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Chadian Democratic Union

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Chadian Democratic Union
Union Démocratique Tchadienne
AbbreviationUDT
LeaderGontchomé Sahoulba
Founded1945
Dissolved1960
HeadquartersFort Lamy
IdeologyAnti-colonialism
Chadian nationalism
Muslim interests

The Chadian Democratic Union (French: Union Démocratique Tchadienne, UDT) was a political party in Chad.

History

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The party was established in Fort Lamy in 1945.[1] Following the General Council elections, members of the Chadian-French Progressive List (which had won 7 seats), Republican Union (four seats) and Franco-Chadian Progressive Group (unrepresented) formed the new party, which was also joined by two of the three elected independents.[2] Its founders were mainly by African traditional leaders including Gontchomé Sahoulba, with the party representing French commercial interests and a bloc of traditional leaders composed primarily of Muslim and Ouaddaïan nobility. It was linked with the Rally of the French People (RPF),[1] a Gaullist conservative political party representing the Europeans in Chad, and also sided with the other political parties founded in Chad by European expatriates.

Members of the UDT party at first won easily local elections; it won both seats in the June 1946 French National Assembly elections. Although it only won one seat in the November 1946 elections, it won all three seats in the 1951 elections. In the 1952 Territorial Assembly elections the party received 72% of the Second College vote, winning 24 of the 30 seats, whilst the RPF won all 15 First College seats.

However, from 1953 it began to be superseded by Chadian Social Action, which had broken away from the UDT. As a result, the UDT started dissolving itself, having also come under threat from the emergence of the Chadian Progressive Party (PPT), which was more radical and nationalistic. In the 1957 Territorial Assembly elections, which saw a victory for the PPT, the UDT had only a marginal role as an ally of the PPT.

The party was dissolved in 1960.[3]

References

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  1. ^ a b Thompson, Virginia; Adloff, Richard (1960). The Emerging States of French Equatorial Africa. Stanford University Press. p. 563.
  2. ^ Lanne, Bernard (1998). Histoire politique du Tchad de 1945 à 1958: administration, partis, élections [Political history of Chad from 1945 to 1958: administration, parties, elections] (in French). KARTHALA Editions. p. 102.
  3. ^ Chad: Defunct parties Archived April 9, 2015, at the Wayback Machine EISA