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MDP welcomes Nasheed and other Democrats

Mohamed Nasheed addresses the crowd gathered at Lonuziyaaraih Kolhu to celebrate MDP's victory in the Parliamentary Elections 2019 on April 6, 2019. (Photo/Sun/Ahmed Awshan Ilyas)

The main opposition Maldivian Democratic Party (MDP) on Wednesday welcomed the decision by former president Mohamed Nasheed and other Democrats to return to the party they left two years back.

During a national assembly meeting on Tuesday, Democrats passed a resolution agreeing that all members will rejoin the MDP,  citing that they believe “a strong opposition is the best way to win the local council election, improve Maldives’ future, uphold an accountable state, and restore the waning faith in a competitive multi-party system.”

The MDP’s national council convened for an unofficial meeting at the party’s headquarters at on Wednesday night to discuss this decision.

Sun has been informed that none of the national council members raised any objections to the Democrats rejoining the MDP, and decided to welcome them back.

MDP leaders welcome Democrats

(From L-R) MDP's PG leader Ibrahim Nazil, chairperson Fayyaz Ismail, and president Abdulla Shahid speak to reporters on November 21, 2024. (Photo/MDP)

In a post on X shortly after the meeting, MDP’s president Abdulla Shahid urged party members not to linger on the past, but look towards the future.

“We must not become enslaved by the past. We must always look towards the future. And it is the universal truth that success will be achieved by working together,” he said.

Shahid also urged other people to join the MDP.

“I call upon members of other political parties and Maldivian citizens who are desperate to but this country on the right track to join the MDP. MDP is the only political party in this country with a future,” he said.

MDP’s chairperson Fayyaz Ismail also took to X to welcome the decision by Nasheed and other Democrats to rejoin MDP.

Fayyaz said the MDP was founded to introduce democracy and much needed reforms to the Maldives, and is also the country’s oldest political party.

“It is the courage of the members of this party that puts this country back on track every time it goes astray,” he said.

“At a time when we must be extra vigilant regarding the actions of the incumbent government, President Nasheed and members of the Democrats joining this party strengthens these efforts.”

Nasheed's exit and return to MDP

Nasheed, one of the founding members of the MDP, held office from 2008 until his resignation in 2012, a decision that he later said he was forced to make due to a coup by the security forces.

In 2018, Nasheed backed a successful campaign to hoist Ibrahim Mohamed Solih to power, after he was ruled out of contention due to a conviction that was later overturned.

Former president Mohamed Nasheed (R) and former Ibrahim Mohamed Solih (L). (Sun Photo/Fayaz Moosa)

But tensions flared between Nasheed and Solih as it drew closer to the 2023 presidential election, especially after the former lost the MDP presidential ticket to the latter in January that year.

The rivalry between them created a rift within the MDP, culminating into Nasheed and those loyal to him leaving the party in June 2023, to form a new party, the Democrats.

Following the formation, Nasheed famously declared that he would “dismantle” the MDP, a party that he helped found and led for over a decade.

Mohamed Nasheed addresses a rally held by the Democrats. (Sun Photo/Moosa Nadheem)

This rift is widely believed to be one of the main reasons for MDP’s defeat in the 2023 presidential election.

In December 2023, Nasheed announced he was taking “a respite from active politics” to assume a new post in Ghana as the secretary general of the Climate Vulnerable Forum (CVF).

But in January this year, Nasheed said that he hasn’t completely moved away from politics despite his new role, and in April, he urged the MDP and Democrats to work together, saying that he believes that to be in the best interest of the country, as well as the two parties.

Nasheed’s decision to rejoin the MDP came a day after he met with MDP chairperson Fayyaz.

It also comes with the Maldives set to hold two key elections; the local council election in 2026, and the presidential election in 2028 – the latter of which Nasheed has said he is considering contesting.

The decision by Nasheed to rejoin the MDP increases the rivalry within the party for its presidential ticket. Fayyaz has already announced he plans to contest in the party’s presidential primary, while sources confirm that both Solih and the party’s president Shahid are also campaigning for the ticket.

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