, the first President of Mali, who led French Sudan to independence Following the passage of the
Loi Cadre by the French National Assembly in 1956, many of the colonies in French West African began to hold elections to increase the
self-determination of their territories. In the first elections held in French Sudan in 1957, the
African Democratic Rally (
Rassemblement Démocratique Africain, commonly known as the RDA) won the elections in French Sudan, as well as winning majorities in neighboring Ivory Coast, French Guinea, and the Upper Volta. Following the
French constitutional referendum of 1958, which received an overwhelming majority in support, the '''' declared itself a republic with internal autonomy on 24 November 1958. The Sudanese Republic, as the area was now called, was the second colony after
Madagascar to join the
French Community, which provided it internal autonomy while linking its currency, foreign policy and defense with France. In early January 1959, there were plans for a federation linking the Sudanese Republic with Senegal, Dahomey, and the Upper Volta in a federation of autonomous states. By April, however, neither Dahomey's nor Upper Volta's legislatures had ratified the federation, and so the
Mali Federation was formed with only the Sudanese Republic and Senegal. In 1959,
Modibo Keïta's RDA party won all 70 seats in the legislative elections in the Sudanese Republic and joined forces with the dominant party in Senegal, headed by
Léopold Sédar Senghor. The federation achieved independence on 20 June 1960 within the French Community; however, divisions between Senghor and Keïta on the governance of the federation resulted in its dissolution on 20 August 1960. The area of French Sudan formally proclaimed itself the
Republic of Mali and, with increasing radicalization of Keita, left the French Community in September 1960. ==See also==