Only parties who fielded candidates for the Belgian Senate are listed.
Flemish parties (Dutch speaking) These Flemish parties field candidates in the regions of
Flanders and the partially bilingual electoral district
Brussels-Halle-Vilvoorde.
CD&V/N-VA The
Christian Democratic and Flemish party (CD&V) is a
Christian Democratic party that has formed an alliance with the Flemish nationalist party
New-Flemish Alliance (N-VA). Most polls in the run-up to the election suggested that the alliance would win the election and become the largest political force in Flanders. It is led by
Yves Leterme, current prime minister of the Flemish Region and Community. Having become the largest political party in the Belgian Chamber after the 2007 election, the alliance will become the fulcrum of the coalition talks for a new government. Commentators suggest that coalition talks will be difficult, as most Francophone parties see the alliance as being overly Flemish-dominated.
VB It was the first time that the
Flemish Interest (Vlaams Belang, VB) had taken part in federal elections under its new name. Ostracized by all other political parties because of its views on foreigners and immigration, the VB is unlikely to take part in a new government. The VB's lists also included members of the right-liberal Flemish Liberal Independent Tolerant and Transparent party (
VLOTT) of
Hugo Coveliers.
sp.a–Spirit The
Socialistische Partij Anders is a social-democratic party and has formed a cartel list with the Flemish regionalist and left liberal party
Spirit. Like their coalition partner VLD, they lost heavily in the election, which prompted sp.a party leader
Johan Vande Lanotte to step down. Vande Lanotte made it also clear that the alliance will not take part in a federal government whose sole concern is state reform.
Open VLD Open Flemish Liberals and Democrats (Open Vld) is the alliance list of the
Flemish Liberals and Democrats (VLD) of prime minister
Guy Verhofstadt, and the small liberal political parties
Vivant (left-liberal) and
Liberal Appeal (Liberaal Appèl) (right-liberal). The VLD has seen some infighting in the last years, resulting in two prominent members leaving the party,
Hugo Coveliers (VLOTT) and
Jean-Marie Dedecker (
Lijst Dedecker). After the
2006 municipal elections, the party had tried to revamp itself with the newly named Open Vld cartel, under direction of noted political strategist
Noël Slangen.
Groen! Groen! is an ecological party, and the successor of Agalev. It hoped to make a return to the federal legislature after being wiped out in the
2003 general election. They managed to return to the Belgian parliament with four House seats and one senate seat, but their result of 6.3% was below expectations.
LDD List Dedecker (Lijst Dedecker) is a liberal offshoot of the
Flemish Liberals and Democrats, founded by Belgian Senator
Jean-Marie Dedecker and
Boudewijn Bouckaert, chairman of the
Nova Civitas think tank. The party surprised some who doubted it would clear the 5% electoral threshold by receiving 6.3% of the Flemish vote.
PVDA+ The
Workers' Party of Belgium (Partij van de Arbeid van België) is a radical left wing party, of
Maoist origin. Its lists also contain independent candidates. The PVDA almost doubled their votes, from 0.5% to 0.9%.
CAP The
Committee for Another Policy (Comité voor een Andere Politiek) is a bilingual left wing political movement, consisting of trade union militants, and political militants of communist,
Trotskyist and socialist origin. It was formed in 2006 as a reaction to the more centrist course of the SP.a. Former SP.a-representative Jef Sleeckx is one of the co-founders. These elections were the first the movement participated in. They got 0.4% of the votes in Flanders.
Francophone parties (French speaking) These
Francophone parties fielded candidates in the
Walloon Region and in the electoral district
Brussels-Halle-Vilvoorde.
PS The
Parti Socialiste (PS) is a social-democratic party that took part in the
Verhofstadt I Government and the
Verhofstadt II Government. It is unlikely that the PS will deliver Belgium's next prime minister, the last Francophone prime minister was
Paul Vanden Boeynants in 1978–79. Largest competitor of the PS is the Mouvement Réformateur (MR), which just recently broke with the PS in
Charleroi, after PS aldermen were charged with corruption.
MR The
Mouvement Réformateur is a liberal party. It is a fusion of the
Liberal Reformist Party (PRL), the French-linguistic party
Democratic Front of Francophones (FDF) and a breakaway fraction of the Christian democratic
Citizens' Movement for Change (MCC). It had taken part in the federal government of Guy Verhofstadt, which included MR leader
Didier Reynders as finance minister. The MR clearly won the elections in the French-speaking Walloon region, and the bilingual Brussels-Capital Region, ousting the previously dominant Parti Socialiste. The MR campaigned on three major fronts: the need for an alternative to the PS, entangled in various scandals of corruption and accused of poor governance leading to unemployment and anachronistic political systems; the need for a new fiscal reform; lowering taxes and government grip on the economy; and finally friendliness and cooperation with its Flemish counterpart, Open VLD.
cdH The
Centre Démocrate Humaniste is a Christian democratic party. They made a small advance (0.4%) in these elections and finished with 15.8% of the votes.
Ecolo Ecolo is a
Green party. It made the largest gains of the 2007 election among Francophone parties and went from 7.5% to 12.8%.
FN The
Front National is a Franco-nationalist political movement known for its tough stances on immigration. They gained 5.6% of the vote, the same as in 2003.
CAP The
Committee for Another Policy (Comité pour une Autre Politique) was a bilingual left wing political movement, consisting of trade union militants, and political militants of communist,
Trotskyist and socialist origin. It was formed in 2006 as a reaction to the more centrist course of the PS and the SP.a. Former FGTB-chairman
Georges Debunne was one of the co-founders. These elections were the first the movement participated in. The party got 0.2% of the votes in Hainaut and Liège, the two provinces where its candidates stood. ==Issues==