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List of political parties in Uganda

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This article lists political parties in Uganda. Until a constitutional referendum in July 2005, only one political organization, the Movement (also called the National Resistance Movement) was allowed to operate in Uganda. The president, who also chairs the Movement, maintained that the Movement was not a political party, but a mass organization that claimed the loyalty of all Ugandans.

Until the 2005 referendum, the 1995 constitution had required the suspension of political parties while the Movement organization was in governance. Other political parties could technically exist but were prohibited from sponsoring candidates and holding meetings.

Registered political parties are now allowed to operate openly and contest elections. However, sometimes they find hardship in practicing their rights by the party in power.

YouTube Encyclopedic

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  • History vs. Richard Nixon - Alex Gendler

Transcription

The presidency of the United States of America is often said to be one of the most powerful positions in the world. But of all the U.S. presidents accused of misusing that power, only one has left office as a result. Does Richard Nixon deserve to be remembered for more than the scandal that ended his presidency? Find out as we put this disgraced president's legacy on trial in History vs. Richard Nixon. "Order, order. Now, who's the defendant today, some kind of crook?" "Cough. No, your Honor. This is Richard Milhous Nixon, the 37th president of the United States, who served from 1969 to 1974." "Hold on. That's a weird number of years for a president to serve." "Well, you see, President Nixon resigned for the good of the nation and was pardoned by President Ford, who took over after him." "He resigned because he was about to be impeached, and he didn't want the full extent of his crimes exposed." "And what were these crimes?" "Your Honor, the Watergate scandal was one of the grossest abuses of presidential power in history. Nixon's men broke into the Democratic National Committee headquarters to wiretap the offices and dig up dirt on opponents for the reelection campaign." "Cough It was established that the President did not order this burglary." "But as soon as he learned of it, he did everything to cover it up, while lying about it for months." "Uh, yes, but it was for the good of the country. He did so much during his time in office and could have done so much more without a scandal jeopardizing his accomplishments." "Uh, accomplishments?" "Yes, your Honor. Did you know it was President Nixon who proposed the creation of the Environmental Protection Agency, and signed the National Environmental Policy Act into law? Not to mention the Endangered Species Act, Marine Mammal Protection Act, expansion of the Clean Air Act." "Sounds pretty progressive of him." "Progressive? Hardly. Nixon's presidential campaign courted Southern voters through fear and resentment of the civil rights movement." "Speaking of civil rights, the prosecution may be surprised to learn that he signed the Title IX amendment, banning gender-based discrimination in education, and ensured that desegregation of schools occurred peacefully, and he lowered the voting age to 18, so that students could vote." "He didn't have much concern for students after four were shot by the National Guard at Kent State. Instead, he called them bums for protesting the Vietnam War, a war he had campaigned on ending." "But he did end it." "He ended it two years after taking office. Meanwhile, his campaign had sabotaged the previous president's peace talks, urging the South Vietnamese government to hold out for supposedly better terms, which, I might add, didn't materialize. So, he protracted the war for four years, in which 20,000 more U.S. troops, and over a million more Vietnamese, died for nothing." "Hmm, a presidential candidate interfering in foreign negotiations -- isn't that treason?" "It is, your Honor, a clear violation of the Logan Act of 1799." "Uh, I think we're forgetting President Nixon's many foreign policy achievements. It was he who normalized ties with China, forging economic ties that continue today." "Are we so sure that's a good thing? And don't forget his support of the coup in Chile that replaced the democratically-elected President Allende with a brutal military dictator." "It was part of the fight against communism." "Weren't tyranny and violence the reasons we opposed communism to begin with? Or was it just fear of the lower class rising up against the rich?" "President Nixon couldn't have predicted the violence of Pinochet's regime, and being anti-communist didn't mean neglecting the poor. He proposed a guaranteed basic income for all American families, still a radical concept today. And he even pushed for comprehensive healthcare reform, just the kind that passed 40 years later." "I'm still confused about this burglary business. Was he a crook or not?" "Your Honor, President Nixon may have violated a law or two, but what was the real harm compared to all he accomplished while in office?" "The harm was to democracy itself. The whole point of the ideals Nixon claimed to promote abroad is that leaders are accountable to the people, and when they hold themselves above the law for whatever reason, those ideals are undermined." "And if you don't hold people accountable to the law, I'll be out of a job." Many politicians have compromised some principles to achieve results, but law-breaking and cover-ups threaten the very fabric the nation is built on. Those who do so may find their entire legacy tainted when history is put on trial.

Active political parties

Parties with parliamentary representation

Party Abbr. Leader Political position Ideology MPs
National Resistance Movement
Harakati za Upinzani za Kitaifa
NRM Yoweri Museveni Big tent
(Dominantly Right-wing)
Ugandan nationalism
Economic liberalism
Social conservatism
Right-wing populism
336 / 529
National Unity Platform
Jukwaa la Umoja wa Kitaifa
NUP Robert Kyagulanyi Ssentamu Centre-left Constitutionalism
Progressivism
57 / 529
Forum for Democratic Change
Jukwaa la Mabadiliko ya Kidemokrasia
FDC Patrick Amuriat Oboi Centre-right Liberal democracy
Liberal conservatism
Secularism
32 / 529
Democratic Party
Chama cha Kidemokrasia
DP Norbert Mao Centre-right Christian democracy
Social conservatism
9 / 529
Uganda People's Congress
Congress ya Watu wa Uganda
UPC Jimmy Micheal Akena Centre-left
(with Left-wing factions)
Social democracy
African nationalism
Pan-Africanism
9 / 529
Justice Forum JEEMA Asuman Basalirwa Syncretic Constitutionalism
Social conservatism
1 / 529
People's Progressive Party PPP Jaberi Bidandi Ssali Centre-left to Left-wing Social democracy
1 / 529

Political Parties without Representation in Parliament

As of September 2023, the Uganda Electoral Commission lists 26 registered political parties on its website. Some of the listed parties include the following:[1]

  • Activist Party
  • Sammy unity Platform
  • Alliance for National Transformation
  • Congress Service Volunteers Organisation
  • Conservative Party
  • Ecological Party of Uganda
  • Forum for Integrity in Leadership
  • Green Partisan Party
  • Liberal Democratic Transparency Party
  • National Convention For Democracy
  • National Peasants’ Party
  • People's Development Party
  • People’s United Movement
  • Republican Women and Youth Party
  • Revolutionary People’s Party
  • Social Democratic Party
  • Society for Peace and Development
  • Uganda Economic Party
  • Uganda Federal Alliance
  • Uganda Patriotic Movement

Defunct political parties

  • Uganda People's Movement

See also

References

  1. ^ Uganda Electoral Commission (14 September 2020). "List of Registered Political Parties In Uganda". Kampala: Electoral Commission of Uganda. Retrieved 14 September 2020.

External links


This page was last edited on 14 April 2024, at 04:12
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