National People's Party
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Leader | Johan van Niekerk |
President | Badih Chaaban |
Second Deputy President | Jameelah Daniels |
National Coordinator | Petrus Roodtman |
Chief Executive Officer | Farriet Stemmet |
Director of Intelligence | Andrew Lyon |
Founded | 30 September 2007 |
Headquarters | 3rd floor, Chaaban House, Prestwich Road, Cape Town |
Ideology | Populism |
Political position | Left-wing |
Colours | Blue |
Slogan | For the People Vir die Mense |
Cape Winelands District Municipality council seats |
1 / 16
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Drakenstein Local Municipality council seats |
2 / 61
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Stellenbosch Local Municipality council seats |
1 / 43
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Website | |
www |
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The National People's Party (or National Peoples Party) is a political party registered on a national level with the Independent Electoral Commission (IEC) of South Africa. It came into existence when Badih Chaaban, a member of the Cape Town City Council crossed the floor from the Africa Muslim Party (AMP) in an attempt to wrest control of the city council from the Democratic Alliance-led multi-party coalition. The party was set up by Chaaban shortly before the floor crossing period in 2007 with the help of David Sasman, its interim leader. It should not be confused with the National People's Party, renamed the Minority Front, led by Amichand Rajbansi during the apartheid era.
Members of the NPP (past and present) include:
The NPP used to hold three council seats on the Cape Town City Council and controlled the Kannaland Local Municipality and the Cape Winelands District Municipality in coalition with the ANC. After the latest local government elections, their position has mostly been reduced to a small number of seats in opposition on a limited number of councils. NPP however governed Oudtshoorn Local Municipality in coalition with ANC and ICOSA between 2011 and 2015, when the municipality was placed under administration.
The party challenged the IEC's refusal to accept their candidate nomination lists for the City of Cape Town Metropolitan Municipality's council in the upcoming municipal elections, in the Electoral Court. Judge Pillay of the Electoral Court found that the IEC had been overly zealous in applying the cut-off time, and ordered the Commission to allow the NPP to contest the elections.