Organization for Popular Democracy – Labour Movement explained

Organization for Popular Democracy-Labour Movement
Native Name:Organisation pour la démocratie populaire – Mouvement du travail
Leader:Arsène Bongnessan Yé,
Nabaho Kanidoua,
Roch Marc Christian Kaboré
Abbreviation:ODP–MT
Foundation:April 1989
Successor:Congress for Democracy and Progress
Merger:UCB,
OMR,
ULC-LF factions,
GCB factions
Newspaper:Yeelen
Country:Burkina Faso

The Organization for Popular Democracy – Labour Movement (French: Organisation pour la Démocratie Populaire - Mouvement du Travail) was the ruling political party in Burkina Faso from 1989 to 1996. It was founded in April 1989 by the Union of Burkinabè Communists, the Revolutionary Military Organization (OMR) and factions from Communist Struggle Union - The Flame and Burkinabè Communist Group as a party based on Marxism, but strongly pragmatic, adopting the free market in its economic plan. It renounced Marxism–Leninism in March 1991.[1]

In February 1996 the ODP-MT merged into the Congress for Democracy and Progress.

In the parliamentary election held on May 24, 1992, it won 48.2% of the popular vote and 70 out of 107 seats.

The ODP-MT was led by Arsène Bongnessan Yé, Nabaho Kanidoua and Roch Marc Christian Kaboré.

It published Yeelen.

Electoral history

National Assembly elections

Notes and References

  1. Political Parties of the World (6th edition, 2005), ed. Bogdan Szajkowski, page 96.