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oikeisto

Oikeisto, meaning “the right” in Finnish, is a political label used to describe ideologies and movements on the right side of the political spectrum. In Finnish discourse, oikeisto typically encompasses conservative, liberal-conservative, or market-liberal positions that favor private property, free-market economics, limited government intervention, strong national defense, and traditional social values. It is a descriptive term rather than a formal party name, applied to parties and groups across a range from centre-right to nationalist or populist currents.

Within Finland, the best-known representative of oikeisto is the National Coalition Party (Kokoomus), a centre-right party

Historically, the concept of oikeisto has roots in the period around Finnish independence and the 1918 civil

founded
in
1899,
which
advocates
market
economy,
European
Union
integration,
and
business-friendly
policies.
Other
right-leaning
currents
include
liberal-conservative
and
agrarian-right
groups,
and
in
recent
decades
some
factions
identified
as
right-wing
populist
have
appeared,
notably
within
the
Finns
Party.
The
term
is
sometimes
used
in
public
debate
to
contrast
oikeisto
with
vasemmisto
(the
left),
but
it
does
not
denote
a
fixed
bloc.
war,
when
the
Whites
opposed
the
Reds.
After
independence,
right-leaning
elites
and
parties
played
a
dominant
role
in
various
coalitions
during
the
early
to
mid-20th
century;
Kokoomus
emerged
as
the
main
parliamentary
force
on
the
right
and
has
occupied
government
roles
in
several
coalitions
in
later
decades.
In
the
21st
century,
oikeisto
remains
a
widely
used
label
in
Finnish
political
journalism
and
discourse,
though
the
exact
composition
of
the
right
has
shifted
with
party
changes
and
new
movements.