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List of political parties in Anguilla

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This article lists political parties in Anguilla.

Anguilla used to be a part of Saint Christopher-Nevis-Anguilla, which hindered the formation of parties on the island. Early parties included the Anguilla Democratic Party (founded by October 1967 during the island's brief and unrecognized independence as the Republic of Anguilla) and the Anguilla Constructive Democratic Movement (founded after The Anguilla (Administration) Order of 1971). Both organizations quickly vanished as they lacked mass appeal. The Anguilla (Constitution) Order of 1976 firmly laid "the foundations for the development of party politics".[1]

The first party to formally take part in elections was the People's Progressive Party led by Ronald Webster, which won 6 out of 7 seats at the 1976 Anguillian general election. Parties that appeared during the 1972–1980 period include the Anguilla Democratic Party (led by Camile Connor as of 1976), the Anguilla National Alliance, and the Anguilla United Movement (founded by Webster). The latter two broke off from the PPP, which ceased to exist, and contested the 1980 Anguillian general election.[1]

The Anguilla United Front alliance, consisting of the Anguilla Democratic Party and the Anguilla National Alliance, was formed in 2000.[2] The Anguilla United Movement became the Anguilla Progressive Movement in 2019.[3]

Due to holding elections under forms of first-past-the-post, Anguilla has a two-party system, which means that there are two dominant political parties, with it being extremely difficult for anybody to achieve electoral success under the banner of any other party.

The parties

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Represented in the House of Assembly

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Name Abbr. Leader Ideology House Political position
Anguilla Progressive Movement APM Ellis Webster Liberalism
Progressivism
7 / 13
Centre-left
Anguilla United Front AUF Cora Richardson-Hodge Conservative liberalism
4 / 13
Centre to
Centre-right

Other parties

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Defunct parties

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See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b Barrow-Giles, Cynthia; Joseph, Tennyson S. D. (2006). "3. Electoral Outcomes and Party Fortunes, 1992-2005". General elections and voting in the English-speaking Caribbean, 1992-2005. Kingston, Jamaica; Miami: Ian Randle. pp. 53–55. ISBN 9766372675.
  2. ^ The Americas Review. World of Information. 2007. Retrieved 17 November 2024.
  3. ^ AUM rebranded as APM with new faces, new concepts The Anguillan, 14 October 2019