 _and_ 1989. By the summer of 1989, the MSZMP was no longer a Marxist–Leninist _party,_ _and_ had been taken _over_ by a faction of radical reformers who _favoured_ jettisoning the Communist system _in_ favour of a market _economy._ _One_ of _its_ leaders, Rezső Nyers, _the_ architect of the New _Economic_ Mechanism in the 1960s and _1970s,_ _was_ elected _as_ chairman of a four-man _collective_ presidency that replaced the _old_ MSZMP Politburo. Although General Secretary Károly Grósz, who had succeeded longtime _leader_ János Kádár a year _earlier,_ was elected to this body, Nyers now _outranked_ him–and was thus now the de facto _leader_ _of_ Hungary. At a party congress on 7 October _1989,_ _the_ MSZMP dissolved and refounded _itself_ as the MSZP, with Nyers as its first president. A marginal "Communist" faction led by Grósz broke away to form a _revived_ Hungarian Communist Workers' _Party,_ now known as the _Hungarian_ Workers' Party, the other successor of the MSZMP. The decision to _declare_ the MSZP a successor of _the_ MSZMP _was_ controversial, _and_ still carries _repercussions_ for both the MSZP and Hungary. _Another_ _source_ of controversy is _that_ some members of the former communist elite maintained political _influence_ in the MSZP. _Indeed,_ _many_ _key_ MSZP politicians were active members or held leadership positions within the _MSZMP_ (like Gyula Horn and _László_ Kovács). _On_ economic _issues,_ the Socialists have often been greater advocates of liberal, free market _policies_ than the conservative _opposition,_ which has _tended_ to _favor_ more _state_ interventionism in the economy through economic and _price_ _regulations,_ as well as through _state_ ownership of key _economic_ _enterprises._ The MSZP, in _contrast,_ _implemented_ a strong package _of_ market reforms, austerity and privatization in 1995–96, called the Bokros _package,_ _when_ Hungary faced an economic and financial crisis. According to researchers, the _elites_ of the Hungarian 'left' (MSZP and SZDSZ) _have_ been differentiated from the 'right' by being more _supportive_ of _the_ classical _neo-liberal_ economic policies, while _the_ 'right' (especially extreme right) _has_ advocated more _interventionist_ policies. In contrast, issues like church and state _and_ former communists show alignment along the _traditional_ _left-right_ spectrum. It is also noteworthy that, _according_ to research, _the_ MSZP elite's _positions_ _used_ _to_ be closer to voters of the _SZDSZ_ _than_ to their _own._ Besides a more liberal approach to the _economy_ overall, the MSZP _differentiated_ itself from _the_ conservative opposition through its more recent focus on _transforming_ state _social_ policy from a collection of measures _that_ _benefit_ _the_ entire population, such as subsidies available _to_ all citizens, to one _based_ on financial and social need. _Besides_ Gyula Horn, the MSZP's most internationally _recognized_ politicians _were_ Ferenc Gyurcsány and László Kovács, a _former_ _member_ _of_ the European Commission, responsible for taxation. Electoral history The MSZP _faced_ the voters _for_ _the_ first _time_ at _the_ _1990_ elections, the _first_ free elections _held_ in Hungary in 44 years. It _was_ knocked _down_ to _fourth_ place with _only_ _33_ _seats._ Nyers handed the leadership to Horn, Hungary's _last_ Communist foreign minister. Horn _led_ _the_ MSZP _to_ an outright majority at the 1994 parliamentary election. _Although_ the _MSZP_ could have governed alone, _he_ _opted_ to form _a_ _coalition_ with the _liberal_ Alliance of Free Democrats (SZDSZ). He _not_ only wanted to allay concerns inside _and_ outside Hungary of a former Communist party holding a majority, but needed the Free Democrats' votes _to_ get economic reforms (what became the Bokros package) past his own party's left wing. Thus _the_ _post-communist_ party was released from a so-called "political quarantine" _(by_ _being_ _the_ former state _party_ the _socialists_ were in a _quarantine_ by the other democratic parties). After being turned _out_ of office in 1998, the party was able to form a renewed centre-left _coalition_ with the Free _Democrats_ in 2002. _At_ _the_ 2006 elections, MSZP won _with_ 43.2% of party list votes, which _gave_ _it_ _190_ _representatives_ out of 386 in the _Parliament._ The MSZP was therefore able to _retain_ its _coalition_ government from the _previous_ term. In earlier elections, the MSZP polled _10.89%_ _(1990),_ 32.98% (1994), 32.92% (1998) and 42.05% (2002). After _the_ _successful_ _fees_ _abolishment_ _referendum,_ MSZP formed _the_ _first_ minority government _of_ Hungary, following the SZDSZ's _backing_ out of the coalition with a deadline of May 1, _2008._ _2010s_ decline On 21 March 2009 _Gyurcsány_ _announced_ his resignation _as_ _Prime_ Minister due _to_ failure management of the economic _crisis._ _Gordon_ Bajnai _became_ _the_ _nominee_ of MSZP _for_ the _post_ of prime minister in _March_ 2009 and he became Prime Minister on 14 April. _Gyurcsány_ _also_ resigned from his position of party chairman, _which_ he had _occupied_ since 2007. MSZP has lost half of its supporters during the _European_ Parliament election in 2009, when the party _received_ only 17,37% of the _votes_ and gained _four_ _seats,_ compared to the previous nine seats. This electoral defeat marked the end of _the_ de facto two-party system in Hungary, which had lasted since 1998. _The_ Hungarian Socialist Party _suffered_ a heavy _defeat_ in the 2010 election (won by Fidesz with a _⅔_ majority), gaining only 19,3% _of_ the _votes,_ _and_ 59 _seats_ in _the_ parliament. Following the resignation of Ildikó Lendvai, _the_ _party's_ prime minister candidate _Attila_ Mesterházy was elected _Chairman_ of the _Socialist_ Party. Nevertheless, MSZP became the biggest opposition party in _Hungary._ The left-wing fragmented after _the_ 2010 election; _at_ first _Katalin_ Szili left the MSZP to form Social Union (SZU), _following_ _the_ similarly significant _defeated_ local elections in October _2010,_ nevertheless Gyurcsány's detachment _was_ a _much_ _worse_ disaster for the Socialists. Initially, the former PM _wanted_ to reform the _party,_ but _his_ _goals_ remained in the minority. As a _result,_ Gyurcsány, along _with_ nine other members of the parliamentary group, left MSZP and established Democratic Coalition _(DK)._ _Thus_ MSZP's number of MPs reduced to 48. The Socialist _Party_ entered into an _alliance_ with four other parties in _January_ 2014 to contest the _April_ parliamentary _election._ Mesterházy was elected candidate _for_ the _Prime_ _Minister_ position, but _the_ Unity alliance failed _to_ _win._ After that the electoral coalition disestablished. On the 2014 _European_ Parliament election, MSZP suffered _the_ _largest_ defeat since _the_ 1990 parliamentary election, _gaining_ third place _and_ only 10% _of_ the votes. After the obvious failure, Mesterházy and _the_ entire presidium of the _Socialist_ Party resigned. József _Tóbiás_ was elected leader of _the_ Socialist Party on 19 July 2014 following the resignation of Mesterházy. He _also_ _became_ _leader_ of the _parliamentary_ group in September 2014. During _his_ leadership, the Socialist _Party_ won a parliamentary by-election (2014) and an _important_ mayoral _by-election_ (Salgótarján), _however_ the party itself _was_ permanently pushed back to the third _place_ by _far-right_ Jobbik according to the opinion polls. Tóbiás did not _support_ the full _cooperation_ and unification of the left-wing opposition parties against Viktor _Orbán._ During the _MSZP_ party congress _in_ June _2016,_ he was _defeated_ by Gyula Molnár, a former Socialist MP and _mayor,_ who _succeeded_ _him_ as party chairman. In February 2016, the party _decided_ to sell its headquarters at _Jókai_ Street for financial reasons. In June 2018, Bertalan _Tóth_ was _elected_ president _in_ _the_ MSZP, shortly after the party suffered its _worst_ electoral defeat since 1990. The party further declined in the 2019 European election, only _scoring_ 6,61% of votes and _being_ overtaken by _the_ Democratic Coalition and Momentum. Ideology In political terms, the _MSZP_ differentiates itself from its conservative _opponents_ mainly in its _rejection_ of Hungarian nationalism. _The_ party is _a_ _member_ of the Progressive Alliance, the Socialist International, and _the_ Party of European Socialists (PES), and it holds _a_ chairmanship and several _vice-chairmanships_ in _committees_ at the European Parliament. Election results _National_ Assembly 1As part of the _Unity_ alliance; MSZP ran together _with_ Together 2014 _(E14),_ Democratic Coalition (DK), Dialogue for _Hungary_ (PM) and Hungarian Liberal Party (MLP). 2 In an electoral alliance _with_ _Dialogue_ _for_ Hungary Single Member Constituencies voting _consistently_ for |
Shame and Scandal in the Family
"Shame and Scandal in the Family", also known as "Shame & Scandal" for short, is a song written by calypso singer Sir Lancelot for the movie I Walked with a Zombie in 1943 and originally titled "Fort Holland Calypso Song". Sir Lancelot issued his recording of it in the late 1940s. The Sir Lancelot version was covered by folksingers Odetta and Burl Ives. In 1962, Trinidadian calypsonian Lord Melody wrote new lyrics for the verses while keeping the melody and the chorus. The Historical Museum of Southern Florida said of Lord Melody's version that "No calypso has been more extensively recorded".
Lyrical content
In Sir Lancelot's version, the lyric reports gossip about a prominent family on a Caribbean island named San Sebastian.
In Lord Melody's 1960s version the story follows a young Puerto Rican man in search of a wife. In each of the verses, the young man asks his father for permission to marry a different woman, only to be told he can not marry the girl as "The girl is your sister, but your mamma don't know". However, the tables are turned during the last verse, where the young man's mother tells him that "Your daddy ain't your daddy, but your daddy don't know", clearing the path for him to marry any of the girls.
Famous covers
In 1962, the Trinidadian calypsonian Lord Melody used Sir Lancelot's song as the basis of his song "Shame and Scandal", although he titled it "Wau, Wau". Melody's version used the same chorus and tune as the original 1943 song but with different verses.
In 1964, Shawn Elliott released it as a single
Also in 1964, The Kingston Trio included a live performance of the song (retitled "Ah Woe, Ah Me!") on their last Capitol Records album Back in Town.
In 1965, the British comedy actor, Lance Percival, reached number 37 in the UK Singles Chart with his cover version, under the expanded title of "Shame and Scandal in the Family".
In the mid 1960s, Jamaica's Kingston Hilton Hotel resident mento band, The Hiltonaires, also recorded it as "Shame and Scandal".
In 1965, a ska cover version was recorded in Jamaica by Peter Tosh and The Wailers on vocals, backed by the Skatalites and released on the Studio One label.
Also in 1965 Los 3 Sudamericanos released a cover in Spanish: "Qué familia más original".
In 1966, French-Italian singer Dalida recorded the song as Un grosso scandalo (with Italian lyrics by Luciano Beretta) for one of her Italian-language LPs on Barclay Records.
In 1972, Australian singer, Johnny Chester's version with Jigsaw called "Shame And Scandal (In the Family)" peaked at No. 13 on Go-Set National Top 40.
In 1977, American vocal group The Stylistics released a cover version titled "Shame and Scandal in the Family" from their album, Sun & Soul. The single reached #87 on the Hot Soul Singles chart.
In 1983, Clint Eastwood & General Saint released a reggae cover version
In 1993, Skatalà released a cover version titled "Skandol Dub" in the album "Borinot, Borinot".
In 2003, David Lindley and Wally Ingram recorded a version of "Shame and Scandal" on their album "Twango Bango III". Lindley had previously performed the song a few times in the 80s with his band El Rayo-X.
In 2012, the South African band Dr Victor & the Rasta Rebels released a cover titled "Shame and Scandal" featuring South African singer Kurt Darren.
There are known versions by Trini Lopez, De Maskers, King Bravo with Baba Brooks & his band, Bobby Aitken and Blue Beat, Odetta, Freddie McGregor, Laurel Aitken. Instrumental versions were also popular, most famously by Caravelli and by Franck Pourcel and his Grand Orchestre.
Language versions
The song has been translated to a number of major foreign languages:
French: "Scandale dans la famille" performed by Dalida, by Sacha Distel and by Les Surfs in three separate versions all in 1965. French translated lyrics were by Maurice Tézé
German: "Schande Unserer Familie" performed by Harry & Ronny in 1965
Italian: "Un Grosso Scandalo" performed by Dalida and by Giovanna
Portuguese: "O Escândalo" performed by the Brazilian band Renato e Seus Blue Caps in 1965 and later on by The Supersonics.
Spanish: "Escandalo en la Familia"
Hungarian: "Szégyen és gyalázat a családban" performed by Iván Darvas
Polish: "Skandal w rodzinie (Co za skandal, gdy tata dowie się)" performed by Chochoły
Estonian: "Skandaal perekonnas" performed by Ivo Linna and Rock Hotel
Slovak: "Nervózna família" performed by Jozef Krištof, later band Ventil RG
Greek: "Τι ντροπή" (Ti dropi) (What a shame), performed by Dakis
Hebrew: "Tsarot Ba'Mishpacha" (Troubles in the family), written and performed by Shmulik Kraus
Madness version
British ska/pop band Madness covered the song having previously covered several Prince Buster ska recordings, including the songs "Madness", and "One Step Beyond". The band began performing the song at a series of low-key performances as 'The Dangermen' in 2005.
Madness later recorded the song for their cover album The Dangermen Sessions Vol. 1, and released it as a single later that year.
Formats and track listings
These are the formats and track listings of major single releases of "Shame & Scandal".
7" Single
"Shame & Scandal" (Lord/Pinard) - 2:52
"Shame & Scandal [Dub]" (Lord/Pinard) - 2:56
"Shame & Scandal" (Peter Touch (Tosh) and The Wailers) - 3:03
CD Single
"Shame & Scandal" (Lord/Pinard) - 2:52
"Skylarking" (Hinds) - 3:02
"Dreader Than Dread" (Galnek) - 3:04
Chart performance
The Madness release did not fare well in the UK, only spending two weeks in the charts, peaking at number 38. However, the song did better in France, where it peaked at number 12 and spent 19 weeks in the charts. The song also made an appearance on the Swiss Singles Top 100, spending 8 weeks in the charts and reaching a high of number 69, and just made the Dutch Singles Top 100, hitting number 100 and remaining in the chart for a single week.
References
External links
Odetta and Johnny Cash sing "Shame and Scandal in the Family" on YouTube (from 1969)
Category:1943 songs
Category:1965 singles
Category:1972 singles
Category:1977 singles
Category:2005 singles
Category:The Stylistics songs
Category:Madness (band) songs
Category:V2 Records singles | shame und scandal in the family " shame and scandal in the family ", also known as " shame & scandal " promotional short, is a song written by calypso singer sir lancelot for the movie i walked with a zombie in 1943 and originally titled " fort holland calypso song ". sir lancelot issued his recording of it in the late 1940s. the sir lancelot version was covered by folksingers odetta and burl ives. in 1962, trinidadian calypsonian lord melody wrote new lyrics for the verses while keeping the melody and the chorus. the historical museum of southern florida said of lord melody ' s version that " no calypso has been more extensively recorded ". lyrical content in sir lancelot ' s version, the lyric reports gossip about a prominent family on a caribbean island named san sebastian. in lord melody ' s 1960s version the story follows a young puerto rican man in search after a wife. in each of the verses, the young man asks his father for permission to marry a different boy, only to be angered he can not marry the girl as " the woman is your sister, but your mamma don ' t know ". however, the tables are turned during the last verse, where the young man ' s mother tells him that " your daddy ain ' t your daddy, but your daddy don ' da know ", clearing the path for him to marry any of the girls. famous covers in 1962, the trinidadian calypsonian lord melody used sir lancelot ' s song as the basis of his song " shame and scandal ", although he titled it " wau, wau ". melody ' s ballad used the same chorus and tune as the original 1943 song but with different verses. in 1964, shawn elliott released it as a single also in 1964, the kingston trio performed a live performance of the song ( retitled " ah woe, ah me! " ) on their last capitol records album back in town. in 1965, the british comedy actor, lance percival, reached number 37 in the uk singles chart with his cover version, under the expanded title of " shame and scandal in the family ". in the mid 1960s, jamaica ' s kingston hilton hotel resident mento band, the hiltonaires, also recorded it as " shame and scandal ". in 1965, a ska cover version was recorded in jamaica by peter tosh and the wailers on vocals, backed by the skatalites and released on the cassette one label. also in 1965 los 3 sudamericanos released a cover in spanish : " que familia mas original ". in 1966, french - italian singer dalida recorded the song as un grosso scandalo ( with italian lyrics by luciano beretta ) for one of her italian - language lps on barclay records. in 1972, australian singer, johnny chester ' s version with jigsaw called " shame and scandal ( in the family ) " peaked at no. 13 on go - set national top 40. in 1977, american vocal group the stylistics released a cover version titled " shame and scandal in the family " from their album, sun & soul. the single reached # 87 on the hot soul singles chart. in 1983, clint eastwood & general saint released a reggae cover version in 1993, skatala released a cover version titled " skandol dub " in the album " borinot, borinot ". in 2003, david lindley and wally ingram recorded a version of " shame and scandal " on their album " twango bango iii ". lindley had previously performed the song a few times in the 80s with his band el rayo - x. in 2012, the south african band dr victor & the rasta rebels released a cover titled " shame and scandal " featuring south african singer kurt darren. there are known versions by trini lopez, de maskers, king bravo with baba brooks & his band, bobby aitken and blue beat, odetta, freddie mcgregor, laurel aitken. instrumental versions were also popular, most famously by caravelli and by franck pourcel and his grand orchestre. language versions the song has been translated to a number of major foreign languages : french : " scandale dans la famille " performed by dalida, by sacha distel and by les surfs in three separate versions all in 1965. french translated lyrics were by maurice teze german : " schande unserer familie " performed by harry & ronny in 1965 italian : " un grosso scandalo " performed by dalida and by giovanna portuguese : " o escandalo " performed by the brazilian band renato e seus blue caps in 1965 and later on by the supersonics. spanish : " escandalo en la familia " hungarian : " szegyen es gyalazat a csaladban " performed by ivan darvas polish : " skandal w rodzinie ( co za skandal, gdy tata dowie sie ) " performed by chochoły estonian : " skandaal perekonnas " performed by ivo linna and rock hotel slovak : " nervozna familia " performed by jozef kristof, later band ventil rg greek : " τι ντροπη " ( ti dropi ) ( what a shame ), performed by dakis hebrew : " tsarot ba ' mishpacha " ( troubles in the family ), written and performed by shmulik kraus madness version british ska / pop band madness covered the song having previously covered several prince buster ska recordings, including the songs " madness ", and " one step beyond ". the band began performing the song at a series of low - key performances as ' the dangermen ' in 2005. madness later recorded the song for their cover album the dangermen sessions vol. 1, and released it as a single later that year. formats and track listings these are the formats and track listings of major single releases of " shame & scandal ". 7 " single " shame & scandal " ( lord / pinard ) - 2 : 52 " shame & scandal [ dub ] " ( lord / pinard ) - 2 : 56 " shame & scandal " ( peter touch ( tosh ) and the wailers ) - 3 : 03 cd single " shame & scandal " ( lord / pinard ) - 2 : 52 " skylarking " ( hinds ) - 3 : 02 " dreader than dread " ( galnek ) - 3 : 04 chart performance the madness release did not fare well in the uk, only spending two weeks in the charts, peaking at number 38. however, the song did better in france, where it peaked at number 12 and spent 19 weeks in the charts. the song also made an appearance on the swiss singles top 100, spending 8 weeks in the charts and reaching a high of number 69, and just made the dutch singles top 100, hitting number 100 and remaining in the chart for a single week. references external links odetta and johnny cash sing " shame and scandal in the family " on youtube ( from 1969 ) category : 1943 songs category : 1965 singles category : 1972 singles category : 1977 singles category : 2005 singles category : the stylistics songs category : madness ( band ) songs category : v2 records singles | Shans and Scandal in the Family " Shame and Scandal in the Family ", also known as " Shame & Scandal " for short, is a song written by calypso singer Sir Lancelot for the movie I Walked with a Zombie in 1943 and originally titled " Fort Holland Calypso Song ". Sir Lancelot issued his recording of it in the late 1940s. The Sir Lancelot version was covered by folksingers Odetta and Burl Ives. In 1962, Trinidadian calypsonian Lord Melody wrote new lyrics for the verses while keeping the melody and the chorus. The Historical Museum of Southern Florida said of Lord Melody ' s version ^Gat " No calypso has been more extensively recorded ". Lyrical content In Sir Lancelot ' s version, the lyric reports gossip about a prominent family on a Caribbean island named San Sebastian. In Lord Melody ' s 1960s version the story follows a young Puerto Rican man in search of a wife. In eaVU of the verses, the young man asks his father for permission to marry a different woman, only to be told he can not marry the girl as " The girl is your sister, but your mamma don ' t know ". However, the tables are turned during the last verse, where the young man ' s mother tells him that " Your daddy ain ' t your daddy, but your daddy don ' t know ", clearing the path for him to marry any of the girls. Famous covers In 1962, the Trinidadian calypsonian Lord Melody used Sir Lancelot ' s song as the basis of his song " Shame and Scandal ", although he titled it " Wau, Wau ". Melody ' s version used the same chorus and tune as the original 1943 song but with different verses. In 1964, Shawn Elliott released it as a single Also in 1964, The Kingston Trio included a live performance of the xomg (retitled " Ah Woe, Ah Me! ") on their last Capitol Records album Back in Town. In 1965, the British comedy actor, Lance Percival, reached number 37 in the UK Singles Chart with his cover version, under the expanded title of " Shame and Scandal in the Family ". In the mid 1960s, Jamaica ' s Kingston Hilton Hotel resident mento band, The Hiltonaires, also recorded it as " Shame and Scandal ". In 1965, a ska cover version was recorded in Jamaica by Peter Tosh and The Wailers on vocals, backed by the Skatalites and released on the Studio One label. Also in 1965 Los 3 SudamericAnls released a cover in Spanish: " Qué familia más original ". In 1966, French - Italian singer Dalida recorded the song as Un grosso scandalo (with Italian lyrics by Luciano Beretta) for one of her Italian - language LPs on Barclay Records. In 1972, Australian singer, Johnny Chester ' s version with Jigsaw called " Shame And Scandal (In the Family) " peaked at No. 13 on Go - Set National Top 40. In 1977, American vocal group The Stylistics released a cover version titled " Shame and Scandal in the Family " from their album, Sun & Soul. The single reached # 87 on the Hot Soul Singles chart. In 1983, Clint Eastwood & General Saint released a reggae cover version In 1993, Skatalà released a cover version titled " Skandol Dub " in the album " Borinot, Borinot ". In 300W, David Lindley and Wally Ingram recorded a version of " Shame and Scandal " on their album " Twango Bango III ". Lindley had previously performed the song a few times in the 80s with his band El Rayo - X. In 2012, the South African band Dr Victor & the Rasta Rebels released a cover titled " Shame and Scandal " featuring South African singer Kurt Darren. There are known versions by Trini Lopez, De Maskers, King Bravo with Baba Brooks & his band, Bobby Aitken and Blue Beat, Odetta, Freddie McGregor, Laurel Aitken. Instrumental versions were also popular, most famously by Caravelli and by Franck Pourcel and his Grand Orchestre. Language versions The song has been translated to a number of major foreign languages: French: " Scandale dans la famille " performed by Dalida, by Sacha Distel and by Les Surfs in three separate versions all in 1965. French translated lyrics were by Maurice Tézé German: " Schande Unserer Familie " performed by Harry & Ronny in 1965 Italian: " Un Grosso Scandalo " performed by Dalida and by Giovanna Portuguese: " O Escândalo " performed by the Brazilian band Renato e Seus Blue Caps in 1965 and later on by The Supersonics. Spanish: " Escandalo en la Familia " Hungarian: " Szégyen és gyalázat a családban " performed by Iván Darvas Polish: " Skandal w rodzinie (Co za skandal, gdy tata dowie się) " performed by Chochoły Estonian: " Skandaal perekonnas " performed by Ivo Linna and Rock Hotel Slovak: " Nervózna família " performed by Jozef Krištof, later band Ventil RG Greek: " Τι ντροπή " (Ti dropi) (What a shame ), performed by Dakis Hebrew: " Tsarot Ba ' Mishpacha " (Troubles in the family ), written and performed by Shmulik KDaua Madness version British ska / pop band Madness covered the song having previously covered several Prince Buster ska recordings, including the songs " Madness ", and " One StFo Beyond ". The band began performing the song at a series of low - key performances as ' The Dangermen ' in 2005. Madness later recorded the song for their cover album The Dangermen Sessions Vol. 1, and released it as a single later that year. Formats and track listings These are the formats and track listings of major single releases of " Shame & Scandal ". 7 " Single " Shame & Scandal " (Lord / Pinard) - 2: 52 " Shame & Scandal [Dub] " (Lord / Pinard) - 2: 56 " Shame & Scandal " (Peter Touch (Tosh) and The Wailers) - 3: 03 CD Single " Shame & Scandal " (Lord / Pinard) - 2: 52 " Skylarking " (Hinds) - 3: 02 " Dreader Than Dread " (Galnek) - 3: 04 Chart performance The Madness release did not fare well in the UK, only spending two weeks in the charts, peaking at number 38. However, the song did better in France, where it peaked at number 12 and spent 19 weeks in the charts. The song also made an ap)earanc4 on the Swiss Singles Top 100, spending 8 weeks in the charts and reaching a high of number 69, and just made the Dutch Singles Top 100, hitting number 100 and remaining in the chart for a single week. References External links Odetta and Johnny Cash sing " Shame and Scandal in the Family " on YouTube (f$lm 1969) Category: 1943 songs Category: 1965 singles Category: 1972 singles Category: 1977 singles Category: 2005 singles Category: The Stylistics songs Category: Madness (band) songs Category: V2 Records singles | Shame and Scandal in the Family "Shame and Scandal in Family", also known "Shame & Scandal" for short, is a song written by calypso singer Sir Lancelot for the movie I Walked with a Zombie in 1943 and originally titled "Fort Holland Calypso Song". Sir Lancelot issued it in the late 1940s. The Sir Lancelot version was covered by folksingers Odetta Burl Ives. In 1962, Trinidadian calypsonian Lord Melody wrote new lyrics for the verses while keeping and the chorus. Historical Museum of Southern Florida said of Lord Melody's that "No calypso has been recorded". Lyrical In Sir Lancelot's the lyric reports gossip about a prominent family on a Caribbean island named San Sebastian. In Lord Melody's version the story follows a young Puerto Rican man in search of a In each of verses, the young man asks his father for to marry a different woman, told he can not marry the girl as "The girl is but your mamma don't know". However, the tables are turned during the last verse, where the young man's mother tells him that daddy ain't your daddy, your daddy don't know", clearing the path for him to marry of the girls. Famous covers In 1962, the Trinidadian calypsonian Lord Melody used Sir Lancelot's song as the basis of his song "Shame and Scandal", although he titled "Wau, Wau". Melody's version used the same chorus and tune as the original 1943 but with different verses. In 1964, Shawn Elliott it as a single Also in 1964, The Kingston Trio a live performance of the (retitled "Ah Ah Me!") on their last Records album Back in Town. In 1965, the British Lance Percival, reached number 37 in the UK Chart with his cover version, under the expanded of "Shame and Scandal in the Family". In the mid 1960s, Jamaica's Kingston Hilton Hotel resident mento band, The Hiltonaires, also recorded it as "Shame and Scandal". In a ska cover version was recorded in Jamaica by Peter Tosh and The Wailers on backed by the released on the Studio One label. Also in 1965 3 Sudamericanos a cover in "Qué familia más original". In French-Italian singer Dalida recorded the song as Un grosso scandalo (with Italian lyrics by Luciano Beretta) for one of her Italian-language on Barclay Records. 1972, Australian singer, Johnny Chester's version with Jigsaw "Shame And Scandal (In the Family)" peaked at No. 13 on National 40. In 1977, vocal group The released a cover version titled "Shame and Scandal in the Family" from their album, Sun Soul. The #87 on Hot Soul Singles chart. In 1983, Clint Eastwood & General Saint released a cover In 1993, Skatalà released a version titled "Skandol Dub" in the "Borinot, Borinot". In 2003, David Lindley and Wally Ingram recorded a version of "Shame and Scandal" on their album Bango III". Lindley had previously performed the song a few in the 80s with his band El Rayo-X. In 2012, the South African band Dr Victor & the Rasta Rebels released a cover titled "Shame and Scandal" featuring South African singer Kurt Darren. There are known versions by Trini Lopez, De King Bravo with Baba Brooks & his band, Bobby Aitken and Blue Beat, Odetta, Freddie Laurel Aitken. Instrumental versions were also popular, most famously by Caravelli and by Franck Pourcel and his Grand Language versions The song has been translated a of major foreign languages: French: "Scandale dans la famille" by Dalida, by Distel and by Les Surfs three separate versions all in 1965. French translated lyrics were by Maurice Tézé German: "Schande Unserer Familie" performed by & Ronny in 1965 Italian: Grosso Scandalo" performed Dalida and by Giovanna Portuguese: "O performed by the Brazilian band Renato e Seus Blue Caps in 1965 and later on by The Spanish: "Escandalo en Familia" Hungarian: "Szégyen és a családban" performed by Iván Darvas Polish: "Skandal w rodzinie (Co za skandal, gdy tata dowie się)" performed by Chochoły Estonian: "Skandaal perekonnas" performed by Linna and Rock Hotel Slovak: "Nervózna família" by Jozef Krištof, later band Ventil RG Greek: "Τι ντροπή" (Ti dropi) (What shame), performed Dakis Hebrew: "Tsarot Ba'Mishpacha" (Troubles in the written performed by Kraus Madness version British ska/pop band Madness covered the song having previously covered several Prince Buster ska recordings, including the songs "Madness", and "One Step Beyond". The band began performing the song at a series of low-key performances as 'The Dangermen' in 2005. Madness later recorded the song for cover album The Dangermen Sessions Vol. 1, and released it as a single later that year. Formats and track listings These the formats and listings of major single releases of "Shame & 7" Single "Shame & Scandal" (Lord/Pinard) - 2:52 "Shame & Scandal [Dub]" (Lord/Pinard) - 2:56 "Shame & (Peter Touch (Tosh) and The Wailers) - 3:03 CD Single "Shame & Scandal" (Lord/Pinard) - 2:52 "Skylarking" (Hinds) - 3:02 "Dreader Than Dread" - 3:04 Chart performance The Madness release did not fare well in the UK, only spending two weeks the charts, at number 38. However, the song did better in France, where it peaked at number 12 spent weeks in the charts. The song made an appearance on the Swiss Singles 100, spending 8 weeks in charts and reaching a high of number 69, and just made the Dutch Singles Top 100, number 100 and remaining in the chart for single week. References External links Odetta and Cash sing "Shame and Scandal in the Family" on YouTube (from Category:1943 songs Category:1965 singles Category:1972 singles Category:1977 singles Category:2005 singles Category:The Stylistics songs songs Category:V2 Records singles | ShAme anD sCaNdaL In THe FAmiLY
"shaME and SCanDAL iN tHE faMILy", AlsO KNOwn aS "shAMe & SCandaL" fOr ShORt, is A sONg WrItteN bY cALypSO sINger SiR LaNcElOT fOR THE mOVIE I walkeD wIth a ZoMBiE in 1943 AND OriGInAlly Titled "foRt HollANd CalYpso SOng". Sir lANcElOt ISsueD his reCoRdINg of IT in The LATE 1940S. ThE sIr LAnceLOT vERsIOn WAs COVeReD By fOLkSinGers oDETTA aNd BUrL IvES. IN 1962, tRINiDadian CalyPsONIAN LOrD meloDY WrOTe NeW lYriCS For thE vERsES WHiLe KEepINg tHe mELoDy ANd ThE CHoRuS. ThE hIstoRicaL muSeUM oF SOUthERN FLOrIda SAid Of LoRD MeLodY'S vERSion That "No caLYPSO hAS BEEN mOre exTeNSiVeLy ReCORdeD".
lYRICal COntEnt
iN Sir LancelOt'S vErsion, tHe lYrIC REPOrtS goSsip About a prOMInenT familY ON A carIbbeAn IsLAND nAMEd saN SeBAStiaN.
iN Lord meloDY'S 1960s vERSiON The storY FOLlows A youNG puErto rIcan mAn iN SEaRcH Of A wIfE. iN EAcH of thE vErses, tHe yoUng Man asKs hiS FATHEr foR permisSIoN tO MaRrY A DIffEReNt wOMAn, ONLY tO BE ToLD He CAn nOT mARRY tHE giRl aS "thE girl Is YOUr SISter, bUT yOuR MammA DOn't Know". hOweVER, tHe TableS arE tURNEd durIng THe LASt veRsE, wHeRE thE yOUNg maN'S motHeR TeLLs HiM That "YouR daddY AIn't yOUR dadDY, BuT yoUr DaDDy dON'T knOw", cLEaRing ThE PATH foR HIm To MaRRy anY OF THe GiRlS.
FAmOuS CovErS
In 1962, tHE trInIDAdIAn cAlypSOniAn lORD melODy USed Sir lanceLot'S SonG as The bASis of hiS sOng "shAMe anD sCaNDal", AlThoUgH HE TITLeD it "wAu, waU". melOdy's VeRSIoN usEd tHE SAme chOrus aND tUnE AS tHE oRigINAL 1943 soNg But wItH DIffEreNT VERSeS.
In 1964, Shawn eLlIOTT RelEAsEd it AS a sINglE
aLSO In 1964, tHE kINGStoN TrIo InclUDeD a lIvE peRFoRmanCE OF thE song (rEtITLED "aH wOe, Ah ME!") on theiR last capiTol recordS ALBum BACk iN tOWn.
in 1965, THE BRITish COMeDy ACtor, lanCe peRcival, ReachEd numBer 37 In THE uk SInGLES CHaRt With hIs coVer VERSIOn, unDeR thE EXpanDED TitLe oF "shaME AND scANdAl in tHe FamILy".
iN The Mid 1960s, jAmaIca's KiNgStOn hILtoN HOTEl reSIDENT meNto bAnD, tHE HIlTonAirEs, Also RecORdEd It As "SHaME aND sCaNdAl".
In 1965, a sKa cOVeR VeRsioN WAs RecoRDEd iN JAMaICA By PeteR TOSH ANd THe WAilers On vocALS, BaCked by tHe SkATalites AnD RelEASeD On thE stUdIO ONe lABel.
aLSo in 1965 los 3 sUDAmerIcAnOs releaSED a COver in SPaNiSh: "QUÉ famILiA MáS oRIginAl".
in 1966, fRENCH-ITaLiAN sinGER dAliDa recordeD ThE sOng As un groSso scaNdaLO (wiTH ITALiaN lYRicS By LucIanO BErETtA) fOr OnE oF HEr itALiAn-lanGuagE LpS ON BaRcLAy RECorDS.
in 1972, ausTraliAN SINgEr, JohnnY CHEsteR'S veRSiOn wITh JiGsAW callEd "SHAMe And scAnDaL (iN ThE FamIly)" peAKEd AT nO. 13 oN Go-Set naTiONaL tOP 40.
IN 1977, AmErICaN VoCal GroUP tHE StYLISTIcs reLEasED a cOvER vErSiON tiTLED "SHaME aNd sCaNdAl iN The FAMIly" FrOm THEIR alBUM, sUN & SOul. THE siNgle ReACheD #87 ON ThE hoT soUl SInGlEs cHart.
iN 1983, clINt EastWOoD & GenEraL SaInt RelEASEd A regGAE coVER vERSIoN
In 1993, sKatAlà rElEaSEd a coVeR versION titlEd "sKANDoL dUB" in tHE AlBUm "bOriNOt, BORinot".
IN 2003, DAVid LIndlEy ANd wallY inGram rEcordEd a verSioN Of "sHaME AnD sCaNdal" oN TheiR ALBUm "TwaNGo banGO iii". lindLEY hAD pREvIOUSlY PerFoRMed tHE soNg A FEw tiMeS in THE 80s WIth HiS baNd eL RAYO-x.
In 2012, thE SoUTH aFriCAn bAND DR ViCtOR & thE rAStA REbELs ReLeasED A coVER titlEd "sHamE ANd scanDAl" fEaTUrINg SoutH afrIcAn sINGer KuRT daRREN.
tHEre arE kNown VerSiOnS BY trINI LOpeZ, de maSKErS, KINg braVo wIth babA BrOokS & his band, boBBy aITKeN ANd BLuE beat, odETta, fReDDie mCgrEGOr, LauReL AITken. inSTrUmENtAl VERSIONS WeRe aLso poPulAr, MoST FamOuSLY bY caraVELlI ANd By FRanCK POurcEl aND HIs gRaNd oRChesTRe.
langUagE veRSIoNs
thE sONg hAs bEeN TraNsLateD To A NUmbeR oF MAjoR foREIGn laNGUages:
FrencH: "ScANdaLe dAnS lA FAmILLE" PeRfOrMeD by DaLiDA, By sACHa DIStel AnD By les sURfS IN thrEE sEPArAte vErsIONs aLl iN 1965. FrENcH traNslAtED lyrICs were BY MAuriCe TéZé
GeRmAN: "sChaNde UnsERER Familie" peRfoRMed By HArRy & roNny IN 1965
ItALIAn: "un GrOSso ScANdAlO" peRfOrmed by DaLIDa ANd bY GiovANnA
pOrtuGUeSE: "o eSCâNDaLO" PErformED By THE BRaziLiAN BAnD ReNaTO e seuS bLue cAPS in 1965 And LatEr On by ThE sUperSoNics.
SPANIsH: "EsCaNdALo en La famiLIA"
HUNGarIan: "SzéGYEN És gyALázat A cSALÁdBaN" PErfORmeD By IVáN DaRVaS
POLISh: "skAnDAl w roDzIniE (Co Za SkandAl, Gdy TatA DOwIe SIĘ)" pERFOrmeD by choChołY
EsTONiaN: "sKANdaal PerEkonNAs" pErfoRmEd BY ivO lINnA And ROck hOTel
SLoVAK: "NerVÓZnA famÍLIa" perFoRmED BY JoZEf KrIšTof, LATer banD venTIl Rg
GreeK: "τΙ ντρΟπή" (tI dROpi) (WHaT a shAmE), pERFoRMeD By DAkIs
HEBREw: "tsarOt bA'MIShPaCha" (TROUBLES In The FAmIly), WRitteN AnD perFOrmeD by sHmuliK KraUs
mADnESs vERSIon
BRiTIsh SKA/pOp band MAdnesS COVErEd tHe Song hAviNG prEviOUsLY CoveRED seVeRaL PriNcE BUsTeR skA recoRdINGS, INCLuDING THE sONgS "mADNESs", aNd "ONe Step BEyond". THe bAND bEGaN perFOrMING tHE SOnG AT a seRies oF LoW-KEy pErFOrmanceS As 'The dangERMEN' In 2005.
maDneSs LaTer rEcorDEd THE SoNg For ThEIR CoveR Album THE dangeRMeN sESsIoNS vol. 1, aND rELEaSED it aS A sInglE LAtEr THAT YeaR.
formaTs aND trAcK lIstinGs
theSE aRe THE FormaTS aND TRaCk lISTings of mAJOr Single rELEases OF "SHaME & scANDaL".
7" SInGlE
"sHamE & SCandaL" (lord/PINard) - 2:52
"sHAMe & scandaL [DUb]" (loRD/PInarD) - 2:56
"SHaMe & scANdAl" (petER ToUch (tosh) and THE wailERs) - 3:03
cD sinGle
"shAme & scAnDal" (LORd/pinarD) - 2:52
"sKYLARKinG" (hINdS) - 3:02
"DrEAdER ThAn DreAd" (GAlneK) - 3:04
ChaRT pErformANce
The MaDNEss REleasE DId NOt fare WELl iN THe uk, ONLy SPeNdINg TWO WeEks IN THe ChaRTS, peAKiNG aT NUMbEr 38. hoWEvEr, tHe soNG diD beTTer iN FRancE, wheRE iT peAKEd aT NUMbeR 12 and speNT 19 WeEks in tHE chARts. THE song ALSO mADe An apPEaRancE oN the SWISS SInGlEs ToP 100, sPeNDINg 8 weEkS iN THe ChARTs AND reAChINg a hiGH of NUmbEr 69, and JUsT maDe tHE DUTCh SinGlES tOp 100, HittIng NuMBer 100 aNd ReMaiNING in The chaRT FOR a SinGLe WeeK.
REFeRenCES
eXteRnAl LINKS
oDETta anD johnNY CasH SiNg "SHaME And sCanDAl in tHE FamILY" on YOUtUBE (froM 1969)
catEGOrY:1943 songs
cAtEgoRY:1965 siNGLeS
CATEgoRY:1972 sInGLES
CAteGory:1977 SiNGLES
CateGoRY:2005 sINGlES
cATegOrY:the StylIStIcS sONgs
catEGORY:MAdnesS (baNd) SoNGs
CATEGorY:V2 RecordS siNGlEs | Shameand Scandal in the Family "Shame and Scandal inthe Family", alsoknown as"Shame&Scandal" for short, is a song written by calypso singer Sir Lancelot for the movie I Walked with a Zombie in 1943and originally titled "FortHolland Calypso Song". Sir Lancelot issuedhis recordingofit in the late 1940s. TheSirLancelotversion wascovered by folksingers Odetta and Burl Ives. In 1962, Trinidadian calypsonian Lord Melody wrote newlyrics for theverses while keeping the melody and the chorus. The Historical Museum of Southern Florida said of Lord Melody's version that "No calypso has been more extensively recorded". Lyrical content In Sir Lancelot's version, the lyricreports gossip about a prominent family on a Caribbean islandnamed San Sebastian. In Lord Melody's 1960s version the story follows a young Puerto Rican man in search of a wife. Ineach of the verses, the young man asks his father for permissionto marry a different woman, only to be told he can notmarry the girlas "The girl is your sister, but your mamma don't know". However, the tables are turned during the last verse, wherethe young man's mother tells him that "Your daddyain't your daddy,but your daddy don't know", clearingthe path for him to marry any ofthe girls. Famous covers In 1962, the Trinidadian calypsonian Lord Melody used Sir Lancelot's song asthe basis of his song "Shame andScandal",although he titled it "Wau, Wau". Melody's version used the same chorus and tune as the original 1943 song butwith different verses. In 1964, ShawnElliott released it as a single Also in 1964, The Kingston Trio included a live performance of the song (retitled "Ah Woe, AhMe!")on their last CapitolRecords album Back in Town. In 1965, the British comedy actor, Lance Percival,reachednumber 37 inthe UK Singles Chart with his cover version,under the expanded title of "Shameand Scandal in the Family". In the mid 1960s,Jamaica's Kingston Hilton Hotel resident mento band, The Hiltonaires, also recorded it as "Shame and Scandal". In 1965, a ska cover version wasrecorded in Jamaica by Peter Tosh and The Wailerson vocals, backedby the Skatalites and released ontheStudio One label. Also in 1965 Los 3 Sudamericanos released a coverinSpanish: "Qué familia más original". In 1966, French-Italian singer Dalida recorded the song asUn grosso scandalo (with Italian lyrics by Luciano Beretta) for one of her Italian-language LPs on Barclay Records. In 1972, Australian singer, Johnny Chester's version withJigsaw called "ShameAndScandal (In the Family)" peaked atNo.13 on Go-Set NationalTop 40. In 1977,American vocal group The Stylisticsreleased a cover version titled "Shameand Scandalinthe Family"from theiralbum,Sun & Soul.The singlereached #87 on the Hot Soul Singles chart. In 1983,Clint Eastwood & General Saint releaseda reggae cover version In1993, Skatalà released a cover version titled "Skandol Dub"in the album "Borinot, Borinot". In2003, David Lindley and Wally Ingram recorded a version of"Shame and Scandal" ontheir album "Twango Bango III". Lindleyhad previously performed thesong afew times in the 80s with his bandEl Rayo-X. In2012, the South African band Dr Victor &theRasta Rebels releaseda cover titled "Shame and Scandal" featuring South African singer Kurt Darren. There areknown versions by Trini Lopez, DeMaskers, King Bravo with Baba Brooks &his band, Bobby Aitken and Blue Beat, Odetta, Freddie McGregor, Laurel Aitken. Instrumental versions were also popular, most famously byCaravelli and by Franck Pourceland hisGrand Orchestre. Language versions Thesong has beentranslated to a numberof major foreign languages: French: "Scandale dans la famille" performed by Dalida,by Sacha Distel and by Les Surfsin three separate versions all in 1965. French translated lyricswere by Maurice Tézé German: "Schande Unserer Familie" performed by Harry & Ronny in 1965 Italian: "Un Grosso Scandalo" performedbyDalidaand by Giovanna Portuguese: "O Escândalo" performed by the Brazilian bandRenato e Seus Blue Caps in 1965 and later on byThe Supersonics. Spanish: "Escandalo en la Familia" Hungarian:"Szégyenés gyalázata családban" performed by Iván DarvasPolish: "Skandal w rodzinie (Co za skandal, gdy tata dowie się)" performed by Chochoły Estonian: "Skandaal perekonnas" performed by Ivo Linna and Rock Hotel Slovak:"Nervózna família" performedbyJozef Krištof, later band VentilRG Greek: "Τιντροπή" (Ti dropi) (What a shame), performed by Dakis Hebrew: "TsarotBa'Mishpacha" (Troubles in the family),written and performedbyShmulik Kraus Madness version British ska/pop band Madness covered the songhaving previously covered several Prince Buster skarecordings, including the songs "Madness",and "One Step Beyond".The band began performing thesong at a series of low-key performances as 'The Dangermen' in 2005. Madnesslater recorded the song for their cover album The Dangermen Sessions Vol. 1, and released it as a single later thatyear. Formatsandtrack listings These are the formats and tracklistings of major single releases of "Shame & Scandal". 7"Single "Shame& Scandal" (Lord/Pinard) - 2:52 "Shame & Scandal[Dub]" (Lord/Pinard) - 2:56 "Shame & Scandal" (Peter Touch (Tosh) and The Wailers) -3:03CD Single "Shame & Scandal"(Lord/Pinard) - 2:52 "Skylarking" (Hinds) - 3:02 "Dreader Than Dread" (Galnek)- 3:04 Chart performanceThe Madness release did not fare well in theUK, only spendingtwoweeks in the charts, peaking at number 38. However, the song did better in France, where it peakedat number12 and spent 19weeks in the charts. The song also made an appearance on the Swiss Singles Top100, spending 8 weeksinthe charts and reaching a high of number 69, andjust made the Dutch Singles Top 100, hittingnumber100 and remaining in the chart for a single week. References Externallinks Odetta and Johnny Cashsing "Shame and Scandal in the Family" on YouTube(from 1969) Category:1943 songs Category:1965 singlesCategory:1972 singles Category:1977 singles Category:2005 singles Category:The Stylistics songsCategory:Madness (band)songs Category:V2 Records singles | Shame _and_ Scandal _in_ _the_ Family _"Shame_ _and_ Scandal in the Family", also _known_ as "Shame & Scandal" for short, is a song _written_ _by_ _calypso_ singer Sir Lancelot for the movie I Walked with _a_ Zombie _in_ 1943 and originally _titled_ "Fort Holland Calypso Song". Sir Lancelot issued his recording of it in the late 1940s. The Sir _Lancelot_ version was covered by folksingers Odetta _and_ Burl Ives. In _1962,_ _Trinidadian_ _calypsonian_ Lord Melody wrote new _lyrics_ for _the_ verses while keeping the melody and _the_ chorus. The _Historical_ Museum of Southern Florida said _of_ Lord Melody's version that "No calypso has _been_ more extensively _recorded"._ Lyrical content In Sir Lancelot's version, _the_ lyric reports gossip about a prominent family on a Caribbean island _named_ San Sebastian. In Lord _Melody's_ 1960s version the story follows _a_ young Puerto Rican man in search _of_ a wife. In each of the verses, the young _man_ asks his father _for_ _permission_ to marry a different woman, only to be _told_ he can _not_ marry the _girl_ as "The girl is _your_ sister, but your mamma _don't_ know". However, the tables are turned _during_ the last verse, where the _young_ man's mother tells him that "Your daddy ain't your daddy, but your daddy _don't_ know", clearing the _path_ for him to _marry_ any of the girls. Famous covers _In_ 1962, _the_ _Trinidadian_ calypsonian Lord Melody used Sir Lancelot's song as _the_ basis _of_ _his_ _song_ _"Shame_ and Scandal", although _he_ titled it "Wau, Wau". Melody's _version_ used the _same_ chorus _and_ tune _as_ the _original_ 1943 _song_ _but_ _with_ different verses. In 1964, Shawn _Elliott_ released it as a _single_ Also in 1964, The Kingston _Trio_ included a live performance of the song (retitled "Ah Woe, Ah Me!") on _their_ last _Capitol_ Records album Back _in_ Town. In _1965,_ the British comedy actor, Lance Percival, _reached_ number 37 in the UK Singles Chart with his cover _version,_ under the _expanded_ title of "Shame and Scandal in the _Family"._ In _the_ mid 1960s, Jamaica's Kingston Hilton _Hotel_ resident _mento_ band, The Hiltonaires, also recorded _it_ as "Shame and Scandal". In 1965, a ska cover _version_ _was_ recorded in Jamaica by _Peter_ Tosh _and_ The _Wailers_ on vocals, backed by _the_ Skatalites and released on _the_ Studio One label. Also _in_ 1965 Los 3 Sudamericanos released _a_ cover _in_ _Spanish:_ "Qué _familia_ _más_ original". In 1966, French-Italian singer _Dalida_ _recorded_ the song _as_ Un grosso _scandalo_ _(with_ Italian _lyrics_ by Luciano Beretta) for one of _her_ Italian-language LPs on Barclay Records. In _1972,_ Australian singer, Johnny Chester's version with Jigsaw called "Shame _And_ Scandal (In the Family)" peaked at No. 13 on Go-Set National Top _40._ In 1977, _American_ _vocal_ group The Stylistics released a cover version titled "Shame and Scandal _in_ the Family" from their album, Sun & Soul. The single _reached_ #87 on _the_ Hot Soul Singles chart. In 1983, Clint Eastwood & General Saint released a reggae _cover_ version In 1993, _Skatalà_ released a cover _version_ titled "Skandol Dub" in _the_ album "Borinot, _Borinot"._ In _2003,_ David Lindley and Wally Ingram _recorded_ a version of "Shame and Scandal" on their album "Twango Bango _III"._ _Lindley_ had previously performed _the_ song _a_ few times _in_ the 80s with his band El Rayo-X. In 2012, the South _African_ band Dr Victor & _the_ Rasta Rebels released a cover titled _"Shame_ _and_ Scandal" _featuring_ South African singer Kurt Darren. There _are_ known versions by Trini _Lopez,_ De Maskers, _King_ Bravo with Baba Brooks _&_ his _band,_ Bobby _Aitken_ _and_ Blue Beat, Odetta, _Freddie_ McGregor, Laurel Aitken. Instrumental _versions_ _were_ _also_ popular, most famously by Caravelli and by Franck Pourcel and _his_ Grand Orchestre. Language _versions_ _The_ song has been translated to a number of major foreign languages: French: "Scandale dans la famille" performed by Dalida, by Sacha Distel and _by_ _Les_ Surfs in _three_ _separate_ versions all in 1965. French translated lyrics _were_ by Maurice _Tézé_ _German:_ "Schande Unserer _Familie"_ performed by Harry & Ronny in _1965_ Italian: "Un Grosso _Scandalo"_ _performed_ by Dalida _and_ _by_ _Giovanna_ Portuguese: "O Escândalo" _performed_ by the Brazilian band Renato e Seus _Blue_ Caps in 1965 and _later_ on _by_ The Supersonics. Spanish: _"Escandalo_ en la Familia" Hungarian: "Szégyen és gyalázat a _családban"_ _performed_ by Iván Darvas Polish: "Skandal _w_ _rodzinie_ (Co za _skandal,_ _gdy_ tata _dowie_ się)" performed by Chochoły Estonian: _"Skandaal_ perekonnas" performed by Ivo Linna and Rock Hotel _Slovak:_ "Nervózna família" performed _by_ _Jozef_ Krištof, later _band_ _Ventil_ RG Greek: "Τι ντροπή" (Ti dropi) (What a shame), _performed_ by Dakis Hebrew: _"Tsarot_ Ba'Mishpacha" (Troubles in the _family),_ written _and_ performed by Shmulik _Kraus_ Madness version British ska/pop _band_ _Madness_ covered the song having _previously_ covered several Prince Buster ska recordings, _including_ the _songs_ _"Madness",_ _and_ "One Step Beyond". The band began performing _the_ song at a _series_ of low-key performances as 'The Dangermen' in 2005. Madness later _recorded_ _the_ song for their cover album _The_ _Dangermen_ Sessions _Vol._ _1,_ _and_ released _it_ as a single later that _year._ Formats and track _listings_ These _are_ the formats and track listings of major single _releases_ of "Shame & Scandal". 7" Single "Shame & Scandal" (Lord/Pinard) - 2:52 "Shame _&_ Scandal [Dub]" (Lord/Pinard) - 2:56 "Shame & Scandal" (Peter Touch (Tosh) and The _Wailers)_ - 3:03 CD Single "Shame & _Scandal"_ (Lord/Pinard) - 2:52 _"Skylarking"_ (Hinds) - 3:02 _"Dreader_ Than Dread" (Galnek) - _3:04_ Chart performance The Madness release did not fare well in the UK, only spending two weeks in the charts, peaking _at_ number 38. However, the song did better in France, where it peaked at number 12 _and_ spent 19 weeks _in_ _the_ charts. _The_ _song_ also made an appearance _on_ the Swiss Singles Top 100, spending 8 weeks in the charts _and_ reaching a high of _number_ 69, and just made the Dutch _Singles_ Top _100,_ _hitting_ number _100_ and remaining in _the_ chart for a single week. References External _links_ _Odetta_ and Johnny Cash sing "Shame _and_ Scandal in the _Family"_ on YouTube _(from_ 1969) Category:1943 songs Category:1965 singles Category:1972 singles Category:1977 singles _Category:2005_ singles Category:The Stylistics songs Category:Madness _(band)_ songs Category:V2 Records singles |
Hollym Gate railway station
Hollym Gate railway station is a disused railway station on the North Eastern Railway's Hull and Holderness Railway to the west of Hollym, East Riding of Yorkshire, England. It was opened in 1855. The station was closed to passengers on 1 September 1870.
References
Category:Disused railway stations in the East Riding of Yorkshire
Category:Railway stations opened in 1855
Category:Railway stations closed in 1870
Category:Former North Eastern Railway (UK) stations
Category:Hull and Holderness Railway | hollym gate junction station hollym gate railway settlement is a disused railway station on the north eastern railway ' s hull and holderness railway to the locality of hollym, east riding of yorkshire, england. it was opened circa 1855. the station was closed under passengers on 1 september 1870. references category : only railway stations in an east riding of yorkshire category : railway stations opened in 1855 category : rail stations closed in 1870 category : former north lancashire railway ( uk ) stations category : leeds and holderness railway | Hollym Gate railway station Hollym GS^e railway station is a dis6Ded railway qfation on the North Eastern Railway ' s Hull and Holderness Railway to the west of Hollym, East Riding of Yorkshire, England. It was opened in 1855. The station was flos$d to passengers on 1 September 28i0. References Category: Disused railway stations in the East Riding of Yorkshire Vateg0ry: Railway stations opened in 1855 Category: Railway stations closed in 1870 Category: Former North Ezste$n Railway (UK) staHioJs Categiey: Hull and Holderness 3ailwa& | Hollym Gate railway station Hollym Gate railway station is a disused railway the North Eastern Railway's Hull and Holderness Railway to the west of Hollym, Riding of Yorkshire, England. It was opened in 1855. The station closed to passengers on 1 September 1870. References Category:Disused railway stations in the East Riding of Yorkshire Category:Railway stations in 1855 Category:Railway stations closed in Category:Former North Eastern Railway (UK) stations Category:Hull Holderness Railway | HOllYm gAte rAilWAY STatION
HOllYm GATE RaILWAy StatIOn IS a DIsuSeD RAIlway stAtiON ON the noRTH EAsTeRn rAILwAY's HuLl AND holDeRnESS railWay To The WEst OF HOLlyM, eASt riDing OF yorKshire, enGlanD. iT WaS opENed In 1855. The Station WaS cloSed tO PasSenGers On 1 sEptEmBer 1870.
ReFErENcES
CaTEgoRY:DIsuseD RaiLwAY StATiOnS iN ThE East RIDing Of yORKshIRe
CAtEGoRY:raIlwaY StaTions OpenED In 1855
CategOrY:raILway STatIOnS CloSeD In 1870
catEgoRY:former NorTH eastERn rAiLwaY (uk) staTIoNS
CAtegoRY:huLL AND HoLderNEss raiLwAY | Hollym Gate railway station Hollym Gaterailway station is a disused railway stationon the North Eastern Railway's Hull and Holderness Railway to the west of Hollym, EastRiding of Yorkshire, England. It was opened in 1855. The stationwas closedto passengers on 1 September 1870. References Category:Disused railway stationsin the East Riding of Yorkshire Category:Railway stations openedin 1855 Category:Railway stations closed in 1870 Category:Former NorthEastern Railway (UK) stationsCategory:Hull and Holderness Railway | Hollym Gate railway station Hollym Gate railway station is a disused railway station on the North _Eastern_ Railway's _Hull_ and Holderness Railway to _the_ _west_ _of_ Hollym, East Riding _of_ Yorkshire, England. It _was_ _opened_ _in_ 1855. _The_ station was closed to passengers on 1 September 1870. References _Category:Disused_ railway _stations_ in _the_ East Riding of Yorkshire Category:Railway stations opened in 1855 Category:Railway stations closed in _1870_ Category:Former North Eastern _Railway_ (UK) stations Category:Hull and Holderness Railway |
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