The Rhodesian Action Party was a political party in Rhodesia formed in 1977 by a group of Rhodesian Front MPs who were dissatisfied by the leadership of Ian Smith and his attempts to negotiate an 'internal settlement' with African nationalists. Twelve members of the Rhodesia House of Assembly joined the party when it was launched on July 4, 1977.
The defections did not end the Rhodesian Front majority in the Assembly but did deprive it of the two-thirds majority which was needed to amend the constitution and Smith therefore decided to dissolve the Assembly and hold an early general election to try to regain the initiative. The party contested 46 out of the 50 white seats at the 1977 general election, and performed disastrously: it failed to win any seat, and all of the sitting members won less than 22.3% of the vote in their constituency. The party's overall total was 9.3%.
The party remained in existence and fought the Highlands North byelection in 1978 after the internal settlement agreement but did not improve its numbers significantly.
President of the Party was Ina Antoinette Bursey (previously Rhodesian Front MP for Sinoia-Umvukwes in the 1965 general election) (D.O.B. unknown). She resigned before the 1970 election and stood as an independent in the 1970 election, for the same seat but failed after garnering 4.9% of the vote. The national chairman of the Rhodesian Action Party was ex RF member Mr Guy Ferdinand Larché (b 8/4/23 in Paris, France - still alive as at 21/3/2007). He was a member of the RF Greendale branch but opposed the existing MP, Mark Partrige. When the 12 Rhodesian Front MP's crossed the floor to form the RAP in 1977, Guy Larche was one of the founding organisers. Larché grew up in Port Louis, Mauritius. He attained the rank of Sergeant in the French (later British) forces during World War II, serving as an instructor. Larché lived in South Africa after 1945, moving to Southern Rhodesia in 1959. Thereafter, he worked in Kitwe on the Northern Rhodesian Copperbelt as an engineer in the Kitwe Power Station before returning to Rhodesia in 1972, where he ventured into politics. Time Magazine interviewed Larché as leader of the RAP in 1976, describing him as "a pencil thin man sitting in the RAP offices overlooking Cecil Square". As National Chairman of the party, Larché wrote RAP speeches, conducted letter writing campaigns and press releases opposing the Rhodesian Front's negotiations with the UANC of Bishop Abel Muzorewa, which ultimately led to the formation of Zimbabwe-Rhodesia in 1978. Larché moved to South Africa with his wife, Eileen, and her children in 1980. In 1995, despite his right-wing political opinions, Larché became a card carrying member of the ANC (South Africa's majority political party, under Nelson Mandela). He currently lives in Johannesburg. He was attacked in a robbery on his Johannesburg business in 1996 but survived seven stab wounds to his head and upper body, despite the perforation of both lungs. He retired completely shortly thereafter.