New Union (Social Liberals)
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New Union (Social Liberals)
Summary
New Union (Social Liberals) is a former liberal party[1]. New Union (Social Liberals) draws 15 Wikipedia views per month (former_liberal_party category, ranking #22 of 34).[2]
Key Facts
- New Union (Social Liberals) is in the country of Lithuania[3].
- New Union (Social Liberals)'s instance of is recorded as former liberal party[4].
- New Union (Social Liberals)'s instance of is recorded as defunct political party[5].
- New Union (Social Liberals)'s logo image is recorded as Naujoji sąjunga logo.svg[6].
- New Union (Social Liberals)'s headquarters location is recorded as Vilnius[7].
- New Union (Social Liberals)'s sRGB color hex triplet is recorded as FFCC66[8].
- New Union (Social Liberals)'s chairperson is recorded as Artūras Paulauskas[9].
- +1998-01-01T00:00:00Z marks the founding of New Union (Social Liberals)[10].
- New Union (Social Liberals) was dissolved in +2011-07-09T00:00:00Z[11].
- New Union (Social Liberals)'s Freebase ID is recorded as /m/027092[12].
- New Union (Social Liberals)'s official website is recorded as http://www.nsajunga.lt[13].
- New Union (Social Liberals)'s topic's main category is recorded as Q9034751[14].
- New Union (Social Liberals)'s political ideology is recorded as social liberalism[15].
- New Union (Social Liberals)'s legal form is recorded as political party[16].
- New Union (Social Liberals)'s Lithuanian company code is recorded as 191957591[17].
Body
Founding
+1998-01-01T00:00:00Z marks the founding of New Union (Social Liberals)[10].
Leadership
New Union (Social Liberals)'s chairperson is recorded as Artūras Paulauskas[9].
Operations
New Union (Social Liberals)'s headquarters location is recorded as Vilnius[7].
Dissolution
New Union (Social Liberals) was dissolved in +2011-07-09T00:00:00Z[11].
Why It Matters
New Union (Social Liberals) draws 15 Wikipedia views per month (former_liberal_party category, ranking #22 of 34).[2] New Union (Social Liberals) has Wikipedia articles in 8 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[18] New Union (Social Liberals) is known by 11 alternative names across languages and contexts.[19]