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RESPECT - The Unity Coalition

Respect Party
Leader George Galloway
Chairman Abjol Miah
Deputy Leader Vacant
Founded 25 January 2004 (2004-01-25)
Dissolved 18 August 2016 (2016-08-18)
Youth wing Student RESPECT
Membership  (2014) 640
Ideology Anti-war
Socialism
Anti-capitalism
Anti-imperialism
Anti-Zionism
Political position Left-wing
European affiliation European Anticapitalist Left
Colours Red and green
Website
www.respectparty.org

The Respect Party was a left-wing political party active in the United Kingdom between 2004 and 2016. At the height of its success in 2007, the party had one Member of Parliament in the House of Commons and nineteen councillors in local government.

The Respect Party was established in London by Salma Yaqoob and George Monbiot in 2004. It grew out of the Stop the War Coalition, and from the start revolved largely around opposition to the United Kingdom's role in the Iraq War. Uniting a range of leftist and anti-war groups, it was unofficially allied to the far-left Socialist Workers Party (SWP) and Muslim Association of Britain (MAB). In 2005, Respect's candidate George Galloway was elected MP for Bethnal Green and Bow, while the party came second in three other constituencies. The party made further gains in the 2006 and 2007 local elections, at which point its support peaked. In 2007, a schism emerged in the party between SWP-supporters and the Respect Renewal group led by Galloway and Yaqoob; the former group left the party to form the Left List. Over the coming years, Respect gradually lost the council seats that it had gained and it deregistered itself with the Electoral Commission in 2016.

Ideologically characterised as a left-wing or far left party, Respect adhered to an ideology of revolutionary, international socialism. This socialist current has been described as being Marxist in orientation. Opposed to neoliberalism, it called for the nationalisation of much of the UK economy, increased funding to public services, and further measures to tackle poverty and discrimination. It was Eurosceptic and promoted an anti-imperialist worldview. It was also Anti-Zionist, opposing the existence of Israel and endorsing the Palestinian solidarity movement. Several commentators claimed that Islamism was a component of its ideology and regarded it as part of a wider alliance between socialists and Islamists within Western Europe. Respect's voting base was primarily among the British Muslim communities in East London, Birmingham and Bradford, where it built upon opposition to the Iraq War and disenchantment among leftist voters with the governing Labour Party.


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