Congress for National Unity

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The Congress for National Unity (CONU) is a political party in Malawi led by Daniel Kamfosi Nkhumbwe.

History

The party was established in March 1999.

June 1999 general elections
, nominating Nkhumbwe as its presidential candidate. He finished fourth out of five candidates with 0.5% of the vote. In the National Assembly elections the party ran in 31 constituencies, although Nkhumbwe was its candidate in 27 of them. It received just 0.07% of the vote, failing to win a seat.

The party did not nominate a candidate for president in the

2004 elections. Although it only ran two candidates in the National Assembly elections (Nkhumbwe and Richard Mwaila), its vote share increased to 0.23%. Whilst Nkhumbwe received only 57 votes in the Lilongwe Kumach constituency, Mwaila was victorious in Blantyre West.[2] Prior to the elections Mwaila had left the United Democratic Front after an internal dispute over manipulation of the UDF selection process by the party's eventual candidate Nicholas Kachingwe.[3]
However, Mwaila convincingly defeated Kachingwe, taking 40% of the vote in the constituency.

Prior to the

2014 general elections the party joined the Tisintha Alliance alongside AFORD, MAFUNDE, the New Labour Party, the National Unity Party, the MDP, the Republican Party and the Maravi People's Party.[6]
Although the alliance nomainted MAFUNDE leader George Mnesa as its presidential candidate, the parties contested the National Assembly elections individually and CONU did not put up any candidates.

References

  1. ^ Malawi: Active registered parties Archived 2015-07-25 at the Wayback Machine EISA
  2. ^ Parliamentary summary results for 2004 elections Archived 2015-07-25 at the Wayback Machine MEC
  3. ^ Nixon S Khembo (2005) Elections and democratisation in Malawi: An uncertain process Archived 2012-03-22 at the Wayback Machine EISA
  4. ^ "US embassy cable - 04LILONGWE468". Archived from the original on 2015-07-25. Retrieved 2015-07-25.
  5. ^ Parliamentary results 29 May 09 Archived 2019-07-03 at the Wayback Machine MEC
  6. ^ Eight political parties form an alliance, Mnesa chairs it Face of Malawi, 4 February 2014