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{{short description|Political party in South Africa}}
{{Wikify|date=December 2007}}
{{distinguish|text=the ] or the ]}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2022}}
{{Infobox South Africa Political Party
{{Infobox political party
||party_name = Christian Democratic Party
|party_logo = | country = South Africa
| colorcode = {{party color|Christian Democratic Party (South Africa)}}
|leader = Rev. ]
|members = 0 | name = Christian Democratic Party
| native_name =
|foundation = 1999
|ideology = | logo = Christian Democratic Party (South Africa) logo.jpg
|international = None | logo_size = 100px
|colours = | leader = Rev. ]
| seats1_title =
|headquarters = Menlyn, Pretoria, South Africa
| seats1 =
|website =
| seats2_title =
| seats2 =
| seats3_title =
| seats3 =
| foundation = 9 September 1999
| headquarters = Menlyn, ], South Africa
| position = ] to ]
| ideology = ]
| international =
| colours =
| youth_wing =
| wing1_title =
| wing1 =
| wing2_title =
| wing2 =
| website =
| flag = ]
| footnotes =
}} }}


The '''Christian Democratic Party''' (CDP) was a Christian ] party in ]. The party was registered on 9 September 1999 and was formally launched a year later. The CDP had seats in the ] and the ]. The '''Christian Democratic Party''' ('''CDP''') is a Christian ] party in ]. The party was registered on 9 September 1999 and was formally launched a year later.


The CDP's support was mainly in Gauteng, and its alliance partner in Mpumalanga was the ]<ref>http://www.cda.org.za/partners.html</ref>. The CDP's support was mainly in ], and its alliance partner in Mpumalanga was the ].<ref>{{cite web|url= http://www.cda.org.za/partners.html|title= CDA web-site|url-status= dead|archiveurl= https://web.archive.org/web/20090310172318/http://www.cda.org.za/partners.html|archivedate= 2009-03-10}}</ref>


== Leadership structure == == Leadership structure ==
The party's leadership structure is the Federal Leadership Council, which consisted of the party leader, two co-leaders, and provincial leaders.

The party's leadership structure was the Federal Leadership Council, which consisted of the party leader, two co-leaders, and provincial leaders.


=== Party leader === === Party leader ===
The leader of the CDP is Theunis Botha, who had been a Christian cleric since 1970. He is the founder of the Christian Drama Workshop (CDW) and the Christian Fellowship of Ministries (CFM).<ref>{{cite web|url= http://jv.news24.com/Beeld/Suid-Afrika/0,,3-975_2123796,00.html|title= JV News}}{{dead link|date=August 2017 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}</ref> He had been involved in politics since 1994, as councillor in the ] City Council and member of the provincial legislator (MPL) for Gauteng. Botha was opposed to what he sees as secular/humanist and socialist/liberal factions within the ] and the ].


=== Co-Federal Leader ===
The leader of the CDP was Theunis Botha, who had been a Christian cleric since 1970. He is the founder of the Christian Drama Workshop (CDW) and the Christian Fellowship of Ministries (CFM)<ref>http://jv.news24.com/Beeld/Suid-Afrika/0,,3-975_2123796,00.html</ref>. He had been involved in politics since 1994, as councillor in the Pretoria City Council and member of the provincial legislator (MPL) for Gauteng. Botha was opposed to what he sees as secular/humanist and socialist/liberal factions within the ] and the ].
The CDP's co-Federal Leader is Richard Botha. He had been involved in politics since 2000 when he joined the CDP. He served on various structures and became the regional Chairperson before becoming co-Federal Leader. He has served as a councillor on the Tshwane Metro Council in 2009. He serves on the Finance, City Planning and Corporate Shared Services committees.

=== Co-leader ===

The CDP's co-leader was Joe Hanekom. He had been involved in politics since 1995, when he became a councillor on the Pretoria City Council. He was also the council's caucus chair person. He opposed the building of a casino in Pretoria. Hanekom joined the CDP in 2001 and became its Gauteng provincial leader. In 2003 he was promoted to a third co-leader of the party.


== Election results == == Election results ==
=== National elections ===
{| border="1" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="5"
{{election table}}
|----- bgcolor="#cccccc"
! '''Election'''
! '''Votes'''
! '''%'''
! '''Seats'''
|- |-
! Election
| ]
! Total votes
| align="right" | 17,619
! Share of vote
| align="right" | 0.11
! Seats
| align="right" | 0
! +/–
! Government
|-
! ]
| 17,619
| 0.11
| {{Composition bar|0|400}}
| –
| {{no|extraparliamentary}}
|} |}


It did not contest the ], instead supporting the formation of a new party, the ] (CDA), along with a number of other parties. The CDA failed to win a seat. It did not contest the ], instead supporting the formation of a new party, the ] (CDA), along with a number of other parties. The CDA failed to win a seat.

It did not contest the ].<ref>{{cite news|title=Christian Democratic Party pulls out of general election|url=http://www.timeslive.co.za/politics/2014/03/11/christian-democratic-party-pulls-out-of-general-election|accessdate=11 March 2014|newspaper=Times LIVE|date=11 March 2014}}</ref>

== References ==
<references />


==External links== ==External links==
* official web site * official web site
* *
{{South African political parties}}


]
== References ==
]

]
<references/>
]

]

] ]

Latest revision as of 16:06, 28 August 2024

Political party in South Africa Not to be confused with the African Christian Democratic Party or the United Christian Democratic Party.

Christian Democratic Party
LeaderRev. Theunis Botha
Founded9 September 1999
HeadquartersMenlyn, Pretoria, South Africa
IdeologyChristian democracy
Political positionCentre-right to right-wing
Party flag
Website
www.cdp.org.za/

The Christian Democratic Party (CDP) is a Christian social conservative party in South Africa. The party was registered on 9 September 1999 and was formally launched a year later.

The CDP's support was mainly in Gauteng, and its alliance partner in Mpumalanga was the Christen Party/Christian Party.

Leadership structure

The party's leadership structure is the Federal Leadership Council, which consisted of the party leader, two co-leaders, and provincial leaders.

Party leader

The leader of the CDP is Theunis Botha, who had been a Christian cleric since 1970. He is the founder of the Christian Drama Workshop (CDW) and the Christian Fellowship of Ministries (CFM). He had been involved in politics since 1994, as councillor in the Pretoria City Council and member of the provincial legislator (MPL) for Gauteng. Botha was opposed to what he sees as secular/humanist and socialist/liberal factions within the African National Congress and the Democratic Alliance.

Co-Federal Leader

The CDP's co-Federal Leader is Richard Botha. He had been involved in politics since 2000 when he joined the CDP. He served on various structures and became the regional Chairperson before becoming co-Federal Leader. He has served as a councillor on the Tshwane Metro Council in 2009. He serves on the Finance, City Planning and Corporate Shared Services committees.

Election results

National elections

Election Total votes Share of vote Seats +/– Government
2004 17,619 0.11 0 / 400 extraparliamentary

It did not contest the 2009 election, instead supporting the formation of a new party, the Christian Democratic Alliance (CDA), along with a number of other parties. The CDA failed to win a seat.

It did not contest the 2014 election.

References

  1. "CDA web-site". Archived from the original on 10 March 2009.
  2. "JV News".
  3. "Christian Democratic Party pulls out of general election". Times LIVE. 11 March 2014. Retrieved 11 March 2014.

External links

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