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8-521: ZRS may refer to: Organisations [ edit ] Union of the Workers of Slovakia (Slovak: Združenie robotníkov Slovenska ), a political party Railways of Republika Srpska (Serbian: Željeznice Republike Srpske ), a rail operator in Bosnia and Herzegovina Association of Radio Amateurs of Slovenia (Slovene: Zveza radioamaterjev Slovenije ),

16-775: A non-profit Military [ edit ] A US Navy hull classification symbol: Rigid airship scout (ZRS) See also [ edit ] ZR (disambiguation) Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title ZRS . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=ZRS&oldid=1255830865 " Category : Disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Articles containing Slovak-language text Articles containing Serbian-language text Pages using Lang-xx templates Articles containing Slovene-language text Short description

24-585: Is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Union of the Workers of Slovakia The Union of the Workers of Slovakia ( Slovak : Združenie robotníkov Slovenska , ZRS) was a radical-left party in Slovakia. The Union of the Workers of Slovakia (Združenie robotníkov Slovenska, ZRS) split from the Party of the Democratic Left (SDL) in 1994. In

32-526: The 1994 parliamentary election the party gained 7.34% of the votes and 13 seats. Although calling themselves "agrarian-left" the deputies entered the coalition of the national-conservative People's Party – Movement for a Democratic Slovakia and the nationalist Slovak National Party . The ZRS occupied the Ministry of Privatization to ensure that key industries remained under state control. The ZRS stated on its webpage that it had prevented privatizations in

40-565: The 150 seats. Its leader Robert Fico was appointed Prime Minister on 4 July 2006, leading a three-party centre-left populist coalition. Originally the election was planned for 16 September 2006. However, on 8 February the government proposed calling an early election after the Christian Democratic Movement left the coalition government. This proposal was passed by the Parliament on 9 February and signed by

48-515: The President on 13 February. For the first time Slovak citizens living abroad could vote, using absentee ballots . A total of 21 parties contested the elections. On 28 June Fico announced that the government coalition would consist of his Smer-SD, together with the SNS and ĽS-HZDS . The Party of European Socialists (PES) criticized this decision because of nationalist statements of the leader of

56-464: The gas industry, energy sector, telecommunications, banks and insurance. The ZRS had no international affiliations and did not run in the 2004 or 2009 European Parliament elections . In the 1998 parliamentary election the ZRS received 1.30% of the votes. The ZRS received 0.54% of the vote in 2002 and 0.29% in 2006 . In the 2010 parliamentary election the party received 0.24% of the votes – below

64-589: The poll's error margin of 0.6%. The president of the ZRS was Ján Ľupták  [ sk ] . The party dissolved in November 2017. 2006 Slovak parliamentary election Mikuláš Dzurinda SDKÚ–DS Robert Fico Smer Parliamentary elections were held in Slovakia on 17 June 2006. Direction – Social Democracy emerged as the largest party in the National Council , winning 50 of

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