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Mauritian Militant Movement

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Mauritian Militant Movement
Mouvement Militant Mauricien
LeaderPaul Bérenger
Secretary-GeneralRajesh Bhagwan
Deputy LeaderJaya Krishna Cuttaree
FounderPaul Bérenger, Dev Virahsawmy, Zeel Peerun, Jooneed Jeeroburkhan, Fureed Muttur, Chafeekh Jeeroburkhan, Sushil Kushiram, Tirat Ramkissoon, Krishen Mati, Ah-Ken Wong, Kriti Goburdhun, Allen Sew Kwan Kan, Vela Vengaroo, and Amedee Darga[1]
FoundedSeptember 1969 (1969-09)
HeadquartersRoute Poudrière, Port Louis
NewspaperLe Militant
Youth wingMilitant Youth
Ideology
Political positionLeft-wing
International affiliationSocialist International
Progressive Alliance
ColoursPurple
National Assembly of Mauritius
9 / 69
Party flag
Website
www.mmm.mu Edit this at Wikidata

The Mouvement Militant Mauricien (MMM; English: Mauritian Militant Movement) is a left-wing socialist political party in Mauritius. The party was founded by a group of students in the late 1960s. The MMM advocates a "fairer" society, without discrimination on the basis of social class, race, community, caste, religion, gender or sexual orientation.[2]

In the general election of 2014, the MMM became the second largest party in the National Assembly of Mauritius with 12 Members of Parliament, and the second largest party at the municipal level, with 4 councillors.

Structure

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The party is divided into twenty Regionales, one for each of the twenty National Assembly constituencies the main island is divided into. (A twenty-first constituency covers the island of Rodrigues; the MMM, like other mainland parties, typically does not contest elections there, although historically they had a Regionale organized there). The MMM is divided into branches, each of which has a minimum of ten members. Each branch sends two representatives to the local Regionale. Each Regionale has one representative on the party's Central Committee (CC). The CC also includes one male and one female representative of the party's Youth Wing. The CC elects a Political Bureau from among its own members. Ultimate power within the party consists of the Assembly of Delegates, consisting of members of all branches, which can make any decision with a simple majority by secret ballot.

Women's Wing

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Since its inception in 1969, the MMM has emphasized women's rights, and claims to have been the first political party in the country to have done so.[3] A Women's Wing was officially organized in 1974, with the goal of ensuring consistent representation of women in the Central Committee and the Political Bureau. It also seeks to support female candidates for parliamentary elections. Its fourteen-member executive committee is elected at the same time as the party's Central Committee. The party's constitution allocates at least two positions on the Central Committee to women who are not Members of Parliament.

Youth Wing

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The Youth Wing, officially Jeunesse Militante, formed in 1973, is open to all Mauritian citizens aged between fifteen and thirty. A Youth Wing member can be affiliated to a branch or Regionale, or can join the Youth Wing directly. Membership is free of charge.

The Youth Wing is led by eleven executive members. They are chosen, normally for one year, by secret ballot of sixty representatives, three from each of the twenty Regionales.

History

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The MMM's origins date back to 1968 when students' movements Club des Étudiants Mauriciens and Quatre-Bornes Students Association were formed by Veenoo Mootien and Robin Punchoo respectively. These two groups merged into Club des Étudiants, which met regularly at Tennyson College, Quatre Bornes. In September 1969 during street protests against Princess Alexandra's visit, 12 of the student-activists (including Heeralall Bhugaloo, Paul Bérenger, and Sushil Khushiram) were arrested by local police. After their release from prison, and with the assistance of PMSD MP Hurry Parsad Sham (also known as Panchoo), the student movement established its first Executive Committee at Heeralall Bhugaloo's Port Louis High School. The committee's first elected members were Heeralall Bhugaloo, Dev Virahsawmy, Jooneed Jeeroobhurkhan, Tirat Ramkissoon, Sushil Khushiram, Ah Ken Wong, Robin Punchoo, and Paul Bérenger. Other notable members of the new party were Zeel Peerun, Fureed Muttur, Chafeekh Jeeroburkhan, Krishen Mati, Kriti Goburdhun, Allen Sew Kwan Kan, Vela Vengaroo, and Amédée Darga. The movement also modified its name to Mouvement Militant Mauricien in September 1969.[4][5][1]

The early years

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The MMM won its first parliamentary seat in a by-election in Constituency No. 5 Triolet-Pamplemousses in September 1970, following the death of IFB Attorney-General Lall Jugnauth. Dev Virahsawmy (MMM) defeated Nundlall, the candidate jointly proposed by the governing Labour Party, the Parti Mauricien Social Démocrate (PMSD), and a smaller party (CAM) by over 5000 votes. Showkutally Soodhun assisted Dev Virahsawmy and the MMM during the 1970 by-elections.[6]

The MMM experienced its first schism in 1972, when the party's president Heeralall Bhugaloo left the party due to clashes over language and clothing preferences.[7] Shortly afterwards Dev Virahsawmy left the party in 1973 to found the MMMSP.[8]

The path to power: 1976-1982

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In 1976, in the first general election since independence, the MMM emerged as the largest single party, with 34 of the 70 National Assembly seats. The Labour Party, led by the incumbent Prime Minister, Sir Seewoosagur Ramgoolam, won 28 seats, and the PMSD, led by Sir Gaëtan Duval won 8. The MMM was only two seats short of a majority, but Ramgoolam remained in office by forming a coalition with the PMSD. The MMM formed a strong parliamentary opposition with Sir Anerood Jugnauth as Leader of the Opposition. Prior to the December 1976 elections Heeralall Bhugaloo defected from the MMM to join the Labour Party. For several years Heeralall Bhugaloo had been President of the MMM.[9] Other members also followed his lead including Ramesh Fulena and Vijay Makhan.

The MMM won power in the municipalities of Port Louis, Beau Bassin/Rose Hill and Vacoas/Phoenix. The first MMM mayors were Kader Bhayat (Port Louis), Jean Claude de l'Estrac (Beau Bassin/Rose Hill) and D. Jhuboolall (Vacoas/Phoenix).

On 13 January 1977 Heeralall Bhugaloo resigned from his position of Minister of Education under the Labour-PMSD government which he had held since the December 1976 elections. This made way for Kher Jagatsingh who took on Bhugaloo's ministerial seat.

In the following election in 1982, the MMM campaigned on a theme of change. Using the slogan, Enn nouvo simen pou enn nouno lavie , the MMM won 42 of the directly elected seats in its own right, with a further 18 seats going to the PSM and 2 to the Rodrigues People's Organisation, both of which were electorally allied to the MMM. The MMM and its allies had thus made a unanimous sweep of the directly elected seats — an unprecedented feat. Jugnauth became Prime Minister, with Paul Bérenger as Minister of Finance.

The 1983 schism and aftermath

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Disagreements within the MMM led to a schism on 22 March 1983, when Prime Minister Jugnauth rejected Bérenger's demands for the executive powers of the Prime Minister to be transferred to the Cabinet as a collective body. The party sought to replace Jugnauth with Prem Nababsing, but he dissolved Parliament before it had a chance to vote on the No Confidence motion brought by his erstwhile colleagues. Leaving the MMM, he and his remaining parliamentary supporters founded the Militant Socialist Movement (MSM). In the election that ensued, the Jugnauth's MSM and two allied parties held power, with the MMM, now led by Bérenger, winning only 19 of the 60 directly elected seats, despite gaining 46.4 percent of the popular vote. The MMM was to remain in opposition for the rest of the decade; despite winning 47.3 percent of the popular vote in the 1987 election, it secured only 21 of the 60 directly elected seats.

Since 1990

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Mauritian politics since the 1990s has been characterized by frequently shifting political alliances involving the MMM, the MSM, the Labour Party, and some smaller parties. The MMM formed an alliance with the MSM for the 1990 elections, campaigning for Mauritius to cut its ties with the British monarchy and become a republic. The coalition subsequently broke down, however, and in the 1995 elections, the MMM joined forces with the Labour Party. This alliance swept all 60 directly elected seats, with 35 seats going to Labour and 25 to the MMM. The Labour Party leader, Navin Ramgoolam became Prime Minister with Bérenger as his Deputy. In 1997, however, Ramgoolam dismissed all MMM ministers, including Bérenger, and formed a one-party Cabinet.

In the 2000 elections, the MMM again formed an alliance with the MSM, under an agreement that each party would contest an equal number of parliamentary seats; if successful, they would divide the Cabinet posts equally, and that Jugnauth, the MSM leader, would serve as prime minister for three years, after which he would resign, assume the largely ceremonial Presidency, and hand the Prime Minister's office over to Bérenger. Accordingly, Bérenger succeeded Jugnauth as Prime Minister on 30 September 2003. He led the MMM/MSM alliance to defeat in the elections of 2005, however. The alliance subsequently broke up and the MMM contested the May 2010 elections against the MSM as part of the Alliance du Coeur with two smaller parties — the Union National of Ashock Jugnauth and Social Democrat Mauritian Mouvement (MMSD) of Eric Guimbeau. The Alliance du Coeur won only 18 of the 60 directly elected seats, as well as two indirectly elected seats.

By 2014, the deputy leader of the party resigned[10] when the MMM had formed a new alliance with the Labour Party. In the general election held on 10 December that year, this alliance won only 16 of the 69 directly and indirectly elected seats. Of these, 12 were won by the MMM itself. In 2015, the future of the party was questioned after several members resigned from the party.[11]

Party leaders

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Leader Incumbency
Paul Bérenger 1969–1976
Sir Anerood Jugnauth 1976–1983
Paul Bérenger 1983–1987
Prem Nababsing 1987–1995
Paul Bérenger 1995–2013
Alan Ganoo January 2013-October 2013
Paul Bérenger October 2013 – present

Parliament

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Election Number of
overall seats won
Position Leader Position
1976
34 / 70
1st Sir Anerood Jugnauth Leader of the Opposition
1982
48 / 70
1st Sir Anerood Jugnauth Prime Minister
1983
22 / 70
2nd Paul Bérenger Leader of the Opposition
1987
24 / 70
2nd Prem Nababsing Leader of the Opposition
1991
26 / 70
2nd Prem Nababsing Deputy Prime Minister
1995
25 / 70
2nd Paul Bérenger Deputy Prime Minister
2000
26 / 70
2nd Paul Bérenger Deputy Prime Minister
2005
10 / 70
3rd Paul Bérenger Leader of the Opposition
2010
20 / 70
2nd Paul Bérenger Leader of the Opposition
2014
12 / 69
2nd Paul Bérenger Leader of the Opposition
2019
9 / 69
3rd Paul Bérenger Opposition

Affiliations

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The MMM is a member of the Socialist International, an international grouping of socialist, social-democratic, and labour parties,[12] as well as the Progressive Alliance.[13]

References

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  1. ^ a b "Une naissance sous l'etat d'urgence et la repression", Le Militant, p. 8, 25 September 2009
  2. ^ "Principes du Mouvement Militant Mauricien". 2010. Retrieved 2010-01-31.
  3. ^ "Aile Feminine". Archived from the original on 2011-07-20.
  4. ^ Punchoo, Robin (9 June 2005). "Distorted facts about the birth of the MMM". L'Express. Retrieved 2005-06-09.
  5. ^ "Histoire du MMM de 1969 à 2006". MMM. Retrieved 2023-10-16.
  6. ^ Ahmed Khan, Iqbal (28 March 2021). "Controversy: Soodhun's curious diplomacy with the Saudi Kingdom". L'Express. Retrieved 2021-03-28.
  7. ^ "Heeralall Bhugaloo - un homme de coeur". 5Plus. Retrieved 2004-06-15.
  8. ^ Rédaction. "Il y a 42 ans: Li de Dev Virahsawmy embarrasse la censure". L'Express. Retrieved 2019-09-11.
  9. ^ "Il y a 41 ans, le 15 janvier 1977: Kher Jagatsingh remplace Heeralall Bhugaloo comme ministre de l'Education". L'Express. 15 January 2018. Retrieved 2018-01-15.
  10. ^ "Ivan Collendavelloo claque la porte au MMM". Lexpress.mu. 22 April 2014.
  11. ^ "Démissions au MMM : Bientôt vers la fin du parti ?". Lexpress.mu. 25 April 2015.
  12. ^ "Members".
  13. ^ "Participants | Progressive Alliance". Archived from the original on 2015-03-02. Retrieved 2014-12-08.
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