Justice Party (Guyana)

History

The party was set up in 1964 with assistance from the CIA, and was led by Jai Narine Singh and Balram Singh Rai.[1][2] The American government hoped the new party, together with the Guiana United Muslim Party (which the British government was funding), would take votes from the People's Progressive Party (PPP), whose left-wing leanings they were concerned about.[3] Although the CIA estimated that the Justice Party and GUMP could win three seats in the 1964 general elections,[1] neither did; the Justice Party received only 0.6% of the vote and failed to win a seat,[4] whilst the PPP emerged as the largest party, but was unable to form a government.

The party did not contest any further elections.[5]

gollark: See, I consider this somewhat, well, worrying, given what I said about "respect" for authority figures being pretty close to "subservience" a lot.
gollark: "i will be respected here." implies EVERYONE, not just staff.
gollark: I don't think it ever really had those except one time when the debug interface [REDACTED]/
gollark: What's the problem with that? It doesn't really have horrible security problems. I fixed those.
gollark: I mean, the basic operations you can't do trivially are just "temporarily ban/apply role" and "remove messages matching predicates", right?

References

  1. Stephen G Rabe (2006) U.S. Intervention in British Guiana: A Cold War Story, Univ of North Carolina Press, p130
  2. The Indian presence in Guyana Stabroek News, 28 May 2009
  3. The 1964 election campaign Guyana.org
  4. Nohlen, D (2005) Elections in the Americas: A data handbook, Volume I, pp366-368 ISBN 978-0-19-928357-6
  5. Nohlen, p365


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