TOP 09

Czech political party From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

TOP 09 (Czech: Tradice Odpovědnost Prosperita, lit.'Tradition Responsibility Prosperity')[14] is a liberal-conservative[2][3][4][5] political party in the Czech Republic, led by Matěj Ondřej Havel. 9 of its members sit in the Chamber of Deputies, and two of them are MEPs.

Deputy LeadersJiří Pospíšil
Ondřej Müller
Kateřina Pastorková
Marek Ženíšek
Lukáš Otys
Chamber of Deputies LeaderJan Jakob
Quick facts Leader, Deputy Leaders ...
TOP 09
LeaderMatěj Ondřej Havel
Deputy LeadersJiří Pospíšil
Ondřej Müller
Kateřina Pastorková
Marek Ženíšek
Lukáš Otys
Chamber of Deputies LeaderJan Jakob
MEP LeaderLuděk Niedermayer
FoundersMiroslav Kalousek
Karel Schwarzenberg
Founded11 June 2009; 16 years ago (2009-06-11)
Split fromKDU–ČSL[1]
HeadquartersOpletalova 1603/57, Prague
Think tankTOPAZ
Youth wingTOP Team
Membership (2025)1,864
Ideology
Political positionCentre-right[13]
National affiliationSpolu
European affiliationEuropean People's Party
European Parliament groupEuropean People's Party Group
International affiliationInternational Democracy Union
Colours   
  (customary)
Chamber of Deputies
9 / 200
Senate
7 / 81
European Parliament
2 / 21
Regional councils
16 / 675
Governors of the regions
0 / 13
Local councils
428 / 61,892
Website
top09.cz
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History

Foundation and participation in government

The party was founded on 11 June 2009 by Miroslav Kalousek who left the Christian and Democratic Union – Czechoslovak People's Party.[15] Its first leader was Karel Schwarzenberg, who had previously served as Minister of Foreign Affairs in the second Topolánek cabinet from January 2007 to March 2009, having been nominated by the Green Party for the post, and who had been elected to the Senate in 2004 as nominee of the Freedom Union – Democratic Union (US-DEU) and Civic Democratic Alliance (ODA) parties.[16][17]

Karel Schwarzenberg, Honorary chairman and former leader of TOP 09

In the 2010 parliamentary elections on 28–29 May 2010, TOP 09 received 16.7% of the vote and 41 seats, becoming the third largest party.[18] The party joined the Nečas cabinet, forming a coalition with the Civic Democratic Party (ODS) and Public Affairs (VV).[19]

In September 2010 TOP 09 applied to join the European People's Party. Karel Schwarzenberg had already officially participated in two EPP summits (15 September[20] and 16 December 2010[21]). On 10 February 2011 TOP 09 was granted permission to join the EPP.[22]

In the 2013 parliamentary election on 25–26 October 2013, TOP 09 won 12% of the vote and 26 seats. The party became part of the parliamentary opposition to the Sobotka cabinet.

Opposition and cooperation with STAN and ODS

In the 2014 European elections on 24 and 25 May 2014, TOP 09 reached second place nationally with 15.95% of the vote, electing 4 MEPs.

Karel Schwarzenberg left the position of leader in 2015. He was replaced by Miroslav Kalousek afterwards.

In March 2016, Karel Tureček left the party and joined ANO, which left TOP 09 with 25 MPs.[23] In May 2016, Pavol Lukša, one of founders of TOP 09, left the party and established a new party, Good Choice.[24]

The 2016 Czech regional elections were a major loss for TOP 09. The party gained only 19 seats and 3.4% of the vote. Miroslav Kalousek then considered resigning, but decided to remain the party’s leader.[25]

In January 2017, TOP 09 introduced a new program called Vision 2030, in which it declared intentions to adopt the Euro, implement electronical voting, and increase health standards to Germany's level. TOP 09 also wanted to shorten the working week to 4 days. Miroslav Kalousek said he believed that TOP 09 would get over 10% in the upcoming legislative election even though recent opinion polls indicated that TOP 09 might not reach the 5% threshold.[26][27]

Ahead of the 2017 parliamentary elections, TOP 09 was endorsed by The Czech Crown, Conservative Party, Club of Committed Non-Party Members and Liberal-Environmental Party.[28][29] The party eventually received 5.3% of the vote, gaining 7 seats. Jiří Pospíšil became the new leader after the election.[30]

In the next year municipal elections TOP 09 got only 1.1 per cent of the vote nationally. The best performance for the party was in the Prague City council elections, following which it joined a coalition with the Czech Pirate Party and Prague Together.

In November, 2019, Markéta Pekarová Adamová was elected party’s leader.[31] In late 2020, TOP 09 formed an electoral alliance with KDU-ČSL and ODS called Spolu, to run in the 2021 elections.[32] The alliance won the popular vote and formed a coalition with the Pirates and Mayors alliance. As a result of agreements made to form these alliances, TOP 09 leader Markéta Pekarová Adamová became President of the Chamber of Deputies of the Czech Republic.

On 20 November 2021, Pekarová Adamová was reelected in a TOP 09 leadership election, with 163 out of 176 votes, being the only candidate.[33]

On 11 November 2023, Pekarová Adamová was reelected in a TOP 09 leadership election, with 142 out of 177 votes, being the only candidate.[34]

On 8 November 2025, Matěj Ondřej Havel was elected in a TOP 09 leadership election, with 120 out of 171 votes, being the only candidate.[35]

Ideology

TOP 09 is characterised most prominently by its economic liberalism and its pro-Europeanism,[36] being firmly in favour of European integration.[37] Generally, the party is considered to lean towards both liberal and conservative strains of right-of-centre thought, gradually becoming increasingly liberal compared to its official stance of conservatism.[38]

Election results

Chamber of Deputies

Election Leader Votes % Seats +/− Place Position
2010 Karel Schwarzenberg[a] 873,833 16.7
41 / 200
3rd Coalition
2013 Karel Schwarzenberg[b] 596,357 12.0
26 / 200
Decrease15 4th Decrease Opposition
2017 Miroslav Kalousek[c] 268,811 5.3
7 / 200
Decrease19 8th Decrease Opposition
2021 Markéta Pekarová Adamová 1,493,701 27.79
14 / 200
Increase7 1st Increase Coalition
Part of SPOLU coalition, which won 71 seats in total
2025 Markéta Pekarová Adamová 1,313,346 23.36
9 / 200
Decrease5 2nd Decrease Opposition
Part of SPOLU coalition, which won 52 seats in total

Senate

More information Election, First round ...
Election First round Second round Seats Total seats +/–
Votes % Place Votes % Place
2010 165,27714.403rd51,3107.543rd
2 / 27
2 / 81
New
2012 57,9076.595th9,9181.935th
2 / 27
4 / 81
Increase 2
2014 92,1378.985th30,4766.436th
0 / 27
4 / 81
Steady
2016 70,6538.026th30,8207.275th
2 / 27
4 / 81
Steady
2018 41,9803.857th22,5805.408th
1 / 27
3 / 81
Decrease 1
2020 46,5754.677th33,9387.514th
2 / 27
5 / 81
Increase 2
2022 73,4736.606th33,3416.954th
3 / 27
6 / 81
Increase 1
2024 44,3205.595th17,4574.474th
2 / 27
7 / 81
Increase 1
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Presidential

More information Election, Candidate ...
Election Candidate First round Second round
Votes % Result Votes % Result
2013 Karel Schwarzenberg 1,204,195 23.40 Runner-up 2,241,171 45.20 Lost
2018 Jiří Drahoš 1,369,601 26.60 Runner-up 2,701,206 48.63 Lost
2023[d] Petr Pavel 1,975,056 35.40 Winner 3,358,926 58.33 Won
Danuše Nerudová 777,080 13.93 Eliminated supported Petr Pavel
Pavel Fischer 376,705 6.75 Eliminated supported Petr Pavel
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European Parliament

Election List leader Votes % Seats +/– EP Group
2014[e] Luděk Niedermayer 241,747 15.95 (#2)
3 / 21
New EPP
2019[f] Jiří Pospíšil 276,220 11.65 (#4)
2 / 21
Decrease 1
2024[g] Alexandr Vondra 661,250 22.27 (#2)
2 / 21
Steady

Regional councils

More information Election, Vote ...
Election Vote % Seats +/– Position
2012 175,089 6.6
19 / 675
5th
2016 86,164 3.4
19 / 675
Steady 9th
2020[h] Party didn't run on a single list
20 / 675
Increase 1 9th
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Local elections

Former TOP09 leaders Karel von Schwarzenberg and Miroslav Kalousek
More information Election, Votes ...
Election Votes % Seats
2010 8,537,461 9.5
1,509 / 62,178
2014 8,324,195 8.4
726 / 62,300
2018 1,241,976 4.8
483 / 61,892
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Prague City Assembly

More information Election, Leader ...
Election Leader Votes % Seats +/– Position Status
2010 Zdeněk Tůma 1,043,008 30.2
26 / 65
Increase 25 Increase 1st Coalition (2010–2013)
Minority (2013–2014)
2014 Tomáš Hudeček 4,158,226 20.1
16 / 65
Decrease 10 Decrease 2nd Opposition
2018 Jiří Pospíšil 4,127,063 16.3
13 / 65
Decrease 3 Decrease 4th Coalition
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Leaders

Symbols

Notes

  1. With participation of STAN and SLK candidates on the party list.
  2. With participation of STAN and SLK candidates on the party list.
  3. With participation of , KONS, KAN and LES candidates on the party list.
  4. The SPOLU coalition supported 3 independent candidates for this election.
  5. Run in a joint list with STAN.
  6. Run in a joint list with STAN, SZ and LES.
  7. Run as part of the SPOLU coalition.
  8. Including one member elected as a nominee of Mayors and Independents.

References

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