Arab Socialist Union
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Arab Socialist Union
The Arab Socialist Union (, ; ) is one of a number of loosely related political parties based on the principles of Nasserist Arab socialism in a number of countries.[1]
EgyptThe Arab Socialist Union was founded in Egypt in December 1962 by Gamal Abdel Nasser as the country's sole political party. The ASU grew out of his Free Officers Movement. The party's formation was just one part in Nasser's National Charter. The Charter set out an agenda of nationalisation, agrarian reform and constitutional reform, which formed the basis of ASU policy. The programme of nationalisation under Nasser saw seven billion Egyptian pounds of private assets transferred into the public sector. Banks, insurance companies, many large shipping companies, major heavy industries and major basic industries were converted to public control. Land reforms saw the maximum area of private land ownership successively reduced from 200 to 100 feddans. A 90% top rate of income tax was levied on income over ten thousand Egyptian pounds. Boards of directors were required to have a minimum number of workers, and workers and peasants were guaranteed at least half of the seats in the People's Assembly. The Charter also saw a shift in emphasis away from Egyptian nationalism towards Arab unity.[1] After Nasser's death in 1970, Anwar Sadat quickly moved away from his radical socialist position. The first seat change occurred in 1974, with Sadat's Infitah, or Open Door, economic policy, which allowed the emergence of a modern entrepreneurial and consumerist society. Then, in 1976, the beginning of political pluralism allowed three political platforms ? left, centre and right ? to form within the Arab Socialist Union. In 1978, the platforms were allowed to become fully independent political parties, and the ASU was disbanded. Many of today's political parties in Egypt have their origin in the breakup of the ASU. The Arab Socialist Union reflected goals of this stage as the following:
ASU DemiseFollowing the 1967 War and massive demonstrations in February and October 1969, Egypt was in a state of political turmoil, leading to raising calls for granting citizens more democratic rights and demanding self-expression for political affiliations. Following assuming office in 1970, late president Anwar Sadat adopted the slogans of rule of law and the institutional state.
In August 1974, Sadat put forward a working paper to revamp the Arab Socialist Union. SyriaThe ASU in Syria was an outgrowth of the Arab Socialist Movement a socialist and Arab nationalist party, with roots in the peasant movement. In the 1950s Akram al-Hawrani was the leader of the Arab Socialist Party. After merging with the Baath Party, the ASU supported Nasser's United Arab Republic. After the failure of that union, the ASU separated from Baath Party, as did several other splinter parties, including the Democratic Arab Socialist Union (DASU) under Jamal al-Atassi. After the complete failure of arab socialism in Egypt, the ASU resumed its close ties with the Baath Party and joined with them in the National Progressive Front. The ASU received 7 of the 250 seats in the Syrian legislature in 2003, and 8 in the 2007 elections. Since the death of al-Atassi, the DASU has been led by Hassan Abdelazim. It remains an illegal party and has been subject to sporadic repression; although it became semi-openly active after the accession of Bashar al-Assad to power in 2000, and under the limited liberalization that followed. The DASU is the leading member of the National Democratic Gathering, a nationalist-leftist opposition alliance founded in 1979. LibyaMany aspects of Muammar al-Gaddafi's Libyan revolution were based on that of Gamal Abdel Nasser. Like Nasser, Qaddafi seized power with a Free Officers Movement, which, in 1971 became the Arab Socialist Union. Like its Egyptian counterpart, the Libyan ASU was the sole legal party, and was designed as a vehicle for integrated national expression rather than as a political party. In 1972, Qaddafi pushed hard for the formation of a Federation of Arab Republics, combining Libya with Egypt and Syria under his leadership, but the plan never took off. 1974, saw an attept for union with Tunisia also fail. References
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