- New Azerbaijan Party
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New Azerbaijan Party
Yeni Azərbaycan PartiyasıLeader Ilham Aliyev
(since 31 October, 2003)Founded December 18, 1992 Headquarters Bülbül prospekti 13,
Baku, AzerbaijanIdeology Nationalism,
Secularism,
Social market economyPolitical position Center-right Official colours Blue, yellow, white Parliament: 72 / 125Website Official Web Site
(Azerbaijani) (English)Politics of Azerbaijan
Political parties
ElectionsThe New Azerbaijan Party (Yeni Azərbaycan Partiyası, YAP) is the ruling political party in Azerbaijan. It was formed on 18 December 1992 by the former President of Azerbaijan Heydar Aliyev, who led it until his retirement and death in 2003.[1] It is now led by his son, Ilham Aliyev, who succeeded his father as the party leader and as President of Azerbaijan since 2003.
The party's stated ideologies are lawfulness, secularism, and Azerbaijani nationalism. It wants to build a "social-oriented" economy, and lists civil solidarity and social justice as the basis of its ideology.[2] The founder of the party, Heydar Aliyev, was a member of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union until July 1991.[3]
At the elections (5 November 2000 and 7 January 2001), the party won 62.3% of the popular vote and 75 out of 125 seats. Its candidate Ilham Aliyev was reported by the government to have won 80% of the popular vote in the 2003 presidential elections, which faced criticism of vote-rigging from groups such as Human Rights Watch. At the 2005 parliamentary elections, it won 62 out of 125 seats. At the 2010 parliamentary elections, it won 72 out of 125 seats. Presently, New Azerbaijan Party has 518 thousand members.[4]
The main contention between the ruling New Azerbaijan Party and the opposition can actually be seen as a power struggle between the old Soviet elite, which still controls Azerbaijan, and the new intelligentsia that has long-opposed Soviet institutions.[5]
References
- ^ Ruling Party Sees Victory in Azeri Vote
- ^ "History". http://www.yap.org.az/view.php?lang=en&menu=4.
- ^ "Heydar Alirza oglu Aliyev". http://www.yap.org.az/view.php?lang=en&menu=2.
- ^ Ruling New Azerbaijan Party will mark membership of 500,000th person
- ^ Joël Krieger, Margaret E. Crahan. The Oxford companion to politics of the world. Oxford University Press. p. 59.
Further reading
- Ishiyama, John (2008): Political Party Development and Party 'Gravity' in Semi-Authoritarian States. The Cases of Azerbaijan, Kyrgyzstan, and Tajikistan. In: Taiwan Journal of Democracy 4/1: 33-53.
- Küpeli, Ismail (2010): Stabilisierung autoritärer Herrschaft: Das Fallbeispiel Aserbaidschan. Universität Duisburg-Essen, Duisburg 2010.
External links
- Official Web Site (Azerbaijani) (English)
Political parties in Azerbaijan Parliament New Azerbaijan Party · Civic Solidarity Party · Motherland Party
Not represented
in the parliamentMusavat · Azerbaijan Popular Front Party · Azerbaijan National Independence Party · Azerbaijan Democratic Party · Azerbaijan Hope Party · Azerbaijan Social Prosperity Party · Party for Democratic Reforms · Whole Azerbaijan Popular Front Party · Great Order Party · Civic Unity Party · Virtue Party · Justice Party · Azerbaijan Communist Party · Modern Equality Party · Azerbaijan National Democrat Party · National Unity · Azerbaijan Social Democratic Party · Islamic Party of Azerbaijan
Categories:- Political parties in Azerbaijan
- Nationalist parties
- Politics of Azerbaijan
- Caucasian political party stubs
- Azerbaijan politics stubs
- Political parties established in 1992
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