Alliance for Patriotic Reorientation and Construction

Alliance for Patriotic Reorientation and Construction
Leader Yahya Jammeh
Founded 1996
Headquarters Banjul
Ideology Authoritarianism
Anti-colonialism
Religious conservatism
National Assembly
43 / 48
Pan African Parliament
4 / 5
Election poster for Yahya Jammeh

The Alliance for Patriotic Reorientation and Construction is a political party in the Gambia, founded by army officers who staged a coup in 1994. It was formed in 1996 to support army leader Yahya Jammeh's campaign for the 1996 elections. It generally garners high support among voters from Jammeh's Jola ethnic group. Most appointed APRC government officials are from this group as well.

Jammeh won the 2001 presidential elections with 52.8% of the popular vote. In National Assembly elections in 2002, the party won 45 of 48 seats, 33 of them unopposed. The elections were boycotted by the oppositional United Democratic Party.

APRC candidate and incumbent Yahya Jammeh won a third five-year term in presidential elections held on 22 September 2006, receiving 67.3% of the vote.

The APRC won 42 of 48 seats in the 25 January 2007 National Assembly election[1] and 43 of 48 seats in the 29 March 2012 National Assembly election.

In the 2016 presidential elections, for the first time since officially taking power in the 1996 presidential elections, APRC incumbent Jammeh lost the presidency to coalition challenger Adama Barrow, garnering only 36.6% of the vote to Barrow's 45.54%.[2]

References

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