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Crossparty

Cross-party (often hyphenated as cross-party) is a term used to describe actions, groups, or sentiments that involve members from multiple political parties, aiming to bridge partisan divides. It is commonly used as an adjective (cross-party cooperation) or adverbially (to work cross-party). The term emphasizes collaboration across party lines, rather than within a single party, and is distinct from partisanship and adversarial politics. It may apply in legislative, governmental, or public policy contexts. In some writings, the unhyphenated form crossparty is used, but cross-party is the more standard spelling.

In parliamentary systems, cross-party collaboration can take the form of cross-party groups or coalitions. Many legislatures

Limitations and criticisms: while cross-party initiatives can produce broadly acceptable policies, they may require compromise and

See also: bipartisan, coalition, all-party group, cross-partisan collaboration.

host
Cross-Party
Groups
or
All-Party
Groups
where
lawmakers
from
different
parties
meet
to
discuss
issues
such
as
health,
environment,
or
trade.
Cross-party
support
for
a
bill
or
policy
occurs
when
members
from
multiple
parties
back
the
same
measure,
increasing
its
chances
of
passage
regardless
of
majority
party
leadership.
The
term
is
also
used
to
describe
voting
patterns,
consensus-building
mechanisms,
and
independent
or
technocratic
commissions
that
include
members
from
multiple
parties.
risk
diluting
policy
specifics
or
delaying
decisions.
Critics
sometimes
view
cross-party
efforts
as
symbolic
or
as
bargaining
grounds
that
can
undercut
party
platforms.
The
concept
is
common
in
democracies
seeking
stable
governance,
inclusive
policymaking,
and
broader
legitimacy
for
decisions.