Pre-independence After Uganda was colonised in 1894 as a
British Protectorate, the British rulers introduced the
Legislative Council (Legco) in 1921, whose overall mission was to enact appropriate laws for the protectorate. However, it was not until 1945 that the first 3 indigenous Ugandans were allowed to sit in the Legco. This event further strengthened Obote's position in national politics. After the
1961 general elections enabled the Legco to be transformed into the "National Assembly" and saw the
Democratic Party (DP) rise to power, Obote became the first Ugandan Leader of the Opposition. Unfortunately, two months later, the DP lost power in the
1962 general elections, in which Obote's UPC won with the assistance of the
Kabaka Yekka (KY) party in
Buganda.
Post-independence During the first four years since independence (1962–1966), the DP was the only party in the opposition benches in Parliament, and the party not only had to fight against the injustices of the UPC-KY coalition government but also for its own survival. The Leader of the Opposition at the time was
Basil Kiiza Bataringaya, the then secretary general of the DP, hailing from Western Uganda in what was then known as the
Bushenyi District. But after the abrogation of the 1962 Constitution in Parliament and the collapse of the UPC-KY alliance in May 1964, Bataringaya crossed over to UPC with a number of his fellow DP MPs, leaving the opposition heavily depleted. Between 1964 and 1971, the Leader of the Opposition was Alex Latim from
Gulu, who replaced Bataringaya as the DP secretary general. In the following years, Latim together with his fellow DP colleagues and some KY and UPC members who had defected to the opposition, continued to represent the opposition. The opposition vehemently opposed the harsh detention laws which had been imposed in the country, emerging corruption in the Obote regime, and shift towards
one-party rule.
The fall and rise of Obote The
Parliament of Uganda effectively ceased to function for 8 years when General
Idi Amin seized power in a
coup d'état in January 1971. The Amin regime preferred to rule through decrees and regular military announcements. As a result, most UPC and DP politicians went underground or kept a very low profile, while others fled into exile. Obote himself fled to
Tanzania. Following the overthrow of the Amin regime in April 1979 by Tanzanian troops and some Ugandan exiles, Parliament was restored under the name National Consultative Council (NCC), whose responsibilities not only included enacting new laws for the country, but also supervising the executive systematically in order to prevent the reemergence of dictatorial rule. The NCC, however, did not divide itself into "government" and "opposition" sides. Instead it operated as a multi-party umbrella organisation under
Uganda National Liberation Front (UNLF), which sought to reach consensus on each issue on a non-ideological and non-party basis. The first post-independence elections were held in
December 1980, during which Obote and the UPC were voted into power. Although the results of the elections were hotly contested, DP leader Dr.
Paul Kawanga Ssemogerere and his fellow DP MPs reluctantly accepted to sit in the opposition benches. Dr. Ssemogerere thus became Uganda's 5th Leader of the Opposition. The opposition vociferously condemned the escalation of Uganda's external debt, general insecurity and violations of basic human rights of ordinary Ugandans. They were also alleged to be sympathetic to guerrilla movements predominantly in the
Luweero Triangle, including the
National Resistance Movement (NRM) led by future president
Yoweri Kaguta Museveni, the Uganda Freedom Movement (UFM) led by Andrew Kayira, and the Uganda Freedom Fighters (UFF) led by Robert Serumaga.
Second fall of Obote and rise of NRM In July 1985, Milton Obote and his second UPC government were once again overthrown in a
military coup led by General
Tito Okello Lutwa, who also shut down Parliament. However, after the NRM seized power six months later, it was re-opened in February 1986 under a new name, the National Resistance Council (NRC), a month after the NRM seized power. As was the case in the NCC from 1979 to 1980, there was no official opposition in the NRC. The NRC was originally the supreme policy organ of the NRM during the
Ugandan Bush War, and was the same group that constituted itself into a Parliament, maintaining the name of NRC. After the 1996
presidential and
parliamentary elections, the NRC was renamed Parliament, but until 2006, said Parliament and the whole of Uganda operated under a disguised
single-party state called the "Movement System" that would later be defined in the High Court as a
one-party state. As a result, there was no
parliamentary opposition (and thus no formally recognized
Leader of the Opposition) in Parliament from July 1985 to May 2006.
Return to multiparty system What acted as opposition during this period were associations such as the Young Parliamentary Group and the Parliamentary Forum (PAFO). Faced with both national and international pressures, president Museveni was forced to open up the Ugandan political space. In 2005, a
referendum was held to make Uganda a multi-party democracy, and 92% of voters voted to return to multi-party politics. The
2006 general elections were thus the first multi-party elections in 20 years. In this election, the
Forum for Democratic Change (FDC) emerged as the main opposition party. Subsequently, Prof.
Morris Ogenga Latigo from Acholi became the 6th Leader of the Opposition in the 8th Parliament of Uganda. As MP for Agago County, Prof. Latigo led the Opposition in the House at a time when politicians in Uganda were still reeling from the after effects of the Movement System, in which members operated on individual merit. Transforming from that system into the loyalty and discipline that multipartyism demands was difficult and it counts for some of the many challenges that Latigo's leadership faced in the 8th Parliament. Prof. Latigo did not make it to the 9th Parliament after a hotly contested election campaign exercise that saw the military take charge of some parts of the election process leaving him and his supporters crying foul. After the February 2011 Presidential and Parliamentary elections, Nathan Nandala Mafabi became the seventh Leader of the Opposition, six years after the return of multiparty politics under Museveni's regime. Hon. Mafabi was challenged with leading a minority opposition against a large number of the ruling NRM Members. In the two years of his tenure however, Hon. Mafabi saw through immense successes especially in legislative product among which were the two hotly contested Bills, i.e. the Public Order Management Bill and the Anti-Money Laundering Bill. Hon. Mafabi was however not able to complete a full five-year term in office. The mandatory review that came after two and a half years saw him leave office amidst high tensions largely played in the media. The media tensions resulted from the FDC Party Presidential race which was hotly contested by Hon. Nandala Mafabi, the Leader of the Opposition and (Rtrd) Major General Mugisha Muntu was declared winner of the race. Mafabi challenged the results through the party structures and the dispute became a hot media issue leading to a difficult era of the leadership in the party. As the midterm review of the leadership in Parliament, the FDC Party President, Gen. Mugisha Muntu replaced Hon. Mafabi with Hon. Philip
Wafula Oguttu, the MP for Bukoli Central to serve in the remaining period of the term. ==List of leaders of the opposition==