On July 25, 2016, it was transformed into the Latvian Centrist Party. At that time, Aleksandra Siliniece, Aivars Silinieks and Andžejs Zdanovičs were on the party board. On August 7, 2018, the party submitted its list of candidates for the
Saeima elections. The party's program included the restoration of the
lats as the national currency and its withdrawal from
NATO. In the elections, the Latvian Centrist Party received the lowest voter support - 0.11%, which was significantly less than the number of invalid ballot papers handed over. In the 2019 European Parliament elections, starting as a Centre Party, the leader of the party list was Normunds Grostiņš. In the election campaign, party advocated a traditional family, a society based on traditional values and compensation from the
European Union for 15 years of discrimination against
Latvia as a member. Among their candidates was
Waldemar Herdt from the
Alternative for Germany. The Centre Party participated unsuccessfully in the
Riga City Council's elections in 2020 and promised to reduce heating costs, support the residents of denationalized houses and gradually switch to free public transport in
Riga. The first number of the party list was Jānis Valtervitenheims, the second was Normunds Grostiņš. The ticket placed last, with a mere 0.16% of the vote. The party did not participate in the
2022 Latvian parliamentary election, however, multiple members (e.g. party leader
Normunds Grostiņš,
Juris Aleksejevs and Andžejs Zdanovičs) ran on the
Latvian Russian Union ticket. In 2023, the party formed an alliance with the
Latvian Russian Union called ('foundation', 'base'). However, after the alliance received only 1,71% of votes in the
2024 European Parliament elections, the alliance became inactive, and voted to dissolve itself on 14 August 2025. On January 7, 2026, a revival of the
Harmony Centre alliance was announced, with the Center Party joining forces with the
Social Democratic Party "Harmony". == Election results ==