Uganda People's Congress
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The Uganda People's Congress (UPC) is a political party in Uganda.
Uganda People's Congress was founded in 1955 by Milton Obote, who later served two presidential terms under the party's banner. Obote was still party leader at the time of his death in October 2005, although he had previously announced his intention to step down.[1]
On November 28, 2005, Obote's widow Miria was elected party president. Miria Obote was UPC's presidential candidate in the 2006 general election.[2] The party won 9 out of 289 elected seats. In the presidential election of the same date Miria Obote won 0.8 % of the vote.
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[edit] Background
Uganda People's Congress dominated Ugandan politics from independence until 1971 when Milton Obote was overthrown by Idi Amin. The party returned to power under Obote in 1980 until he was overthrown again in 1985 by Tito Okello. The history of the UPC is intertwined with the ethnic divide that has plagued Uganda since it was a British protectorate.
[edit] Pre-Independence
As Independence approached in the 1940s-1950s, it was clear that the Baganda (the largest ethnic group) wanted extensive autonomy in Uganda, and the Buganda King's party Kabaka Yekka ("The King Only") emphasised this desire. However this was not favoured by most Ugandans of other tribes (North and South) and amongst the Buganda educated elite who formed an alternative party, the Democratic Party (Uganda) to aspire for national unity. Although unpopular in Buganda, the Democratic Party had wide spread support in the rest of the Bantu speaking South. However the Democratic Party was also hampered by its Catholic leanings as the majority of Baganda were Protestants.
Into this void, there emerged an alternative - the Uganda National Congress (UNC). Although led by a Northerner (Milton Obote), the UNC appeared more modernist and accommodating and attracted many Southerners particularly in the East. The UNC formed a number of alliances with other parties and emerged as the Uganda People's Congress (UPC). The 3 parties (Kabaka Yekka, UPC and the Democratic Party) contested the first pre-Independence election.
As expected Kabaka Yekka (which also encouraged a boycott of the polls) won most of the seats in Buganda and the UPC won most seats in the North and East. However the Democratic Party (DP) led by Benedicto Kiwanuka emerged as the largest single party. Kiwanuka was on the verge of becoming the first Prime Minister of independent Uganda when he was thwarted by a surprising alliance between the UPC and Kabaka Yekka.
The Kabaka was afraid that DP would remove the Monarchy in favour of a more modern looking Uganda. As for the UPC, Milton Obote realising he had lost the election saw the alliance as the way to power. In return Obote offered the Kabaka a ceremonial role in the new administration and the retention of all royal powers. The UPC/KY alliance thus formed Uganda's first government with Milton Obote as Prime Minister.
[edit] First Government
The alliance between the UPC and Kabaka Yekka did not last long. After 4 years in power, Milton Obote ordered a military attack on the Kabaka's palace in 1966. The attack was led by an army officer called Idi Amin. The Kabaka escaped to London and Obote declared himself President of Uganda. This action more than anything else began the decline of the UPC as a popular party in Uganda. As his unpopularity grew Obote increasingly turned to his Northern home support rather than trying to strengthen the party in the South. The 1969 elections were cancelled and Obote became dictatorial. His government was overthrown in 1971 by Idi Amin.
[edit] Return to Power
The UPC returned in 1979 after Idi Amin was overthrown. Obote as leader of the UPC was closely aligned to the Military Junta that had replaced Idi Amin and rather than strengthen the support of the party in the South of Uganda took up a more military approach. The army (traditionally dominated by Northerners) was a brutal machine that carried out numerous atrocities particularly in the South. This polarised the North/South divide with the UPC being perceived more as a Northern party than ever before. Southerners turned to the Democratic Party and a smaller party called the Uganda Patriotic Movement (UPM) led by a former UPC member Yoweri Museveni
In the elections of 1980, there was overwhelming suspicion that the UPC had rigged the result with the help of the Military Junta. This perception was further enhanced when Obote appointed the head of the Military Junta, Paulo Muwanga as his Vice President when the UPC was declared the winner of the elections. A civil war broke out in Uganda when Yoweri Museveni rejected the result and went to the bush to fight the government.
Yoweri Museveni's eventual success was due to the North/South divide that the UPC had helped foster in Uganda. Southerners more than ever before realised that they had to take up arms to protect their rights. In the past most Southerners had despised military careers. When Museveni came to power in 1986, his army was dominated by Southerners particularly from the west.
[edit] 2006 Elections
The UPC returned to contest the election in 2006, when Museveni restored multi-party elections; however Obote died in exile a few months before. The UPC's traditional heartland in the North appeared disinterested in the UPC without Obote, but still opposed Museveni. This time they turned to Museveni's main opponent Kizza Besyigye (from the South) who led the Forum for Democratic Change (FDC).
The UPC had failed even to capitalise on its self created dilemma (appearing to be a Northern party) by not appointing a popular Northern politician to lead the party - instead they opted for Obote's widow (Miria) - a Southerner. After the elections, the party suffered many high level defections to Museveni's ruling National Resistance Movement and to the FDC. Miria's election is a source of resentment, and many Ugandan's still associate the party with the Military excesses of the past. In the 23 February 2006 National Assembly of Uganda elections, the party won 9 out of 319 seats.
[edit] External links
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