The
Democratic Left Movement (DLM, Arabic,
ĥarakatu-l-yasāri-d-dimuqrātī, Arabic acronym HYD), is a
political party in Lebanon founded in September 2004.
Formation
The DLM was formed as a result of a combined effort among
leftist intellectuals, activists who had previously split
from the Lebanese Communist Party (LCP) and leftist student
groups. The Preparatory Committee, which had previously
issued statements highly critical of the Syrian hegemony
over Lebanon and calling for the birth of a new left,
arranged for a general assembly in which a founding
committee was elected in September 2004 and the movement was
officially born.
History
By the late 1980s, unknown people embarked on an
assassination spree that resulted in purging known leftist
intellectuals such as Hussein Mroue and Mahdi Amel among
others [citation needed]. This was coupled with the downfall
of the number one supporter of leftists in Lebanon, the
Soviet Union. It also marked the beginning of the Syrian
occupation of Lebanon that lasted until April 26, 2005.
Living under Syrian tutelage stirred a dilemma among the
leftists' leadership, intellectuals' and rank and file.
Should the left contend to this existence under the pretext
of fending off external danger? Or should it seek democracy
first as a means for the liberation of the Arab people and
the key to fending off all kinds of danger, whether external
or internal.
The leftist division survives to this day and has, since its
eruption, witnessed several developments. The first and
foremost of these developments was the resignation of George
Hawi, the Lebanese Communist Party's (LCP) leader and strong
figure, in 1992. Hawi was quoted as saying that he better
"leave the boat before it wrecks," in reference to the
collapse of the Soviet Union.
Following Hawi, several communist voices started calling for
the rejection of the soviet model and the revival of the
party's role as a spearhead in the fight for Lebanon's
sovereignty and independence.
The first breach among the leftists, however, occurred among
the rank and file of students with the spontaneous creation
of what came to be called as the Independent Leftist Groups.
These groups scored some initial success which in turn
encouraged opposition factions within the LCP to revolt
against the leadership and start calling for the renewal of
the structure, thought and perceptions of the left.
At the time, the gap between the LCP leadership and leftist
intellectuals was further widening. To add insult to injury,
the LCP leadership expelled a number of its student members
in an attempt to shutdown opposition voices within the
party.
The expelled students, however, had different ideas and
showed signs of determination and strong will as they
created what came to be known as the Communist Students
Organization. The organization led to further breaches
within the LCP.
Divisions within the LCP reached their climax in 2004 when
during the Ninth Assembly; quasi-Stalinists found their way
to top echelons of the leadership after the party witnessed
wide mismanagement of its elections and democratic process.
The undemocratic elections for their part saw officials
tampering with membership lists in order to keep their
loyalists enlisted while scratching the names of the
supporters of their opponents.
This time, LCP's opposition factions walked out on their
party and alongside other leftist intellectuals as well as
the ILGs, formed what came to be known as the Democratic
Left Movement.
Ideological profile
DLM predominantly advocates a European-style social
democracy to reduce the gap between the rich and the poor
without compromising freedom or economic productivity.
However, DLM supports the existence of courants each
possibly having a different leftist ideology and platform.
Thus, DLM's ideology is a broad leftist platform that forms
the common denominator among its constituents.
DLM is one of the few parties in Lebanon that call for a
secular state. The movement is, however, more pragmatic on
this issue and believes that Lebanon should gradually
overcome sectarianism following a series of changes rather
than a single radical change.
DLM has actively participated in the Independence Uprising
that had its peak on March 14, 2005, when over a million
demonstrators gathered to put an end to the Syrian hegemony
over Lebanon. During these protests, the movement warned
against racist and chauvinist slogans.
Structure
DLM is the only political party in Lebanon to encourage
courants and decentralization within the movement.
The general assembly elects a National Committee on the
basis of proportional representation, where every courant
forms a list. The National Assembly sets up the political
priorities, alliances and rhetoric, and elects an Executive
Bureau for daily follow-up on various issues.
Finally, Regional Assemblies and Syndic Assemblies also
elect their committees. However, these committees enjoy a
relative autonomy and are not controlled by the Executive
Bureau nor by the National Assembly.
Electoral results
At the last legislative elections, May and June 2005, DLM
won one seat in the Lebanese Parliament, becoming the first
leftist secular political party to be represented in the
parliament.
There are unusually many Political parties in Lebanon. The
current paliamentary majority is supported by the following
alliance:
Current for the Future (Tayyar Al Mustaqbal), 36
Progressive Socialist Party (Hizb al-Taqadummi al-Ishtiraki),
16
Lebanese Forces, 6
Qornet Shehwan Gathering, 6
Phalangist or Kataeb Party (Hizb al-Kataeb)
National Liberal Party (Hizb al-Ahrar al-Watani)
independents
Tripoli Bloc, 3
Democratic Left Movement, 1
Democratic Renewal, 1
Hawi and Kassir assassinations
On June 2, 2005, Samir Kassir, one of the founders of the
movement, and a prominent Lebanese journalist and political
analyst, was assassinated. Less than one month later, on
June 21, 2005, George Hawi, the former secretary general of
the Lebanese Communist Party , was also assassinated by a
car bomb in Beirut. The movement blames Damascus and the
government of President Bashar al-Assad, and Syrian allies
in the Lebanese security apparatus responsible
Internal Elections
On April 29, 2007, elections were held within the movement
to elect the new members of the national assembly, based on
propotional representation, for the first time in Lebanon.
Two lists competed, one supported by Elias Atallah, and
representing the leadership's rhetoric at that time, and the
other containing 14 all-youth candidates, named Keep Left,
calling in its program for the movement not to loose its
leftist identity while insisting on being part of March 14.
The results were surprising, as the youth list managed to
gather 34% of the votes, enabling all the list to be elected
to the national assembly. Since these elections the group
working around the Keep Left block have made significant
progress as it was mainly the most active group. In the
elections of regional committees, Keep Left managed to
control the key regions of Beirut and the South.
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