Background, farmers' parties The early origins of the SVP go back to the late 1910s, when numerous
cantonal farmers' parties were founded in
agrarian,
Protestant, German-speaking parts of Switzerland. While the
Free Democratic Party had earlier been a popular party for farmers, this changed during
World War I when the party had mainly defended the interests of industrialists and consumer circles. When
proportional representation was introduced in 1919, the new farmers' parties won significant electoral support, especially in
Zürich and
Bern, and eventually also gained representation in parliament and government. By 1929, the coalition of farmers' parties had gained enough influence to get one of their leaders,
Rudolf Minger, elected to the Federal Council. In 1936, a representative party was founded on the national level, called the
Party of Farmers, Traders and Independents (BGB). During the 1930s, the BGB entered the mainstream of Swiss politics as a right-wing
conservative party in the
bourgeois bloc. While the party opposed any kind of
socialist ideas such as
internationalism and
anti-militarism, it sought to represent local Swiss traders and farmers against big business and international capital. The BGB contributed strongly to the establishment of the Swiss national ideology known as the
Geistige Landesverteidigung (Spiritual Defence of the Nation), which was largely responsible for the growing Swiss sociocultural and political cohesion from the 1930s. In the party's fight against
left-wing ideologies, sections of party officials and farmers voiced sympathy with, or failed to distance themselves from, emerging
fascist movements. After
World War II, the BGB contributed to the establishment of the characteristic Swiss post-war consensual politics, social agreements and economic growth policies. The party continued to be a reliable political partner with the
Swiss Conservative People's Party and the
Free Democratic Party. Early years (1971–1980s) In 1971, the BGB changed its name to the Swiss People's Party (SVP) after it merged with the
Democratic Party from
Glarus and
Grisons. The Democratic Party had been supported particularly by workers, and the SVP sought to expand its electoral base towards these, as the traditional BGB base in the rural population had started to lose its importance in the post-war era. As the Democratic Party had represented
centrist,
social-liberal positions, the course of the SVP shifted towards the political centre following internal debates. The new party however continued to see its level of support at around 11%, the same as the former BGB throughout the post-war era. Internal debates continued, and the 1980s saw growing conflicts between the Bern and Zürich cantonal branches, where the former branch represented the centrist faction, and the latter looked to put new issues on the political agenda. When the young entrepreneur
Christoph Blocher was elected president of the Zürich SVP in 1977, he declared his intent to oversee significant change in the political line of the Zürich SVP, bringing an end to debates that aimed to open the party up to a wide array of opinions. Blocher soon consolidated his power in Zürich, and began to renew the organisational structures, activities, campaigning style and political agenda of the local branch. The young members of the party was boosted with the establishment of a cantonal
Young SVP (JSVP) in 1977, as well as political training courses. The ideology of the Zürich branch was also reinforced, and the rhetoric hardened, which resulted in the best election result for the Zürich branch in fifty years in the
1979 federal election, with an increase from 11.3% to 14.5%. This was contrasted with the stable level in the other cantons, although the support also stagnated in Zürich through the 1980s.
Rise of the new SVP (1990s–present) The struggle between the SVP's largest branches of
Bern and
Zürich continued into the early 1990s. While the Bern-oriented faction represented the old moderate style, the Zürich-oriented wing led by Christoph Blocher represented a new radical
right-wing populist agenda. The Zürich wing began to politicise
asylum issues, and the question of
European integration started to dominate Swiss political debates. They also adopted more confrontational methods. The Zürich wing subsequently started to gain ground in the party at the expense of the Bern wing, and the party became increasingly centralised as a national party, in contrast to the traditional Swiss system of parties with loose organisational structures and weak central powers. During the 1990s, the party also doubled its number of cantonal branches (to eventually be represented in all cantons), which strengthened the power of the Zürich wing, since most new sections supported their agenda. In 1991, the party for the first time became the strongest party in Zürich, with 20.2% of the vote. The party broke through in the early 1990s in both Zürich and Switzerland as a whole, and experienced dramatically increasing results in elections. From being the smallest of the four governing parties at the start of the 1990s, the party by the end of the decade emerged as the strongest party in Switzerland. At the same time, the party expanded its electoral base towards new voter demographics. The SVP in general won its best results in cantons where the cantonal branches adopted the agenda of the Zürich wing. In the
1999 federal election, the SVP for the first time became the strongest party in Switzerland with 22.5% of the vote, a 12.6% share increase. This was the biggest increase of votes for any party in the entire history of the Swiss proportional electoral system, which was introduced in 1919. As a result of the remarkable increase in the SVP's popularity, the party gained a second ministerial position in the
Federal Council in 2003, which was taken by
Christoph Blocher. Before this, the only SVP Federal Councillor had always been from the moderate Bern wing. The
2007 federal election still confirmed the SVP as the strongest party in Switzerland with 28.9% of the vote and 62 seats in the National Council, the largest share of the vote for any single party ever in Switzerland. However, the Federal Council refused to re-elect Blocher, who was replaced by
Eveline Widmer-Schlumpf of the moderate Graubünden branch. The SVP thus formed the first opposition group in Switzerland since the 1950s. The
2011 federal election put an end to the continuous progression of the SVP since 1987. The party drew 26.6% percent of the vote, a 2.3-point decrease from the previous elections in 2007. This loss could be partly attributed to the split of the BDP, which gained 5.4% of the vote in 2011. However the SVP rebounded strongly in the
2015 federal election, gathering a record 29.4% of the national vote and 65 seats in parliament. Media attributed the rise to concerns over the
European migrant crisis. The party received the highest proportion of votes of any Swiss political party since 1919, when
proportional representation was first introduced, and it received more seats in the National Council than any other political party since 1963, when the number of seats was set at 200. ==Ideology==