People's Democratic Party (Bhutan)

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People's Democratic Party
མི་སེར་དམངས་གཙོའི་ཚོགས་པ།
30 / 47
Election symbol
Galloping White Horse

The People's Democratic Party (

Dzongkha: མི་སེར་དམངས་གཙོའི་ཚོགས་པ།; Wylie: mi-ser dmangs-gtsoi tshogs-pa; abbr. PDP) is one of the major political parties in Bhutan, formed on 24 March 2007. The founder president of this party is Sangay Ngedup, the former prime minister and agriculture minister of the Royal Government of Bhutan. The current leader of the party is Tshering Tobgay. The People's Democratic Party submitted its application for registration on 6 August 2007 and thus became the first political party in Bhutan to do so. On 1 September 2007 the Election Commission of Bhutan registered the party.[3] The PDP tends to be more popular in the west of the country.[4]

The party presented candidates for the

In the 2013 elections, the party won 32 seats with 54.88% of the votes.

PDP's election victory is attributed to its comprehensive campaign promises. The campaign promise focused on improving the country's economy which has recorded a real GDP growth rate of 2%, the lowest in the recent 20 years. Confidence in the economy was at its weakest with rupee shortages, raising debt, loans being stopped by financial institutions and corruption having become a major concern.

The party came in 3rd place in the 2018 first-round primary elections, thus losing all its seats.

Election results

National Assembly

Election First round Second round Seats +/– Outcome
Votes % Votes %
2008 83,322 32.96% Cancelled
2 / 47
New Opposition
2013 68,650 32.53% 138,760 54.88%
32 / 47
Increase 30 Supermajority
2018 79,883 27.44% Did not qualify
0 / 47
Decrease 32 Extra-parliamentary
2023–24 133,217 42.54% 179,652 54.98%
30 / 47
Increase 30 Majority

See also

Notes

  1. ^ "President - People's Democratic Party". Archived from the original on 28 July 2013. Retrieved 17 July 2013.
  2. ^ "Bhutan and its political parties". European Parliamentary Research Service. Retrieved 12 October 2017.
  3. ^ Election Commission of Bhutan website -PDP Archived 4 March 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ "Why PDP lost, DNT won and DPT held on". The Bhutanese. Retrieved 2 November 2022.
  5. ^ The meeting of the candidates Archived 27 December 2007 at the Wayback Machine
  6. ^ "Bhutan votes for status quo" Archived 29 April 2011 at the Wayback Machine, France 24, 24 March 2008.

External links