Ittihad Party
The Ittihad Party or Union Party was an Islamist political party active in the Kingdom of Egypt.
The party was founded by a group of ulamas with royalist and Islamist ideas that legitimized the Sir Lee Stack's assassination in 1924. This group was composed also by young future political leaders like Muhammad Hamid Abu al-Nasr and Aly Maher Pasha. The ideological values were entrenched in the Egyptian "traditional" culture. The party was gathering in the Al-Azhar Mosque.
The Ittihad was financially supported by King Fuad I and British agents, that trusted that the Ittihad would have destabilized the activities of the left-wing radicals. Nevertheless, the Ittihad failed in its goal of building a conservative party, due to its religious views. Its platform was composed mainly by teachers, farmers, ulamas and imams.
The party program was:
- Dignified positions of the religious authorities
- Better resources for the Egyptian monarchy
- Monopoly over the distribution of public and private endowments
- Creation of the Awqaf
- Strong social values and solidarity
- Anti-Western policies
Despite its low electoral results, the party took over the government of Egypt in 1930s thanks to the support of independent politicians present in the House of Representatives.
The party didn't have a long life and in 1936 was dissolved. Its members adhered mainly to Wafd Party and Muslim Brotherhood.