Botswana Democratic Party
AbbreviationBDP
ChairmanSlumber Tsogwane
President of BotswanaMokgweetsi Masisi
Vice President of BotswanaSlumber Tsogwane
Leader of the HouseSlumber Tsogwane
FounderSeretse Khama
FoundedNovember 1961
HeadquartersTsholetsa House, Gaborone
IdeologyPaternalistic conservatism[1]
Economic nationalism[2]
Political positionCentre[3] to centre-right[4][5][6][7]
International affiliationSocialist International (consultative)[8]
Africa affiliationFLMSA
Colors  Red
  Black
  White
SloganTsholetsa Domkrag
National Assembly
38 / 65
Councillors
332 / 490
Party flag
Website
bdp.org.bw

The Botswana Democratic Party, (abbr. BDP, colloquially known as Domkrag), is the ruling centre-right political party in Botswana. Since the country's inaugural election in 1965, the party has governed the country without interruption for 57 years, making Botswana a dominant-party system and the BDP the longest continuous ruling party in the democratic world.[a]

The party was founded in February 1962 as the Bechuanaland Democratic Party while the country was a British protectorate. It adopted its current name following Botswana's independence in 1966. In its beginnings, it was led by Seretse Khama, the country's first president, and his successor Quett Masire. Subsequent presidents of Botswana, Festus Mogae, Ian Khama, and Mokgweetsi Masisi, have chaired the party. The party won an overwhelming majority in the first elections under universal suffrage in 1965, leading Khama to become the first president of the new state, a position he held until his death in 1980. The BDP enjoyed virtually unquestioned hegemony for the next three decades, benefiting from the relative success of its economic policy and its pragmatic management of the relations between the different tribal groups of the country. Beginning in the late 1980s, the country's increasing urbanization and the emergence of a middle class less influenced by tribal relations weakened the BDP's support base and strengthened its opponents, while a growing economic slowdown in the 1990s caused the party to suffer harsh electoral setbacks, leading it to implement numerous reforms in an attempt to avoid exacerbating political polarization in the country. Since then, the BDP has retained power with less support, benefiting from the first-past-the-post voting and facing an opposition plagued by constant divisions.[13][14][15]

Although its sources of voters have varied over the years and itself has suffered some splits that gave rise to other opposition parties, such as the Botswana Movement for Democracy and the Botswana Patriotic Front, the BDP has not seen its hegemony seriously threatened and has won every election held since the introduction of universal suffrage in 1965. Under its long government, elections in Botswana are considered credible and transparent by the international community, making the BDP actively the longest continuosly ruling party in a democratic country.

From independence until the late 2010s, the BDP was particularly strong in the Central District, Seretse Khama's home region and the territory of the Ngwato tribe, while it became weak in urban areas and in the North-West and the South. During the presidency of Ian Khama (2008-2018), a polarizing figure within the party itself, the BDP suffered considerable internal crises that changed its voter base. The presidency of Mokgweetsi Masisi saw the departure of Khama from the party and the founding of the BPF by members located in the Central District, as well as a recovery of the party in the cities (mostly opposed to Khama) that led the BDP to triumph in the south and in urban areas in the 2019 elections while losing votes and seats in the Central District.

As a party of power, the BDP's ideology is considered by political analysts to be a party with an amorphous character, although in essence, it can be seen as a paternalistic conservative party that defends positions linked to traditionalism, economic nationalism, the market economy, the welfare state and multiparty democracy.[16][17] The party's historical voter base has been tribal communities, which has, in turn, led the BDP to mirror their conservative views. The internal democratization of the party since 1998 has since increased its ideological breadth.[18]

History

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Founding years

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Seretse Khama, founder of the BDP and first president of Botswana.
Quett Masire, second president of Botswana and leader of the BDP from 1980–1998.

The BDP was the third political party founded in the British protectorate of Bechuanaland, present-day Botswana.[19] In this region, political development was much more gradual and slow, yet also more peaceful than in other neighboring African countries. An expansion of British central authority and the evolution of tribal government resulted in the establishment of two consultative councils in 1920 to represent Africans and Europeans. The African Council comprised the eight chiefs of the Tswana tribes and some elected members.[19] An European-African Advisory Council formed in 1951, and the colonial constitution of 1961 marked the establishment of a consultative Legislative Council.[19] By 1960, the party system in the region was still very basic, with only the Federal Party existing, mostly oriented towards the small educated population, aiming to achieve independence from the protectorate through peaceful discussion and the African nationalist and socialist-based Bechuanaland People's Party (BPP).[15][19] The BPP was the first mass party in the country and the first to demand total independence from the colony. However, by the mid-1960s, a series of internal struggles and conflicts between the country's different ethnic groups had affected its political strength.

After a series of meetings, the "Bechuanaland Democratic Party" was established in November 1961 in Lobatse by a group of members of the African Consultative Council, a limited representative body of the protectorate, under the leadership of Seretse Khama, former head of the BaNgwato tribe, with Ketumile Quett Masire as general secretary. The party held its first constitutive congress in 28 February, 1962 and began organizing to establish a presence throughout the protectorate's territory. Masire also started publishing the party newspaper, Therisanyo (lit.'consultation'), in 1963, drawing from his past journalistic experiences.

In everyday language, the term "Domkrag" became more commonly used to refer to the BDP and its supporters. The name originated during the founding stage due to elders' difficulty in pronouncing the word "Democratic" in English. They used the word "Domkrag," which is Afrikaans for a jack used to lift heavy objects off the ground. This led the BDP to adopt the jack as its party symbol, symbolically equating it with its role in "lifting Botswana" from one of the poorest countries in the world to one of the fastest-growing economies. Since in Afrikaans, "dom krag" can be translated as "stupid power" or "power of the stupid," opponents used the term derogatorily to refer to the BDP. However, the word was reappropriated by the party itself and today, the word "domkrag" is synonymous with the BDP.[20]

The first political test for the BDP was the general election of 1965, the first election under universal suffrage in the history of the country. The BDP benefited from extensive control over the central territory of the country guaranteed by Khama's prestige as chief of the Ngwato tribe, as well as the growing internal conflicts faced by the BPP, which was mired in inter-ethnic struggles that encouraged the formation of a new party, the Botswana Independence Party (BIP). Khama and Masire focused their speeches on the defense of liberal democracy, a negotiated transition to independence and an economic development plan for the heavily neglected and impoverished colony. The BDP's discourse was seen as much more moderate compared to its African socialist opponents who had a more aggressive rhetoric, which several voters perceived as unrealistic.[15]

The elections took place on the 1st of March and the BDP won an overwhelming victory with 80% of the popular vote and an absolute majority of 28 out of 31 seats, against 14% of the popular vote and just 3 seats for the BPP. Two days later, Khama was sworn in as Prime Minister, becoming the first democratically elected head of government in Bechuanaland. The general elections were followed by local elections on 12 June 1966, just months before the end of the protectorate. The BDP also emerged victorious with 62% of the votes and secured 122 out of 141 members in the local government councils.[15]

Post-independence years (1966–1994)

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Bechuanaland gained independence as the Republic of Botswana on 30 September, 1966. Following transitional agreements between the authorities elected in 1965 and the UK government at the time, Khama assumed the role of President of Botswana, with Masire serving as vice-president and the legislative council transformed into the National Assembly. On the same day, the BDP changed its name to the Botswana Democratic Party.[15]

In contrast to other African leaders of the time, Khama did not seek the establishment of a one-party state with the BDP as the sole legal party. Instead, he preferred to uphold the rule of law and maintain the presence of a "responsible opposition" in Parliament. Likewise, calls to immediately "indigenize" the bureaucracy, which had caused devastating effects on the public service in neighboring countries, were resisted. The government retained foreign expatriates working in the country until suitably qualified local replacements could be found.[21] However, the following decades would be characterized by the overarching hegemony of the BDP. This was explained by the inability of its opponents to unite, being strongly influenced by tribal interests or advocating ideas based on African socialism that the conservative local population found too radical or unattractive. Nevertheless, tribal relations had a significant influence on the BDP, which was virtually the only party with a presence in the Central District (the territory of the Ngwato tribe) for decades.[15][22] This dominance would continue until the 2019 Botswana general election in which Seretse Khama's son, Ian, would break ranks with the BDP and thereby ending its five-decade stranglehold over the region.[23][24]

At the time of its independence, Botswana was one of the world's poorest countries, even ranking below several African states.[25][26] It possessed only 12 kilometers of paved road, 22 university graduates, and 100 individuals with completed secondary education.[27] The first years after independence were marked by the rapid development of a national infrastructure. The BDP aimed to implement an economic program that would transform Botswana into a country relying on exports of beef, copper, and diamonds. In 1967, the discovery of the Orapa diamond deposits helped make this program viable. However, many social improvements were not visible to the majority of the population until the early 1970s. Simultaneously, the early years witnessed the strengthening of the authority of the Botswana central government over traditional tribal leadership, leading to some resentment among tribal leaders outside the BaNgwato. In this context, Bathoen Gaseitsiwe, chief of the Bangwaketse tribe, denounced the loss of tribal power and resigned his position to engage in politics. He joined the nascent Botswana National Front, led by socialist leader Kenneth Koma.[22] In the context of profound apathy and conflicts with tribal leaders, the BDP suffered a significant loss of votes in the 1969 general elections. Nevertheless, it managed to secure a new two-thirds majority against the BNF, the BPP, and the BIP, but electoral participation dropped significantly. With 68.21% of the vote and 24 of 31 seats elected, it was the party's weakest victory under Khama's leadership.[15][28][22]

The BDP dedicated its second term in power (1969-1974) to implementing policies that benefited the rural sector. This included the construction of extensive infrastructure in remote regions, leading to a rapid surge in popular support for the party, even though the majority of the population remained politically apathetic. The 1974 Botswana general election demonstrated this support. The BDP secured the highest popular vote in its history with 77%. At the local level, it obtained a majority in all councils except the North-East District, where the BPP emerged victorious. However, voter turnout was the lowest in Botswana's electoral history, with only 31% of registered voters casting their ballots. Concerned about the possibility that high abstention could challenge its legitimacy, the BDP launched a broad media campaign in the second half of the 1970s to engage the population, encouraging voter registration and participation. The 1979 election saw the BDP achieve another landslide victory, securing 75% of the vote and 29 of the 32 seats. Although the BDP managed to take the Francistown seat from the BPP, there was a slight drop in Gaborone, where BNF leader Koma received just over 40% of the vote. Khama was re-elected for a fourth term but passed away a few months later on July 13, 1980, and was succeeded by vice-president Quett Masire.

Initially viewed as an "acting president," Masire, a native of the Bangwaketse region, spent his initial years in power consolidating his position within the party. He made some strategic moves to distance the BDP from the Ngwato elite and maintain dominance in other regions of the country.[29] To achieve this, he appointed Peter Mmusi, MP for Gaborone, as vice-president. However, the 1984 general election signaled a change in the country's political landscape following Khama's death. Under Koma's leadership, the BNF achieved a series of municipal victories and became the most voted force in the capital. Months later, an electoral fraud scandal, known as "Botswana Watergate," led to a re-election in Gaborone South in which Koma defeated vice-president Mmusi and assumed the role of Leader of the Opposition.[29] The subsequent mandate was marked by economic difficulties, including an economic recession that adversely affected the diamond industry, a persistent drought, and a resulting famine. The government had to address these challenges through aggressive food aid policies. The BDP government also faced increasing pressure from Apartheid South Africa, which resulted in the military intervention of the South African Defence Force in Gaborone on June 1985, directed against members of the ANC stationed in the country due to the passivity of the Botswana armed forces.[30][31]

The second half of the 1980s witnessed a significant decline in electoral support for the BDP as Botswana's population underwent urbanization, foreshadowing the considerable decline it would experience in the following decade. However, during the first fourteen years after Khama's death, this decline was not accompanied by a loss of parliamentary power. The 1989 elections saw the BDP obtain 64.78% of the votes, marking the first time in its history that it failed to secure more than two-thirds of the validly cast votes. Nonetheless, the party still managed to secure 31 of the 34 parliamentary seats. Benefiting from Bathoen's departure from the BNF and the division of votes with the new BFP, the BDP managed to penetrate its old support base in the Bangwaketse tribe, winning the Ngwaketse South seat from the opposition. These elections revealed the significant overrepresentation of rural areas compared to urban areas. Although it marked the lowest popular vote achieved by the BDP in its history up to that point, the party secured its best historical result in parliamentary terms, controlling 91% of the seats in the National Assembly. Despite the BNF increasing its percentage of votes by almost 7%, it only obtained three seats, losing one of the four achieved in 1984.

Declining popularity and reform (1994–2008)

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Festus Mogae led the party from 1998–2008, following a series of sweeping reforms within the BDP.

The 1990s marked the end of the economic boom in Botswana that had characterized the previous three decades. Between 1989 and 1993, Botswana transitioned from a GDP growth rate exceeding 13% to experiencing negative growth for the first time in its independent history. Unemployment and poverty increased as a consequence of reduced demand for diamonds, copper, and nickel, driven by the global recession. The country continued to experience growing urbanization, creating an urban class less influenced by tribal divisions and a more vocal, politicized population. Informal settlements began to emerge in urban areas like Gaborone, Francistown, Selebi-Phikwe, and Lobatse.

These rapid demographic changes, combined with the worsening economic and social situation, eroded popular support for the BDP. Within the party, which had been previously unified and disciplined, factionalism and internal conflicts began to surface, setting the tone for the party's future.

While President Masire's leadership remained unquestioned, internal clashes between factions within the cabinet became commonplace. Despite Botswana's reputation for comparatively low corruption in sub-Saharan Africa, the first half of the decade was marred by scandals. One of the most notable scandals involved the irregular sale of tribal lands in 1992, which led to the resignations of Vice President Mmusi and the Minister of Agriculture, Daniel Kwelagobe, both high-ranking officials in the ruling party.

The 1994 elections took place against a backdrop of economic complexity and increasing demands for transparency in electoral administration by the opposition. The BDP suffered a significant decline and claimed its weakest victory yet, winning only 26 of the 39 contested seats, while the BNF made gains by capitalizing on urban discontent and even penetrated the party's rural base for the first time, achieving important advances in local elections.

After the elections, the political climate in Botswana deteriorated. The supplementary election in the Thamaga parliamentary constituency, delayed due to the sudden death of Mmusi (a candidate in that constituency), highlighted the internal crisis of the BDP. Factionalism increased as the central leadership imposed Gladys Kokorwe's candidacy despite the local congress overwhelmingly electing Kabo Morwaeng. Younger sectors of the BDP began demanding greater internal democracy in the party. Nonetheless, the BDP retained the seat. In January 1995, a series of demonstrations in Mochudi and Gaborone culminated in a student protest in front of the Parliament building, which was met with severe police repression, regarded as one of the most serious cases of police brutality in the country's history. This event prompted Masire's government to accede to some of the opposition's reformist demands, leading to the first bipartisan negotiations in post-independence Botswana.

The reforms implemented included the creation of the Independent Electoral Commission (IEC), lowering the voting age from 21 to 18, allowing voting abroad, and setting a ten-year time limit (equivalent to two terms) for the presidency of the Republic.

The BDP also adopted a series of internal reforms, including a primary system known as "buleladitswe," which brought a profound change in the party's internal management. Despite these changes, the constitutional limit was not retroactive. Masire resigned as president and leader of the BDP on March 31, 1998, handing power to vice president Festus Mogae, while the vice presidency remained in the hands of Seretse Khama's son, Ian Khama. The BDP adopted an internal reform that implemented the same limit for party leadership, setting the leadership change to occur a year and a half before the regular general elections, giving the incumbent president a prolonged interim period to reinforce their public image and avoid the wear and tear of the outgoing administration. Mogae's presidency focused on addressing poverty, unemployment, and the spread of HIV-AIDS, which affected a significant portion of Botswana's population.

In the same year, the BDP's fortunes improved as the BNF faced internal conflicts between Koma and a dissident faction led by Michael Dingake, which led to the founding of the Botswana Congress Party. The BDP achieved a landslide victory in the 1999 elections, winning 33 of the 40 elected seats and securing 57.15% of the popular vote. However, Botswana's status as an electorally competitive country was affirmed.

The economic situation improved in the following years, stabilizing popular support for the BDP. The government maintained an international reputation for adhering to the rule of law. However, factionalism plagued the BDP throughout the 2000s, raising concerns that the party might split. The Barata-Phathi faction, led by Ponatshego Kedikilwe and former secretary general Daniel Kwelagobe, contended with the dominant faction, Team A, led by President Mogae, Vice President Khama, and cabinet ministers Jacob Nkate and Mompati Merafhe.

Despite these challenges, Mogae's leadership managed to maintain unity during the 2004 elections, where the BDP reaffirmed its majority with 44 of the 57 contested seats. Its popular vote was the lowest in its history at that time (51.73%). The campaign popularized the BDP slogan "there is still no alternative" to emphasize the inability of other parties to take power and govern the country. The transition of party leadership began, with Khama becoming increasingly active in politics before succeeding Mogae as president on March 20, 2008. French President Nicolas Sarkozy awarded Mogae the Grand Cross of the Legion of Honor for his "exemplary leadership" in making Botswana a "model" of democracy and good governance, and he also received the Ibrahim Prize in African leadership that same year.

Ian Khama era (2008-2018)

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Ian Khama presided over a period marked by economic decline and labour unrest.
Mokgweetsi Masisi's presidency saw the BDP distance itself away from Khama's leadership and a significant realignment of Botswana's electoral politics in the 2019 election.

Ian Khama assumed the presidency and leadership of the BDP on April 1, 2008, succeeding Mogae after a decade. In his inaugural speech, Khama pledged to continue the course set by the Mogae administration, ruling out "radical changes." However, Khama's presidency coincided with an escalation in the internal conflicts that had plagued the ruling party throughout the previous decade. Upon taking office, Khama stepped down as the BDP leader, and Kwelagobe, belonging to a rival faction and a leader of the party's old guard, was selected to replace him. The Barata-Phathi faction, including Gomolemo Motswaledi, alongside Kwelagobe, criticized Khama's leadership during his early months in office, accusing him of exceeding his prerogatives as a party leader. Motswaledi abandoned his ambition to run for a seat in Serowe to make way for the president's brother, Tshekedi Khama II, but he was soon barred from contesting a seat in Gaborone after openly clashing with Khama. Motswaledi lost a lawsuit against Khama when the High Court ruled that the president enjoyed constitutional immunity from legal action due to his office. Although voices within the party began criticizing Khama's autocratic tendencies, the president insisted that he was only instilling greater discipline within the BDP.

Khama's initial year in power was characterized by his decision to lead the BDP to adopt a hardline stance against the regime of Zimbabwe, led by Robert Mugabe since 1980, during the country's violent elections. Several months later, Kwelagobe and Khama reached a separate agreement to defuse their conflict and project an image of unity in preparation for the 2009 general elections. With the opposition BNF grappling with a growing internal conflict around its leader, Otsweletse Moupo, and several party leaders running as independents, the BDP achieved a sweeping victory, securing 53.26% of the votes and 45 seats. They also gained control of the Gaborone municipal council for the first time since 1984. The outcome solidified Khama's control over the party, even though questions about his leadership style persisted throughout his term.

The remainder of the period was marked by economic challenges stemming from the global financial crisis that significantly impacted Botswana's economy. Khama implemented harsh austerity measures recommended by the International Monetary Fund, leading to conflicts with both the influential Botswana Federation of Public Sector Unions (BOFEPUSU), which staged the longest public service strike in the country's history in 2011, and a substantial faction within the BDP that disapproved of these policies. Motswaledi's faction finally split from the BDP in mid-2010, forming the Botswana Movement for Democracy (BMD), the first significant split experienced by the BDP in its history. In 2012, the BMD, BNF, and BPP established the Umbrellas for Democratic Change (UDC) coalition, marking the first permanent alliance between various opposition parties since independence, excluding the BCP. Motswaledi tragically died in a car accident in 2014 under controversial circumstances, which cast a shadow over the subsequent election campaign.

The 2014 general election witnessed a significant setback for the BDP, marking its worst result in history. They secured only 37 of the 57 seats elected and 46.45% of the popular vote, compared to the UDC's 30.01% and the BCP's 20.43%. The party's losses were particularly pronounced in urban areas, experiencing a resounding defeat in the Gaborone local council elections, where they ranked third in parliamentary strength behind the UDC and the BCP. This election marked the first instance in the country's electoral history where the party failed to secure over 50% of the popular vote or more than two-thirds of the elected seats. In fact, if the UDC and the BCP had formed a coalition, they would have won the elections. The outcome was attributed to the dissatisfaction of young urban voters with Khama's economic management, while rural voters remained loyal to the party, especially in the BaNgwato territory of the Central District. Nevertheless, the party retained its overall majority, allowing President Khama to serve a second five-year term. After the elections, Khama initiated a cabinet reshuffle and appointed his former Minister of Education, Mokgweetsi Masisi, as vice president and therefore his direct successor as president.

Post-Khama era (2018-present)

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On April 1, 2018, Khama completed his term, and Masisi succeeded him as both the President of Botswana and the leader of the BDP. Seen as closely associated with Khama, Masisi inherited a government and a party suffering a sharp decline in popularity and a weakened economy. Additionally, he faced a united and strengthened opposition after the BCP joined the UDC. Shortly after taking office, Masisi adopted a leadership style distinct from his predecessor and began to politically marginalize the Khama family while revoking various privileges. He also reversed several of Khama's controversial policies and adopted a more conciliatory stance towards the unions.

Between 2018 and 2019, the relationship between the new president and Khama deteriorated to the point where the family severed ties with the BDP in early 2019, accusing Masisi of "treason." Many significant party leaders, particularly in the crucial Central District, BaNgwato territory, defected to the newly founded Botswana Patriotic Front (BPF). In constituencies where the BPF could not field a candidate, they supported the UDC. Looking ahead to the 2019 general elections, the BDP adjusted its discourse and adopted a more personalized approach, emphasizing a forward-looking perspective and definitively breaking with the previous administration. With the opposition discredited due to its association with Khama and a reinvigorated leadership, the BDP achieved a comprehensive victory, securing 52.65% of the vote and 38 of the 57 elected seats.

The election brought about a significant shift in Botswana's electoral politics. The BDP experienced substantial losses in the northern part of the country due to the inclusion of the BCP in the UDC. Furthermore, in the Central District region, it was affected by the concentration of the pro-Khama tribal vote in the UDC and the BPF. However, it enjoyed unexpected growth in urban areas and dominated in the southern part of the country, where most of the opposition's primary strongholds had been situated. Boko refused to acknowledge the results, alleging "massive electoral discrepancies," and announced his intention to challenge the election in court. Ultimately, his appeal was dismissed.

Ideology

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Although it is typically characterized as a conservative party with a centre-right leaning on the political spectrum, the BDP's ideological framework is quite broad. Officially, the party upholds national unity, economic development, and political democracy as its core values, complemented by the concepts of Kagisano (togetherness) and Botho ("humanity").

A fundamental factor in maintaining the BDP's electoral dominance has been its unwavering support for Botswana's local tribal traditions. This stance has garnered the backing of the BaNgwato elites in the eastern part of the country while sometimes leading to the rejection of minority groups and the more globally-oriented urban class. Nevertheless, the BDP also places a strong emphasis on national unity over tribal affiliations, often adopting a civic nationalist discourse.

In economic terms, the party has maintained a pragmatic approach. During its initial years in power, the BDP implemented pro-free market policies, ensuring low and stable taxes to stimulate foreign investment and encourage mining company activities in the country while deterring budget evasion. The revenues generated from these endeavors were allocated to expanding the nation's infrastructure, which was practically non-existent at the time of independence, as well as strengthening the healthcare and education systems. Additionally, alternative industries such as livestock were nationalized. The party's consistent defense of social solidarity and the welfare state, combined with its mixed economic policies, traditionalism, and clear rejection of leftist or Marxist ideologies, have led foreign analysts to sometimes characterize the BDP as a proponent of "paternalistic conservatism".

The BDP is relatively conservative on social issues, primarily influenced by the fact that Botswana is predominantly a Protestant Christian nation. However, some party members have expressed liberal viewpoints on certain sensitive topics, including LGBT rights. The BDP has maintained its support for the death penalty, making Botswana the sole country in the Southern African Development Community that continues to enforce it. The party has rejected calls for its repeal, asserting that a majority of Botswana's population favors its continuation.

In terms of security, the BDP initially allocated minimal spending to the country's territorial defense during its early years in government, prioritizing economic and social development. The party only established a professional army when faced with the serious threat of military incursions by apartheid South Africa.

Regarding foreign policy, the BDP has historically adopted a Western-oriented approach, aligning closely with the United States, NATO, and the European Union. This stance has prompted criticism from detractors, particularly those from a leftist tradition, who have labeled the party as a "neocolonial" entity. Nonetheless, the party maintained a staunch opposition to the white minority regimes in neighboring South Africa, Namibia, and Rhodesia during its initial three decades in power, collaborating with forces opposing these regimes, such as the African National Congress.

Under the leadership of Ian Khama, the BDP adopted a more assertive stance in promoting democracy in Africa through its foreign policy. It engaged in open conflict with the ZANU-PF government in neighboring Zimbabwe, accusing it of human rights violations. In recent years, the party has reaffirmed its historical role as a significant player in the struggle for Botswana's decolonization and independence. Since 2019, it has become a part of the regional organization Former Liberation Movements of Southern Africa (FLMSA), predominantly consisting of socialist parties that participated in African nationalist movements against colonialism or white minority regimes in southern Africa. Many of these parties now govern their countries as dominant parties. Nevertheless, the BDP and its government continue to view themselves as allies of the West in international affairs, particularly on issues such as the Russian invasion of Ukraine, as they consistently vote in favor of condemnatory United Nations resolutions. Sponsored by the ANC, the BDP joined the Socialist International as an "observer member" in 2014.

Electoral history

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National Assembly elections

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Election Party leader Votes % Seats +/– Position Result
1965 Seretse Khama 113,167 80.4%
28 / 31
    1st Supermajority government
1969 52,218 68.3%
24 / 31
  4   1st Supermajority government
1974 49,047 76.6%
27 / 32
  3   1st Supermajority government
1979 101,098 75.2%
29 / 32
  2   1st Supermajority government
1984 Quett Masire 154,863 68.0%
29 / 34
    1st Supermajority government
1989 162,277 64.8%
31 / 34
  2   1st Supermajority government
1994 154,705 54.6%
27 / 40
  4   1st Supermajority government
1999 Festus Mogae 192,598 57.1%
33 / 40
  6   1st Supermajority government
2004 213,308 51.7%
44 / 57
  11   1st Supermajority government
2009 Ian Khama 290,099 53.3%
45 / 57
  1   1st Supermajority government
2014 320,657 46.5%
37 / 57
  8   1st Majority government
2019 Mokgweetsi Masisi 405,719 52.7%
38 / 57
  1   1st Supermajority government

Notes

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  1. ^ The People's Action Party, Singapore's ruling party since independence in 1965 could be considered by some as the longest continuous ruling party in this regard. However, Singapore's democratic credentials are dubious; the V-Dem Democracy Indices consider Singapore as an electoral autocracy with the country never achieving the minimum conditions needed to consider it at least an electoral democracy over its existence, according to the indices.[9][10] Freedom House considers the country as "partly free" with political rights scoring 19/40 compared to 28/40 for Botswana–which is considered "free" overall.[11][12]

References

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Citations

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  1. ^ Seekings, Jeremy (April 2017). "UNU-WIDER : Working Paper : Building a conservative welfare state in Botswana". UNU-WIDER. doi:10.35188/unu-wider/2017/307-3. Retrieved 23 September 2023.
  2. ^ Maundeni, Zibani (2003). "The politics of poverty in Botswana". Botswana Notes and Records. 35: 104. ISSN 0525-5090 – via JSTOR.
  3. ^ Ralph Morris Goldman (9 July 2002). The Future Catches Up: Selected Writings of Ralph M. Goldman, Volume 1. iUniverse. p. 214. ISBN 0595733867. Retrieved 18 June 2021.
  4. ^ "After 46 years in power, Botswana's Democratic Party face united rival". The Times. SAPA-AFP. 22 November 2012. Retrieved 23 October 2019.
  5. ^ Fombad, Charles M.; Steytler, Nico, eds. (10 September 2019). Decentralization and Constitutionalism in Africa. Oxford University Press. p. 468. ISBN 9780192585035. Retrieved 23 October 2019.
  6. ^ Phirinyane, Molefe B., ed. (2013). Elections and the Management of Diversity in Botswana (PDF) (Report). Lightbooks. p. 31. ISBN 978-99912-71-50-7. Retrieved 23 October 2019.
  7. ^ Derbyshire, J Denis; Derbyshire, Ian (2000). Encyclopedia of World Political Systems. New York: Routledge. p. 111. ISBN 9781317471561. Retrieved 23 October 2019.
  8. ^ Member parties of the Socialist International
  9. ^ "V-Dem Democracy Index" (PDF). V-Dem. p. 14, 16, 21, 28. Archived (PDF) from the original on 7 March 2024. Retrieved 27 June 2024.
  10. ^ "Democracy index". Our World in Data. Retrieved 2 September 2024.
  11. ^ "Singapore: Country Profile". Freedom House. Retrieved 2 September 2024.
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