The 'Conservative Party of South Africa' ('Konserwatiewe Party van Suid-Afrika' in
Afrikaans) was a far-right party formed in
1982 as a breakaway from the ruling
National Party. Led by
Andries Treurnicht, a former
Dutch Reformed Church minister, popularly known as 'Doctor No', it drew support from white South Africans, mostly
Afrikaners, who opposed Prime Minister
PW Botha's reforms, which they saw as a threat to
white minority rule, and the
racial segregation known as
apartheid. It became the
official opposition in the whites-only
Parliament in the elections of
May 6 1987, when it surpassed the liberal
Progressive Federal Party.
In the local elections of 1987, the Conservative Party won 60 municipalities out of 110 in the
Transvaal, and 1 out of 4 in the
Orange Free State. The Conservative Party received 43% of the
Afrikaner votes and 7.5% of the
English speaking votes.
International links
In the late 1980s the party established links with the far-right
anti-communist pressure group in Britain, the
Western Goals Institute, who hosted at least two visits to London by Treurnicht and other delegates. On
June 5 1989 Treurnicht was accompanied by
Clive Derby-Lewis, M.P. for
Krugersdorp, and Carl Werth, the party's organizer in Natal, on a ten-day tour of European capitals. The
Conservative Monday Club, a supporter of white rule in South Africa, hosted a black-tie banquet at the Charing Cross Hotel in London for Treurnicht and his entourage.
Opposition to negotiations to end apartheid
The Conservative Party led the "no" campaign during the
1992 referendum, when white South Africans where asked to determine whether or not they supported the negotiated reforms started by the government. The result was a defeat for the Conservatives and the "no" side, when 68% of white voters voted "yes".
About this time, as apartheid was being dismantled, the Conservative Party reached the peak of its influence, with 39 Members of Parliament, but its support rapidly declined after majority rule in
1994.
Clive Derby-Lewis was found guilty in 1993 (under the emergency legislation enacted by the white parliament to counter terrorism) of involvement in the
assassination of
South African Communist Party leader
Chris Hani. In
1997, party leader
Ferdi Hartzenberg testified before the
Truth and Reconciliation Commission that the assassination had been carried out on the party's behalf.
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Dissolution
In 2003, the Conservative Party joined forces with another party of similar views, the Freedom Front, to form the
Freedom Front Plus.
External Links
Flag of the Conservative Party (South Africa)