United Democratic Party (Belize) Explained

United Democratic Party
Native Name:Partido Democrático Unido
Leader:Moses Barrow
Foundation:27 September 1973
Headquarters:Youth for the Future Drive, Belize City, Belize
Newspaper:The Guardian
Youth Wing:Youth Popular Front
Merger:National Independence Party
People's Development Movement
Liberal Party
United Black Association for Development (partial)
Ideology:Conservatism[1]
Position:Centre-right
Affiliation1 Title:Regional affiliation
Affiliation1:Caribbean Democrat Union
Seats1 Title:Seats in the Senate
Seats2 Title:Seats in the House
Seats3 Title:Council Control
Seats4 Title:Councillors
Colors:Red
Website:www.udp.org.bz
Country:Belize
Abbreviation:UDP
Chairperson:Michael Peyrefitte
Leader1 Title:Deputy Leader
Leader1 Name:Beverly Williams
Leader2 Title:Vice Chairperson
Leader2 Name:Alberto August

The United Democratic Party (Spanish: Partido Democrático Unido;[2] [3] abbreviated UDP) is one of the two major political parties in Belize. It is currently the main opposition party, having lost the 2020 Belizean general election, after previously holding the government across three prior terms. Founded as a centre-right conservative party, the UDP is led by Moses Barrow.

Founding

In 1973 political opposition in Belize was weak and the ruling People's United Party (PUP) had never lost a legislative election since its foundation. The main opposition parties, the National Independence Party and the People's Development Movement met together with a new Liberal Party to consider forming an alliance to fight the PUP. The resulting merger formed the United Democratic Party on 27 September 1973. Controversially, a significant portion of the United Black Association for Development also voted to join the UDP upon foundation.[4]

Subsequent history

The UDP's first electoral test was the 1974 general election in which it fielded candidates nationwide except in Corozal District, where it supported candidates from the Corozal United Front. It won six seats, and was within 18 votes of winning three more. Former People's Development Movement head Dean Lindo was subsequently named party leader. The party had success in municipal elections during the 1970s, but failed to defeat the PUP in the 1979 general elections. Its representation in the House of Representatives dropped to five seats and party leader Lindo lost his seat to Said Musa and was replaced as leader by Theodore Aranda. Despite internal divisions, the party retained control of three towns in the December 1981 municipal elections

In late 1982 Aranda was removed as party leader and replaced by Curl Thompson, who in turn was replaced by former Liberal Party leader Manuel Esquivel following a convention. In December 1983 the UDP won Belize City Council elections and the following year they were victorious in the general elections, winning 21 of the 28 seats.[5] However, they lost power in the 1989 elections, winning 13 seats to the PUP's 15.

For the 1993 elections the party formed an alliance with the National Alliance for Belizean Rights. The alliance won 16 of the 29 seats, with the UDP taking fifteen.[5] However, they were soundly defeated in the 1998 elections as the PUP won 26 of the 29 seats, after which Esquivel was replaced by Barrow as party leader. The PUP remained in power following the 2003 elections, in which the UDP only won seven seats. After ten years in opposition, the UDP won the 2008 general elections, taking 25 of the 31 seats.[6]

In 2020, UDP Prime Minister Dean Barrow called for elections to take place in November 2020. This was during the global COVID-19 pandemic which had hit the country's economy hard. The pandemic, along with impacts of Hurricane Eta, caused significant voter discontent with the current government.[7] Ultimately, the UDP suffered one of the worst results in the party's history, winning only 5 of the 31 seats.

List of leaders

Electoral history

House of Representatives elections

ElectionParty leaderVotes%Seats+/–PositionOutcome
1974Dean Lindo9,06938.93% 6 2nd
197921,04547.4% 1 2nd
1984Manuel Esquivel25,75654.1% 16 1st
198928,90049.0% 8 2nd
199334,30648.7% 3 1st
199833,23739.41% 12 2nd
2003Dean Barrow45,37645.57% 4 2nd
200866,20356.61% 17 1st
201264,97650.37% 8 1st
201571,45250.52% 2 1st
2020Patrick Faber42,72438.61% 14 2nd

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Gunson, Phil. The dictionary of contemporary politics of Central America and the Caribbean. 1991. Routledge. 978-0-415-02445-7. 350.
  2. Web site: Facebook . 2024-01-22 . www.facebook.com.
  3. Web site: 2020-11-12 . Oposición gana abrumadoramente elecciones en Belice . 2024-01-22 . AP News . es.
  4. [Evan X Hyde|Hyde, Evan X]
  5. Nohlen, p106
  6. http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2008/02/09/america/LA-POL-Belize-Elections.php Belize's opposition party wins landslide in congressional elections
  7. News: Belize elects opposition leader to succeed retiring prime minister. 12 November 2020. National Post. 12 November 2020 . en-CA. Sanchez . Jose .