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The Progressive Conservative Party was a party with conservative economic values but progressive social values in Lovia. The party was founded in 2004 in Abby Springs by Thomas Bale, an Canadian-Lovian conservative columnist. By 2006, the party had won the support of several hundreds Lovians in Kings and Clymene. Although it was not a major political power until 2010, the party spoke out against the Iron Guard Party in early 2010. The party started to become more active in 2010 and set its goal to win improve education in Lovia. It achieved this by winning several school board elections. The party also held seven seats in the 2011 Second Congress at its peak, but its focus remains on education.

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  • Progressive Conservative Party
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  • The Progressive Conservative Party was a party with conservative economic values but progressive social values in Lovia. The party was founded in 2004 in Abby Springs by Thomas Bale, an Canadian-Lovian conservative columnist. By 2006, the party had won the support of several hundreds Lovians in Kings and Clymene. Although it was not a major political power until 2010, the party spoke out against the Iron Guard Party in early 2010. The party started to become more active in 2010 and set its goal to win improve education in Lovia. It achieved this by winning several school board elections. The party also held seven seats in the 2011 Second Congress at its peak, but its focus remains on education.
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  • The Progressive Conservative Party was a party with conservative economic values but progressive social values in Lovia. The party was founded in 2004 in Abby Springs by Thomas Bale, an Canadian-Lovian conservative columnist. By 2006, the party had won the support of several hundreds Lovians in Kings and Clymene. Although it was not a major political power until 2010, the party spoke out against the Iron Guard Party in early 2010. The party started to become more active in 2010 and set its goal to win improve education in Lovia. It achieved this by winning several school board elections. The party also held seven seats in the 2011 Second Congress at its peak, but its focus remains on education. The PCP stood for classical liberalism, conservatism, and the monarchy. It also supported universal health care, and even controlled three seats on the very prestigous school Adoha Elementary which controls things for the entire school, and the board has been named the "Future of World Schooling" by Time magazine. The party had also had growing success in Newhaven where they got five seats on the school board there. After stunting in local politics the party had reached total popularity with seven seats in the 2011 Second Congress. The party was a member of the government coalition, the Progressive Congress Coalition. In the 2012 Federal elections, the PCP took a beating, primarily due to a loss of popularity to other parties and the involvement of rebel Kim Dae-su within the party. In the 2012 Congress, the PCP controlled one seat in Congress and no government positions. Throughout the year, the party performed worse and worse in local elections, winning very few seats. In the 2013 Federal elections, after descending into further inactivity, the party won zero seats. On February 5, 2013, the PCP decided to dissolve itself and merge into the Conservative Nationalist Party.
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