Movement for National Unity

The Movement for National Unity was a political party in Saint Vincent and the Grenadines. It was formed shortly before the 1984 general elections by a split from the United People's Movement due to the refusal of most party members to disown Fidel Castro's politics.Dieter Nohlen (2005) Elections in the Americas: A data handbook, Volume I, p. 596. {{ISBN|978-0-19-928357-6}} Some of the support for the Movement for National Unity was the result of absorbing former members of the disbanded Youlou United Liberation Movement of the 1970s.Mars, Perry. Ideology and change : the transformation of the Caribbean left. Detroit: Wayne State University Press, 1998. p. 59. The new party received 2.0% of the vote, but failed to win a seat. In the 1989 elections it increased its share of the vote to 2.4%, but remained seatless. However, in the 1994 elections it received 17.4% of the vote and won a single seat.Nohlen, pp. 603-604. In the same year it merged with the Saint Vincent Labour Party to form the Unity Labour Party.

Election results

= House of Assembly elections =

class=wikitable style=text-align:center

!Election

!Leader

!Votes

!%

!Seats

!+/–

!Position

!Status

1984

| rowspan="3" |Ralph Gonsalves

|855

|2.03%

|{{Composition bar|0|13|hex=#4F81BD}}

|{{steady}}

|{{increase}} 4th

|{{eliminated|Extra-parliamentary}}

1989

|1,030

|2.35%

|{{Composition bar|0|15|hex=#4F81BD}}

|{{steady}}

|{{increase}} 3rd

|{{eliminated|Extra-parliamentary}}

1994

|8,178

|17.42%

|{{Composition bar|1|15|hex=#4F81BD}}

|{{increase}} 1

|{{steady}} 3rd

|{{no2|Opposition}}

See also

References