Jamaica Labour Party

Jamaica Labour Party
Leader Andrew Holness
Chairman Robert Montague
General Secretary Horace Chang
Founder Alexander Bustamante
Founded 8 July 1943
Headquarters Kingston, Jamaica
Youth wing Young Jamaica
Young Professional Arm G2K (Generation 2000)
Women's Group Women's Freedom Movement (WFM)
Trade Union Wing Bustamante Industrial Trade Union
Ideology Conservatism
Political position Centre-right[1][2]
International affiliation International Democrat Union
Regional affiliation Caribbean Democrat Union
House of Representatives
32 / 63
Senate
13 / 21
Local Government
75 / 227
Parish Councils
0 / 13
Website
jamaicalabourparty.com

The Jamaica Labour Party (JLP) is one of the two major political parties in Jamaica, the other being the People's National Party (PNP). Despite its name, the JLP is a conservative[3][4][5] political party, albeit one with ties to the Jamaican labour movement due to its history. The JLP is a member of the Caribbean Democrat Union.

It is the current governing party, having won 32 of the 63 parliamentary seats in the lower house of parliament (House of Representatives) in the 2016 general elections. The party did not win any of the local government councils (municipalities) in the 2012 local elections.

The JLP uses the Liberty Bell, the victory sign, and the colour green as electoral symbols.

History

The party was founded on 8 July 1943 by Alexander Bustamante as the political wing of the Bustamante Industrial Trade Union. It won the 1944 general elections with 22 of the 32 seats.[6] It went on to win the 1949 elections with a reduced majority, before losing power to the PNP in the 1955 elections. It remained in opposition following the 1959 elections, but was victorious in 1962 and was therefore the Government when Jamaica gained its political independence from Great Britain on 6 August 1962.

In 1964 Bustamante retired from politics, but he did not relinquish the title of party leader for several years until the party gave him the honorific title of "The Chief" following its defeat in the 1972 elections. In the interim the party's effective head was First Deputy Leader Donald Sangster who led the party to victory at the polls on 21 February 1967. Sangster suffered a brain hemorrhage and died about six weeks after the elections, while he was preparing for his budget presentation.

Hugh Shearer succeeded Sangster as First Deputy Leader and Prime Minister, defeating David Clement (DC) Tavares by two votes in a run-off by of the JLP parliamentarians. Tavares had came out on top in the first ballot, with Shearer and Robert Lightbourne being the other candidates. Shearer led the JLP to election defeat against the People's National Party's Michael Manley in 1972 and served as Opposition Leader until 1974. Both Sangster and Shearer served as prime ministers while Bustamante remained party leader: they both had the title of "First Deputy Leader" of the JLP while they served as Prime Minister.

In 1974 Edward Seaga was elected the second leader of the party. The party lost the 1976 elections, but Seaga became Prime Minister after victory in 1980 when the party won by a landslide, capturing 51 of the then 60 parliamentary seats. In 1983 with the JLP achieving a spike in popularity, in part because of Seaga's support of the US-led military invasion of Grenada, Seaga called early elections and won all sixty seats, the majority by acclamation, mainly because the opposition PNP boycotted those elections. The JLP suffered defeat in the 1989 elections and went on to lose elections in 1993, 1997 and 2002, all under the continued leadership of Seaga.

In 2005 Bruce Golding succeeded Seaga as leader of the party, and led it to victory in the 2007 elections. Golding resigned as head of the party and head of government in October 2011 and was succeeded by current leader Andrew Holness, who served as prime minister until January 2012, when he assumed the position as Opposition Leader. Holness called the 2011 elections, over a year before it was constitutionally due, and the party lost by a 2:1 margin to the PNP.

The party held a leadership election on 10 November 2013 where incumbent party leader (and Leader of the Opposition), Andrew Holness, was challenged by party deputy leader and Shadow Minister for Finance, Audley Shaw. Holness defeated Shaw by a margin of 2,704 votes to Shaw's 2,012.[7]

Holness went on to lead the JLP to a one-seat parliamentary majority (32-31) in the February 25, 2016 general elections, reducing the PNP to the opposition benches after one term.

Political positions

The JLP is a conservative party.

Electoral performance

Election Leader Votes Share of votes Seats Result
1944 William Alexander Clarke Bustamante 144,661 41.4%
22 / 32
Government
1949 William Alexander Clarke Bustamante 199,538 42.7%
17 / 32
Government
1955 William Alexander Clarke Bustamante 189,929 39.0%
14 / 32
Opposition
1959 William Alexander Clarke Bustamante 247,149 44.3%
16 / 45
Opposition
1962 Sir William Alexander Clarke Bustamante 288,130 50.0%
26 / 45
Government
1967 Sir Donald Burns Sangster 224,180 50.7%
33 / 53
Government
1972 Hugh Lawson Shearer 205,587 43.4%
16 / 53
Opposition
1976 Edward Phillip George Seaga 318,180 43.2%
13 / 60
Opposition
1980 Edward Phillip George Seaga 502,115 58.3%
51 / 60
Government
1983 Edward Phillip George Seaga 23,363 88.0%
60 / 60
Government
  • PNP boycotted the elections. JLP won the 6 seats contested along with independent candidates and gained the other 54 for which only the JLP had nominees.
1989 Edward Phillip George Seaga 362,589 42.9%
15 / 60
Opposition
1993 Edward Phillip George Seaga 263,711 39.1%
8 / 60
Opposition
1997 Edward Phillip George Seaga 297,387 38.6%
10 / 60
Opposition
2002 Edward Phillip George Seaga 360,468 46.9%
26 / 60
Opposition
2007 Orette Bruce Golding 410,438 50.0%
32 / 60
Government
2011 Andrew Michael Holness 405,920 46.3%
21 / 63
Opposition
2016 Andrew Michael Holness 437,178 49.5%
32 / 63
Government

List of party leaders

1.^ Donald Sangster and Hugh Shearer were not actually leaders of the JLP but were de facto leaders during Bustamante's illness/withdrawal from active political life.

References

  1. Axel Klein; Marcus Day; Anthony Harriott (13 November 2004). Caribbean Drugs: From Criminalization to Harm Reduction. Zed Books. pp. 70–. ISBN 978-1-84277-499-1.
  2. Robin Gauldie (July 2007). Jamaica. New Holland Publishers. pp. 17–. ISBN 978-1-84537-859-2.
  3. Charles Green (9 May 2002). Manufacturing Powerlessness in the Black Diaspora: Inner-City Youth and the New Global Frontier. AltaMira Press. pp. 133–. ISBN 978-0-585-38626-3.
  4. Sherry Paprocki; Sean Dolan (1 January 2009). Bob Marley: Musician. Infobase Publishing. pp. 76–. ISBN 978-1-4381-0072-2.
  5. Nancy Foner (20 August 2013). One Out of Three: Immigrant New York in the 21st Century. Columbia University Press. pp. 235–. ISBN 978-0-231-53513-7.
  6. Nohlen, D (2005) Elections in the Americas: A data handbook, Volume I, pp432-435 ISBN 978-0-19-928357-6
  7. "Real 'Man A Yaad' - Holness clobbers Shaw to remain JLP leader".

External links

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