Front for the Defence of Constitutional Institutions

Front for the Defence of Constitutional Institutions
Leader Ahmed Bahnini
Founder Ahmed Reda Guedira
Founded March 21, 1963
Dissolved 1970
Merged into Popular Movement
Headquarters Rabat, Morocco
Ideology Royalism
Liberalism
Political position Centre
Religion Secularism
International affiliation None
Politics of Morocco
Political parties
Elections

The Front for the Defence of Constitutional Institutions (Arabic: جبهة الدفاع عن المؤسسات الدستورية, French: Front pour la défense des institutions constitutionnelles, or simply FDIC) was a Moroccan political party founded in 1963 by Ahmed Reda Guedira, friend and advisor of King Hassan II.

History

The FDIC was created some months after the declaration of the Constitution of Morocco. A strong royalist, Ahmed Reda Guedira founded the FDIC for hinder the hegemony of the two strong parties: the conservative Istiqlal Party and the socialist National Union of Popular Forces.

The FDIC won the 1963 elections, and his candidate Ahmed Bahnini became Prime Minister in a FDIC-Istiqlal alliance, that ruled the Morocco for two years, and was succeded, ironically for a royalist party, by the King Hassan II's govern. Only in 1967, the party established another government under Mohamed Benhima, that collapsed in 1969.

However, as a centrist party with a weak structuration, the FDIC was dissolved around 1970, merged in the Popular Movement.

Electoral results

Moroccan Parliament

House of Representatives
Election year # of
overall votes
% of
overall vote
# of
overall seats won
+/– Leader
1963 1,159,932 (#1) 34.8
69 / 144
Ahmed Bahnini

References