Free National Movement

Free National Movement
Party Leader Hubert Minnis
Slogan "We Deliver!"
Founded 1971 (1971)
Split from Progressive Liberal Party
Headquarters Mackey Street, N. 144
P.O. Box N-10713, Nassau
Youth wing Torch Bearers
Ideology Conservatism
Liberal conservatism
Political position Centre-right
International affiliation None
Colours      Red
House of Assembly
8 / 38
Senate
4 / 16
Website
ourfnm.org/fnm/
Politics of The Bahamas
Political parties
Elections

The Free National Movement (FNM) is a conservative political party in The Bahamas formed in the 1970s. The current leader of the party is Dr. Hubert Minnis[1] and his deputy is Loretta Butler-Turner who served as Minister of Social Services during the same period. It is the largest opposition party in the Bahamas by number of seats in the Legislature.The FNM is a party to the right of the Bahamian political spectrum.

The FNM, led at the time by Prime Minister Hubert Ingraham, dropped its total share of votes in the 2012 Bahamian General Elections (obtaining only 42.1 percent of the vote, compared to 48.7 percent by the Progressive Liberal Party). The Progressives won 29 of the seats in the legislature and thus the government, compared to the FNM's 9. Ingraham subsequently resigned, both as party leader as well as the Member of Parliament for North Abaco. Following this series of events the FNM went on to lose the by-election triggered by Ingraham´s retirement held on 15 October, 2012, reducing the total FNM seat count to 8 of the 38 seats in the House of Assembly.

History

The FNM was established at Jimmy Shepherd’s house on Spring Hills Farms in Fox Hill in 1971. The Free-PLP were a breakaway group of eight MPs from the then governing Progressive Liberal Party. This group, which was known as the "Dissident Eight," included Cecil Wallace-Whitfield, Arthur Foulkes, Warren J. Levarity, Maurice Moore, Dr. Curtis McMillan, James (Jimmy) Shepherd, Dr. Elwood Donaldson and George Thompson. Following meetings held at Spring Hill Farms, the FNM officially became a political party in October 1971, with Cecil Wallace-Whitfield as its leader.

The other group, the UBP, was one of the main political parties in the Bahamas and had governed the country since the advent of party politics in 1958, until it lost the 1967 general election by a paper thin margin to the Opposition PLP.

The UBP party's leadership was predominantly white while blacks made up most of the citizenry. Once out of power, its leaders decided that the party's time was at an end and they looked to the Free-PLP to form a new party that would follow a conservative party line. The fusion was called the Free National Movement.

The party grew in part by uniting independent black voters and the old UBP voter base. However, these were heady days for the governing PLP, who led the country to independence in 1973, and the FNM failed to gain much more than 40% of the vote in a string of general elections defeats.

In 1990, Hubert Ingraham took over the leadership of the party after the death of Sir Cecil Wallace-Whitfield. The FNM attacked the governing PLP on corruption charges and published a Manifesto.

In the General Election of 1992, the FNM defeated its rival, the PLP, by wide margins, winning 32 of the then 49 seats. The FNM Government privatized the government-owned hotels, which had fallen into decline since nationalization. Private radio stations were allowed to operate, ending the government's broadcast monopoly. The FNM also introduced local government and encouraged inward investment to grow the economy. The elections of 1997 saw the FNM re-elected in a landslide, with 35 of the 40 seats in a reduced House.

After Ingraham vowed not to seek a third term in office, The party lost the 2002 elections, under the leadership of Tommy Turnquest. Many voters, including FNM supporters felt that Turnquest was much "weaker" than Perry Christie, leader of the Progressive Liberal Party.

At the FNM's party convention the following the general elections of 2002, Ingraham was returned as leader of the Free National Movement. The FNM went on to regain control of the House of Assembly in the elections of 2007.[2]

The FNM lost government to the Progressive Liberal Party once again in the 2012 general elections. Outgoing Prime Minister Hubert Ingraham announced his retirement from politics following the defeat. He had served in Parliament for 35 years, winning re-election seven times, including 2012. Ingraham told supporters, "I gave it the best I could and now I've been rejected by the public of the Bahamas.... We had no indication from the general public they would go that way." [2]

Electoral results

Election Votes % Seats +/– Position Government
1972 19,781 40.0
9 / 38
Steady 9 Steady 2nd Opposition
1977 9,995 15.6
2 / 38
Decrease 7 Decrease 3rd Opposition
1982 31,097 41.1
11 / 43
Increase 9 Increase 2nd Opposition
1987 39,009 43.2
16 / 49
Increase 5 Steady 2nd Opposition
1992 61,799 55.0
33 / 49
Increase 17 Increase 1st Majority
1997 68,766 57.7
35 / 40
Increase 2 Steady 1st Majority
2002 52,807 40.9
7 / 40
Decrease 28 Decrease 2nd Opposition
2007 68,542 49.9
23 / 41
Increase 16 Increase 1st Majority
2012 65,633 42.1
9 / 38
Decrease 14 Decrease 2nd Opposition

References

  1. "Bahamas’ Free National Movement Names Hubert Minnis New Leader" who served as the Minister of Health during the last FNM administration, Caribbean Journal, 10 May 2012.
  2. 1 2 Bahamas profile at BBC News.

External links

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