Alliance for Patriotic Reorientation and Construction explained

Alliance for Patriotic Reorientation and Construction
Colorcode:
  1. 0D6F4A
Leader:Fabakary Jatta
Ideology:Religious conservatism
Social conservatism
Moderate Islamism
Right-wing populism
Anti-colonialism
Headquarters:Banjul
Country:The Gambia
Founder:Yahya Jammeh
Founded:1996
Position:Right-wing
Religion:Sunni Islam
Colors:Green
Seats1 Title:National Assembly
Seats2 Title:Pan African Parliament

The Alliance for Patriotic Reorientation and Construction (APRC) is a political party in The Gambia. Founded by army officers who staged the 1994 coup, it was the ruling party from 1996 to 2016 under President Yahya Jammeh.[1]

History

The APRC was formed in 1996 to support coup organiser Yahya Jammeh's successful campaign in the 1996 presidential election. The party ruled over the next twenty years, winning a series of controversial elections. For instance, no other candidates ran in 33 of the 45 National Assembly seats won by the APRC in the 2002 parliamentary elections, as the main opposition boycotted what it described would be an unfair vote.[2]

Despite such criticisms, the APRC was described as very popular amongst the Jola ethnic group. In terms of nationwide percentage, the party's best parliamentary election result was in 2007 (59.7%), while the best presidential election result came in 2011 (71.5%).[3]

Jammeh was ultimately denied a fifth term in the 2016 presidential election by activist Adama Barrow, and the APRC lost a whopping 38 seats in the following year's parliamentary vote, going into opposition for the first time.[4]

New leader Fabakary Jatta has sought to distance the party from the alleged crimes committed by Jammeh during his twenty year rule, and endorsed Barrow's successful re-election campaign in 2021. Jammeh criticised the decision. After the 2022 parliamentary election resulted in a hung parliament for the first time in the country's history, the APRC formed a coalition agreement with Barrow's National People's Party. This cause internal turmoil, as many members, including within the party establishment, remain loyal to Jammeh.[5]

Electoral history

Presidential elections

ElectionCandidateVotes%Results
1996Yahya Jammeh220,01155.8%Elected
2001242,30252.8%Elected
2006264,40467.3%Elected
2011470,55071.5%Elected
2016208,48739.6%Lost

National Assembly elections

ElectionParty leaderVotes%Seats+/–PositionGovernment
1997Yahya Jammeh160,47052.13%New 1st
200229,09751.05% 12 1st
2007157,39259.70% 3 1st
201280,28951.82% 1 1st
2017Fabakary Jatta60,33115.91% 38 3rd
202215,7103.19% 3 5th

Notes and References

  1. News: Gambia opposition unite to fight . 18 January 2005 . BBC News.
  2. Book: Barry Turner (journalist)

    . The Statesman's Yearbook 2005: The Politics, Cultures and Economies of the World . Barry Turner . Barry Turner (journalist) . 2017-02-07 . Springer . 9780230271333 . en.

  3. http://africanelections.tripod.com/gm.html Elections in The Gambia
  4. News: The Total of Final Election Results . Independent Electoral Commission of The Gambia . 5 December 2016 . 23 January 2017 . https://web.archive.org/web/20161207154235/http://iec.gm/error-in-the-total-of-final-election-results/ . 7 December 2016 . dead .
  5. Web site: Hultin. Niklas. What Barrow's re-election means for The Gambia. 2021-12-12. The Conversation. en.