Trisha Shetty (Editor)

National Liberal Party (Lebanon)

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President
  
Dory Chamoun

General Secretary
  
Elias Abou Assi

Split from
  
Constitutional Bloc

Vice president
  
Robert Khoury

Founder
  
Camille Chamoun

National Liberal Party (Lebanon)

Founded
  
10 September 1958; 58 years ago (10 September 1958)

The National Liberal Party (NLP, Arabic: حزب الوطنيين الأحرار‎‎, literally Ḥizb Al-Waṭaniyyīn Al-Aḥrār) is a center-right political party in Lebanon, established by President Camille Chamoun in 1958. It is now under the leadership of Dory Chamoun, his son.

Contents

Policies

The party has adopted a hard line in regard to the preservation of Lebanese independence, and to the safeguard of the distinctive liberal practices in Lebanon with respect to freedom of expression and opinion and religious freedoms. Like most Lebanese political organization, it has a sectarian basis; the NLP is mainly supported by Christians. (For more information on this, see Demographics of Lebanon)

History

While England and the United States, Camille Chamoun developed an appreciation for political, economic, and social liberalism, particularly in the media. After his presidential career ended, he set up the National Liberal Party to represent his views. Politically, he was anti-French and pro-British, and strongly supported independent action. The ideology of the National Liberal Party was primarily focused on allegiance to Chamoun and support for Lebanese independence. It distinguished itself from other parties mainly by its support for democratic governance and a free enterprise system.

In 1968, the party joined The Helf Alliance formed with the two other big mainly Christian parties in Lebanon: the Kataeb of Pierre Gemayel, and National Bloc of Raymond Eddé. During the Lebanese Civil War of 1975–90, the NLP was aligned with the mainly Maronite Christian alliance who fought the Lebanese National Movement (LNM). It had its own armed militia, the Tigers. In 1976, the NLP joined with the Kataeb Party (Phalange) and the Lebanese Renewal Party (LRP) to form the Lebanese Front, a political coalition. This was paralleled by the joining of the militias under a central command, the Lebanese Forces, headed by Phalange leader Bashir Gemayel. In 1980, Gemayel turned on the Tigers, and in a surprise attack in Safra eliminated the militia. The NLP has survived as a party, however. Nevertheless, with the death of Camille Chamoun in 1987 and the assassination of his successor and son Dany in 1990, combined with the rise of the Lebanese Forces as political party, it seems that the NLP's political influence has considerably declined comparing to the 1960s and 1970s.

In 2005 the NLP was part of the Qornet Shehwan Gathering, opposed to the Syrian occupation of Lebanon, but later left because of what it alleged was "corruption" in this gathering and integrate March 14 Alliance.

In 2009 during the Lebanese general election Dory Chamoun won a deputy seat in the Chouf District accumulating 61936 votes with the support of the Progressive Socialist Party and the Future Movement against the Free Patriotic Movement candidates who just afford to assemble approximately 22000 votes. Chamoun demonstrated in the same time the strength of his party in the region.

In 2011 the NLP opposed to the formation of the Mikati government essentially composed of the March 8 Alliance. At the same contexts hundred of partisans have participated in 2013 in manifestations against the government who fall the same year after the resignation of Najib Mikati in August.

On 12 July 2015 the party organized his internal elections and Dory Chamoun was reelected president and Robert Khoury Vice President as well as a new political council who was elected.

After the election of Michel Aoun as the new president of Lebanon and the formation of the second cabinet of Saad Hariri,The NLP decided to left The March 14 Alliance the 22 December 2016 because the party was excluded from the cabinet and because of the new configurations of alliances in the Lebanese political life.

List of presidents of the National Liberal Party

  • Camille Chamoun (1958–1985)
  • Dany Chamoun (1985–1990)
  • Dory Chamoun (1990–present)
  • References

    National Liberal Party (Lebanon) Wikipedia