Latgalian Christian Peasant and Catholic Party

The Latgalian Christian Peasant and Catholic Party (Latvian: Latgales kristīgo zemnieku un katoļu partija) was a Christian centrist political party in Latvia during the inter-war period.

[1] It was the largest party in the Latgale region, and was led by the bishop Jāzeps Rancāns.

[2] Created in January 1920, immediately after the end of Latvian War of Independence as the Christian Union of Latgale Peasants, the party won six seats in the 1920 Constitutional Assembly elections, becoming the joint fourth-largest party in the Constitutional Assembly.

In August 1933, it changed name to Christian Peasants and Catholics Party.

Although the party had a similar platform to the Latvian Farmers' Union and the Christian National Union, it was mainly focussed on the needs of the Catholic population of Latgale.