Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

True Whig Party

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Founded
  
1869 (1869)

Headquarters
  
Monrovia

Dissolved
  
1980 (1980)

Political position
  
Right-wing

Historic leaders
  
Edward James Roye, Anthony W. Gardiner, William Tubman, William R. Tolbert Jr.

Ideology
  
Black conservatism Protectionism Centralization

The True Whig Party, also known as Liberian Whig Party, was the oldest political party in Liberia. Founded in 1869, the party dominated Liberian politics from 1878 until 1980 to the extent that the country was virtually a one-party state, although opposition parties were never outlawed. Initially, its ideology was heavily influenced by that of the United States Whig Party.

Contents

History

The political party was founded in the township of Clay-Ashland in 1869. It presided over a society where Black American settlers and their descendants were almost 100% of the citizens able to vote, and so represented them, often working in tandem with the Masonic Order. The party endorsed systems of forced labour. In 1930 they sold slaves to Spanish colonialists on Fernando Po (now Bioko in Equatorial Guinea), leading to a five-year U.S. and British boycott of Liberia. Despite this dispute, the West saw them as a stabilizing, unthreatening force and so invested heavily in the nation under William Tubman's leadership (1944–1971).

The party lost power after Tubman's successor, William Tolbert, was killed in an April 1980 military coup by a group of soldiers opposed to his clampdown on the political opposition and his tolerance of corruption. It was then the opposition's turn to clamp down on the True Whig Party; the vast majority of its members and supporters left the party, but it struggled on as a minor party.

Legacy

In 1991, the party faced a challenge from a new group calling itself the "National True Whig Party of Liberia," and TWP chairman Momo Fahnbulleh Jones threatened legal action to induce the newly founded party to change its name.

The party participated in the 2005 general election as part of the Coalition for the Transformation of Liberia, which dissolved the next year. It registered to compete as an individual party in the 2011 general election, while endorsing President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf's bid for a second term. However, the party experienced strife over leadership five months before the election, and it failed to nominate any candidate for any legislative seat.

References

True Whig Party Wikipedia