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Baptistois Liberal Party

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Baptistois Liberal Party

Parti libéral baptistois
AbbreviationPLB
LeaderCyrille Bachelet
Founded30 September 1990
Preceded byNational Republican People's Party
IdeologyCentrism
Economic liberalism
Conservative liberalism
Bacheletism (minority)
Political positionCentre to centre-right
ColorsBlue, yellow
Seats
3 / 14
Website
www.liberal.sb

The Baptistois Liberal Party (Principean: Parti libéral baptistois, PLB) is a centrist political party in Saint-Baptiste. The successor of the National Republican People's Party, the PLB is one of two main parties in Saint-Baptiste, alongside the Saint-Baptiste Reform Party. At present, the party forms the government, holding a majority of eight seats in the Chamber of Deputies. The party traditionally takes a more conservative approach to policy, although it is considered the more economically liberal of the two main parties, and attempts to ascribe to a catch-all and non-ideological position.

History

The Baptistois Liberal Party was founded on 30 September 1990, reforming what remained of the National Republican People's Party after Saint-Baptiste's democratization earlier that year. The party initially lost both the 1991 presidential and parliamentary elections, seeing itself form the official opposition to the Saint-Baptiste Reform Party (PAREF), which gained both a parliamentary majority and control of the presidency. By 1994, political fortunes had turned, and the PLB received a majority government under the leadership of Cyrille Bachelet, who later won the presidency in 1996. Under both Bachelet and Edouard Montgomery, the PLB pursued a policy of economic liberalism and minor privatization, creating a boost in tourism and involving with numerous multinational hotel chains. The party won a third term in government in 2000, with an unprecedent 12-seat majority.

Heading into the 2003 parliamentary election, the government had been embroiled in a number of scandals concerning possibly illegal financial transactions between former Minister of Home Affairs Lou Delannoy and numerous hotel chains, most notably Dumont Hotels, as well as a general air that the PLB had become increasingly corrupt under its 9-year tenure. As such, the party lost power in a landslide loss in 2003, with Montgomery himself losing his seat. In opposition under former Minister of Finance and Infrastructure Emmanuel Ménard from the mid-2000s onwards, the party recouped losses to PAREF in 2006, leading to an even split of seven seats between both parties and Saint-Baptiste's first hung Chamber of Deputies. The PLB would go on to narrowly losing the snap 2007 election.

With the popularity of the PAREF government collapsing during the 2009 general strike and increasing financial crisis to the liquidation of Saint-Baptiste's largest bank, the PLB under newly-elected leader Marc-Antoine Vernier surged in opinion polls, and returned to government in 2010 under a platform espousing increased welfare spending, subsidization of the hospitality industry, and an official investigation into corruption into Baptistois government institutions. The party increased its vote share in 2013, and in 2019 became to first party to govern with four consecutive majority governments.

Election results

Chamber of Deputies

Election year Leader # of
votes
% of
vote
# of
overall seats won
+/– Govt?
1991 Pierre-Marie Blanchet 7,463 46.07 (#2)
4 / 14
Increase4 Opposition
1994 Cyrille Bachelet 7,337 51.01 (#1)
8 / 14
Increase4 Majority
1997 Edouard Montgomery 6,517 51.54 (#1)
8 / 14
Steady Majority
2000 7,282 52.11 (#1)
12 / 14
Increase4 Majority
2003 4,993 44.51 (#2)
4 / 14
Decrease8 Opposition
2006 Emmanuel Ménard 4,446 44.88 (#2)
7 / 14
Increase3 Opposition
2007 5,005 43.52 (#2)
6 / 14
Decrease1 Opposition
2010 Marc-Antoine Vernier 7,137 47.63 (#1)
11 / 14
Increase5 Majority
2013 7,248 51.05 (#1)
11 / 14
Steady Majority
2016 5,802 46.66 (#1)
10 / 14
Decrease1 Majority
2019 5,053 42.34 (#1)
8 / 14
Decrease2 Majority

President

Election year Candidate 1st round 2nd round
# of votes % of vote # of votes % of vote
1991 Édouard Bachelet 7,700 47.71 (#2) 7,317 43.98 (#2)
1996 Cyrille Bachelet 6,922 50.63 (#1)
2001 Cyrille Bachelet 7,191 57.81 (#1)
2006 Emmanuel Ménard 4,938 45.53 (#1) 5,109 49.58 (#2)
2011 Emmanuel Ménard 7,802 52.42 (#1)
2016 Emmanuel Ménard 5,983 44.65 (#1) 6,901 51.01 (#1)
2021 Marc-Antoine Vernier 4,367 27.30 (#1) 8,092 47.31 (#2)

Leadership