Democratic Left Movement (Lebanon)

Democratic Left Movement
حركة اليسار الديمقراطي
AbbreviationDL
FounderNumerous
(Samir Kassir,
Ziad Majed, others)
Founded13 September 2004 (2004-09-13)
Split fromLebanese Communist Party
HeadquartersBeirut
IdeologyArab nationalism[1]
Secularism
Social democracy
Egalitarianism
Nonsectarianism
Political positionCentre-left
National affiliationMarch 14 Alliance
Colors  and  
Parliament of Lebanon
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Website
https://web.archive.org/web/20080207035656/http://www.alyassar.org/

The Democratic Left Movement (DLM, Arabic: حركة اليسار الديمقراطي Harakat Al-Yassar Al-Dimuqratiy, Arabic acronym HYD) is a nonsectarian and a democratic leftist political party. It was founded in September 2004 by left-wing and center-left intellectuals and activists some of whom had previously split from the Lebanese Communist Party (LCP) while some were student activists from the "Independent Leftist Groups". The DLM affirms a European-style social democracy—but is open to all forms of leftism and encourages the development of a true secular state. The party operates under a decentralized framework that emphasizes diversity of thought for a progressive society in a liberal democratic environment. It participated in the 2005 Cedar Revolution, a wave of demonstrations against the Syrian occupation of Lebanon, and calls for correcting imbalanced relations with Syria.

The DLM won its first parliamentary seat in Lebanon's 2005 elections representing the Tripoli district. On 2 June 2005, amid election rounds, Samir Kassir, a founder of the movement, was assassinated in a car bombing. Less than one month later, George Hawi, a former secretary general of the Lebanese Communist Party and an ally of the DLM, was killed in a similar car bombing in Beirut. In the 2009 elections, the party again won a single seat, instead representing the West Bekaa district. It is a member of the March 14 Alliance parliamentary coalition.

  1. ^ "Officially launched DLM rejects current state of Syrian-Lebanese relations". Lebanonwire. 18 October 2004. Archived from the original on 27 January 2013.

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