Political colours are the colours to represent political ideologies, movements and/or parties. They are a form of colour and political symbolism.
Politicians often wear shirts, ribbons, hats and/or ties in their political party's colour so people know that they represent that party by simply looking at the colour of what they are wearing.
What each colour means
Although different countries have different colour meanings, there are some general trends.
The colour black is often used by anarchists. This is because anarchists want little to no government, and black has no colour. The colour is also used by fascists (see blackshirts and Schutzstaffel) and jihadists. Pirate parties round the world also use black.
In Germany and Austria, black has often been associated with the main Christian democracy. The Christian Democratic Union of Germany (CDU) is often represented by the colour black (even though their official colour has been turquoise since September 2023). The Austrian People's Party (ÖVP) used to mainly use black, but in 2017 it switched to using turquoise as its main colour.
In New Zealand, the Electoral Commission uses the colour orange on official signage and on its website. Because of this, political parties in New Zealand cannot use the colour orange because voters might get mixed up and think that something that is actually material from a political party is official election material from the Electoral Commission.
Pink is usually associated with feminism, because pink is the colour that represents women and girls (while blue represents men and boys).
In Portugal, the main social democratic party, the Socialist Party, is often represented by the colour purple, however their official colour is red.
Pink is also sometimes used to represent LGBT rights. This is because the pink triangle badge had to be worn by homosexual prisoners in Nazi concentration camps.
Historically, the colour purple was connected to monarchism. These days, however, it is the most well known colour that is not connected to a political ideology.
In Australia, the Australian Electoral Commission (AEC) uses the colour purple on its official signs and on its website. Although political parties are not banned from using purple, it is strongly discouraged because voters might get campaign material from a political party mixed up with official election material from the AEC.
Unlike most other countries, the main right-wing, conservative party, the Republican Party, uses the colour red. In South Korea, the right-wing, conservative People Power Party also uses the colour red.
Yellow usually represents classical liberal or libertarian parties. However, an exception to this rule is Canada, where yellow is a politically neutral colour and is used by Elections Canada.