Congress for the Republic

For the political party in Niger, see Congress for the Republic (Niger).
Congress for the Republic
المؤتمر من أجل الجمهورية
French name Congrès pour la République
Abbreviation El Mottamar,
CPR
Secretary-General Imed Daimi
Founder Moncef Marzouki and 31 others
Founded 25 July 2001 (2001-07-25)
Headquarters 41 Hedi Chaker,
1000 Tunis
Newspaper Tunisie Avenir (French)
Ideology Left-wing nationalism[1]
Democratic socialism[2]
Social liberalism
Liberalism[3]
Secularism[4]
Colors Green and red
Slogan Sovereignty of the people, dignity of the citizen, legitimacy of the state.
Tunisian Arabic: السيادة للشعب، الكرامة للمواطن، الشرعية للدولة[5]
French: La souveraineté du peuple, la dignité du citoyen, la légitimité de l'état.[6]
Assembly of the
Representatives
of the People
4 / 217
Election symbol
Website
mottamar.net

The Congress for the Republic (Arabic: المؤتمر من أجل الجمهورية, el-Mo’tamar min ajl el-Jomhūriya ; French: Congrès pour la République), also referred to as El Mottamar or by its French acronym CPR, is a centre-left secular political party in Tunisia. It was created in 2001,[7] but legalised only after the 2011 Tunisian revolution. Its most prominent founder and long-term leader was Moncef Marzouki. He has been the party's honorary president since he became interim President of Tunisia in December 2011.

History

Foundation

The creation of the CPR was declared on 25 July 2001[7] by 31 people including the physician, medicine professor and human rights activist Moncef Marzouki as President, Naziha Réjiba (Oum Ziad) as Secretary-general, Abderraouf Ayadi as Vice-President, Samir Ben Amor as Treasurer, and Mohamed Chakroun as Honorary President.[8] The CPR declared that it was aimed to install a republican form of government "for the first time"in Tunisia, including freedom of speech, freedom of association, and the holding of "free, honest" elections, "guaranteed by national and international observers able to genuinely check all levels of the electoral process".[7] The CPR's declaration also called for a new constitution, strict separation of the different branches of government, human rights guarantees, gender equality, and a constitutional court for protecting individual and collective rights.[7] The CPR called for "renegotiating" Tunisian commitments toward the European Union, for Tunisia to support the rights of national self-determination, in particular for the Palestinian people.[7]

It was ideologically heterogeneous, including social democrats, Arab nationalists, far-leftists, as well as Islamists.[9] The unifiying point was their firm opposition to the regime of President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali.

2001–2010

In 2002, during the Ben Ali presidency, the CPR was banned.[10] Its leader Marzouki went into exile in Paris.[11] However, the party continued a de facto existence, being run from France until 2011.[10]

2011

Following the ouster of President Ben Ali in January 2011 as a result of the 2010–2011 Tunisian protests, CPR President Moncef Marzouki announced that he would return to Tunisia and be a candidate in the next general election.[10] He returned to Tunisia on 18 January 2011.

Glasses with a thick red and green frame
The CPR's electoral symbol.

The Congress for the Republic's electoral symbol is a red pair of glasses, alluding to Moncef Marzouki's characteristic glasses. Young supporters of the CPR are known to wear red glasses as an accessory to show their support for Marzouki.[12][13]

In the election for a constituent assembly, the CPR won 8.7% of the popular vote and 29 of 217 seats in the National Constituent Assembly, making it the second-strongest party. Subsequently, the party contracted a three-party coalition with the winning Islamist Ennahda Movement and Ettakatol, called the "Troika".[14] Accordingly, the Constituent Assembly elected CPR leader Moncef Marzouki interim President of Tunisia on 12 December 2011. Thereupon Marzouki appointed an Ennahda-led government with participation of the CPR. Abderraouf Ayadi succeeded Marzouki as secretary-general of the CPR.[15]

2012

In May 2012, disaffected members of the CPR left the party and formed the Independent Democratic Congress. The splinter party that was later renamed Wafa Movement, is headed by Abderraouf Ayadi, a former secretary general of the CPR.[16] He was joined by 12 members of the Constituent Assembly.[17]

Party officials

Secretary General

Spokesperson (also members of political bureau) :

Members of political bureau :

President of CPR National Council

Election results

Election year # of total votes % of overall vote # of seats
Constituent Assembly of Tunisia
2011 353,041 8.71%
29 / 217
Assembly of the Representatives of the People
2014 69,794 2.05%
4 / 217

References

  1. Haugbølle, Rikke Hostrup; Cavatorta, Francesco (Spring 2012), "Beyond Ghannouchi: Islamism and Social Change in Tunisia", Middle East Report (262): 20
  2. Mitchell, Jonathan; Spencer, Richard (25 October 2011). "Tunisia's victorious Islamist party in coalition talks". The Daily Telegraph.
  3. Ottaway, Marina (28 January 2011), Who Will Lead Tunisia?, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, retrieved 21 Oct 2011
  4. "Tunisia: who are the opposition leaders?". The Daily Telegraph. 18 January 2011. Retrieved 4 February 2011.
  5. "Site du CPR" [CPR Website] (in Arabic). Congress for the Republic. Retrieved 4 May 2011.
  6. "Qui sommes-nous ?" [Who are we?] (in French). Congress for the Republic. 2001. Archived from the original on 17 January 2011. Retrieved 17 January 2011.
  7. 1 2 3 4 5 Marzouki, Moncef (24 July 2001). "Déclaration constitutive" [Founding Declaration] (in French). Congress for the Republic. Archived from the original on 23 July 2011. Retrieved 17 January 2011.
  8. "Première liste des membres fondateurs du CPR" [First list of the founding members of the CPR] (in French). Congress for the Republic. 25 July 2001. Archived from the original on 23 July 2011. Retrieved 17 January 2011.
  9. Abdelhak Azzouzi (2006), Autoritarisme et aléas de la transition démocratique dans les pays du Maghreb, L'Harmattan, p. 203
  10. 1 2 3 Sonia Farid (16 January 2011). "Moncef Marzouki declares presidential candidacy". Al Arabiya. Archived from the original on 17 January 2011. Retrieved 17 January 2011.
  11. Chrisafis, Angelique (19 October 2011), "Tunisian elections: the key parties", The Guardian, retrieved 22 Oct 2011
  12. "Marzouki Fans", The Guardian, 21 October 2011. Retrieved 23 October 2011.
  13. von Randow, Gero (20 October 2011), "Mit Facebook und Scharia", Zeit (in German), retrieved 23 October 2011
  14. "Tunisia opposition fear Ennahda power grab", Ahram Online, 17 January 2012, retrieved 7 October 2013
  15. "al-Maktab as-Siyāsī" [Party officials] (in Arabic). Congress for the Republic. Retrieved 29 July 2011.
  16. Ltifi, Afifa (17 May 2012), "Tunisia's Second Largest Democratic Party Divides", Tunisia Live, retrieved 6 June 2012
  17. "Les dissidents du CPR créent le Congrès Démocratique Indépendant", Leaders, 16 May 2012, retrieved 6 June 2012

External links

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