Conservative Party
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| The Conservatism series, part of the Politics series |
| Schools |
|---|
| Cultural conservatism |
| Liberal conservatism |
| Social conservatism |
| National conservatism |
| Neoconservatism |
| Paleoconservatism |
| Ideas |
| Fiscal conservatism |
| Private property |
| Rule of law |
| Social order |
| Traditional society |
| Organizations |
| Conservative parties |
| Int'l Democrat Union |
| European Democrats |
| Movement for European Reform |
| National Variants |
| Australia |
| Canada |
| Colombia |
| Germany |
| United States
|
| Politics Portal |
Conservative Party is a name used by several political parties across the world, which uphold some form of conservatism. They include:
- Conservative Party of Armenia (since 1991)
- Conservative Party of Canada (since 2003)
- Progressive Conservative Party of Canada (1942–2003)
- Conservative Party of Canada (historical) (1873–1942)
- National Liberal and Conservative Party (1920–1921)
- Liberal-Conservative Party (until 1873)
- Conservative Party of Chile (until 1966)
- Colombian Conservative Party
- Conservative People's Party (Denmark)
- New Zealand Conservative Party (defunct)
- Conservative Party of Nicaragua
- Norwegian Conservative Party (Høyre)
- Conservative Party (Romania) and Conservative Party (Romania, 1880–1918)
- Conservative Party (South Africa)
- Conservative Party (Uganda)
- Conservative Party (UK), officially the Conservative and Unionist Party
- Conservative Party of New York, United States
See also conservative political parties for a more complete list of parties that support conservative ideas without necessarily using the word "conservative" in their name.

