National Harmony Party
| National Harmony Party Tautas Saskaņas partija Партия народного согласия | |
|---|---|
| Abbreviation | TSP (Latvian) ПНС (Russian) | 
| Leader | Jānis Urbanovičs | 
| Founder | Jānis Jurkāns | 
| Founded | 4 March 1994 | 
| Dissolved | 10 February 2010 | 
| Split from | Popular Front of Latvia | 
| Preceded by | Harmony for Latvia — Revival of the National Economy | 
| Merged into | Social Democratic Party "Harmony" | 
| Headquarters | Riga | 
| Ideology | Social democracy Russian minority politics Russophilia | 
| Political position | Centre-left | 
| National affiliation | Harmony Centre (2005-2010) | 
| European Parliament group | Progressive Alliance of Socialists and Democrats (2009-2010) | 
| Colours | Maroon White | 
| Seats in the 9th Saeima | 11 / 100 | 
| Seats in the 7th European Parliament | 1 / 8 | 
| Website | |
| tsp.lv | |
The National Harmony Party (Latvian: Tautas Saskaņas partija, TSP; Russian: Партия народного согласия) was a political party in Latvia.
The party identified with social democracy. It supported further liberalisation of Latvian nationality law by granting citizenship to non-citizens who had lived in Latvia for at least 10 years. (The present law only allows Soviet-era migrants to apply for citizenship through a process of naturalization). It also supported expanding education in minority languages, particularly Russian.