Dhivehi Rayyithunge Party

Dhivehi Rayyithunge Party
ދިވެހި ރައްޔިތުންގެ ޕާޓީ
Leader Mohamed Nasheed (Colonel)
Founded 21 July 2005
Headquarters Malé, Maldives
Ideology Conservatism,
Liberal conservatism
Political position Centre-right
Majlis of the Maldives
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Website
www.drp.mv
Politics of the Maldives
Political parties
Elections

The Dhivehi Rayyithunge Party (Maldivian: ދިވެހި ރައްޔިތުންގެ ޕާޓީ, Translation: Maldivian People’s Party, DRP) is a political party of the Maldives. On 2 June 2005, the nation’s 50-member parliament voted unanimously to allow and operate political parties in Maldives. DRP subsequently submitted its registration on 21 July 2005 and was the second registered political party in the second Republic of the Maldives.

DRP has the third largest number of members among all political parties in the Maldives.

History

Maumoon Abdul Gayyoom (2005-2010)

On 2 June 2005, the nation’s 50-member parliament voted unanimously to allow and operate political parties in Maldives. DRP subsequently submitted its registration on 21 July 2005 and was the second registered political party in the second Republic of the Maldives.

At the first multi-party parliamentary elections in the Maldives on 9 May 2009, the DRP won 36% of the seats (28 out of 77 seats) in the parliament, becoming the party to win the most number of seats. However, DRP gained the second most number of votes with 27.5% of the votes (39,399 votes) compared with the 35.3% of votes (50,562 votes) gained by the Maldivian Democratic Party

Ahmed Thasmeen Ali (2010 - 2013)

In 2011, the first leader of the party, former president Maumoon Abdul Gayyoom removed himself from the party amid contentious conflicts of interest within the party and political competitiveness.[1] He formed a new political party called Progressive Party of Maldives (PPM). It was a point where DRP had a huge debt following the defeat in the 2008 Presidential Elections with Ahmed Thasmeen Ali as the running mate of Gayyoom. Once Gayyoom left, the party was led by Ahmed Thasmeen Ali who had to face the inherited debt of 32 Million Rufiyaa. This was the biggest challenge for him as the leader of the party. Following the defeat in the first round of Presidential Elections 2013, Thasmeen Ali being the running mate of former president Dr Waheed, DRP decided to support MDP in the second round of the elections, disappointing a lot of members of the party. MDP was defeated in the second round by PPM. Ahmed Thasmeen Ali then decided to join MDP,[2] leaving DRP in the hands of the current leader Mohamed Nasheed (Colonel), who courageously took up the place of duty, when two leaders on two occasions, had left the party to perish. Taking up the leadership, Mohamed Nasheed promised reform and recovery in many aspects of the party. He had stated that the party was in ICU at the moment, as audited and unaudited debt of the party would round up to a figure as big as 10 Million Rufiyaa.[3]

Mohamed Nasheed (Colonel) (2013–present)

New proposed logo of DRP

The current leader of DRP is Mohamed Nasheed (Colonel). He became the leader of the Party on 18 November 2013, after receiving majority of the votes at the 142nd council meeting.

Soon after taking up the leadership, Mohamed Nasheed, as a determined leader, announced a logo contest open for all, to change the logo of the party. It was part of the re-branding and reforming of DRP. The logo to win the 1st place was “Rising Star” designed by Modern Arts. The logo was inspired from a verse of a poem by Muhammad Jameel Didi who was a famous poet and a political figure of the Maldives.

Currently, Dhivehi Rayyithunge Party does not hold any seats in the parliament. Party congress is scheduled to be held in August this year, in accordance with the decision by the council of DRP.

Party's Objectives

According to the party's literature, The objectives of DRP are:

References

  1. Saeed, Shaheeda (5 September 2011). "Gayoom resigns from DRP". Miadhu. Retrieved 21 June 2014.
  2. Ahmed, Fazeena (18 Nov 2013). "Thasmeen resigns as DRP leader". Haveeru Online. Retrieved 21 June 2014.
  3. Naahee, Mohamed (26 November 2013). "Three DRP MPs defect to Jumhoree Party". Minivan News. Retrieved 22 June 2014.

External links

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