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Democratic Modernist Pole

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

TheModernist Democratic Pole[1][2][3](Arabic:القطب الديمقراطي الحداثي) (French:Pôle démocratique moderniste) (PDM) was aTunisianpolitical coalition created for theTunisian Constituent Assembly electionof 23 October 2011. The "Pole" consisted of four parties and five citizen initiatives, the largest of which is theEttajdid Movement.However, an 18 October report byBloomberg.comstates that "attempts by... the Modernist Democratic Pole, to create a pre-election multiparty coalition failed."[4]

The bloc was founded in May 2011. On 7 September it announced candidate lists for the Constituent Assembly election in all the 33 constituencies at home and abroad. Sixteen women and 17 men will be chief candidates.[5]Riadh Ben Fadl and Mustapha Ben Ahmed, are the founders of the group.[6]Ahmed Ibrahimis a leader in the bloc. The bloc won 5 of the 217 seats and 4.91% of the vote in the2011 Tunisian Constituent Assembly election.[7]Three of the parties in the coalition: theRepublican Party,the Socialist Left Party and theSocial Democratic Path) became part of another coalition called theUnion for Tunisiain 2013.[8]

Positions

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According to Islamopedia, the bloc officially released its campaign platform on 24 September 2011.[9]The bloc proposes the separation of religion and politics and in contrast to traditionalIslamicSharialaw emphasises gender equality, with half its election lists headed by female candidates, and its platform promoting ‘perfect equality’ in inheritance law.[9]The party also supports the abolition of the death penalty.[9]

For Tunisia's constitution, PDM proposes a president elected to five-year terms in office and serving a maximum of two terms. In the Constituent Assembly, it proposes that laws and decisions be based on a majority vote, except for constitutional changes, which would require a two-thirds majority vote.[9]

Components of the pole

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Four parties:[10]

Five independent initiatives:

  • Pole's National Collective of Independents (Collectif national des indépendant(e)s du pôle).
  • Citizens' Initiative (Initiative citoyenne).
  • Pole's League of Independents (Ligue des indépendants du pôle).
  • Enough divisions, let's move forward! (Assez de divisions, allons de l'avant).
  • Call for a democratic, social and cultural pole (Appel pour un pôle démocratique, social et culturel).

See also

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References

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  1. ^Chrisafis, Angelique (2011-10-24)."Tunisia elections: An-Nahda party on course to win".The Guardian.ISSN0261-3077.Retrieved2024-04-21.
  2. ^Schäfer, Isabel (19 August 2015)."The Tunisian Transition: Torn Between Democratic Consolidation and Neo-Conservatism in an Insecure Regional Context"(PDF).PapersIEMed(25). European Institute of the Mediterranean. Joint series with EuroMeSCo: 18.ISSN1888-5357– via German Institute of Development and Sustainability (IDOS), Bonn.
  3. ^R (2023-01-12)."Tunisia-January 14: These 5 parties will go down the street this Saturday to protest".Tunisie Numérique, Tunisia News.Retrieved2024-04-21.
  4. ^Islamists Lead Polls Before First Democratic Tunisia ElectionBy Gregory Viscusi and Jihen Laghmari - bloomberg.com Oct 18, 2011
  5. ^Modernist Democratic Pole fields candidacies in all constituenciesArchived2012-04-25 at theWayback Machine.Tunisian News Agency. 8 September 2011
  6. ^The Modernist Democratic Pole: A “New” political coalitionArchived2012-03-10 at theWayback MachineZied Mhirsi | 03 June 2011
  7. ^In a Worried Corner of TunisJoshua Hammer NYRoB October 27, 2011. (text not available for free on internet)
  8. ^Union for Tunisia: Jebali's initiative "step forward on right path",TAP, 12 February 2013, archived fromthe originalon 17 February 2013,retrieved21 July2013
  9. ^abcdThe Tunisian Democratic Modernist Pole Promises to Outlaw the Death Penalty and Instate ‘Perfect Equality’ in Inheritance.islamopediaonline.org 09.28.2011
  10. ^Who are we?Archived2011-11-04 at theWayback Machine,PDM website
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