Liberty Party Boycotts UP Homecoming

By : Godgift Harris

By : Godgift Harris

The Liberty Party (LP) boycotted the Unity Party’s (UP) December 6 homecoming celebration, signaling a widening rift within the political alliance that helped bring President Joseph Nyuma Boakai to power.

According to senior LP insiders, the decision was reached late Thursday during a closed-door meeting at the home of LP Political Leader and President Pro Tempore of the Liberian Senate,  Nyonblee Karnga-Lawrence.

 The meeting brought together the party’s National Executive Committee (NEC), National Advisory Council (NAC), and National Stakeholders Committee (NSC).

After what sources described as “hour-long, tense deliberations,” the three leadership bodies unanimously resolved that no LP executive, lawmaker or official serving in the Boakai administration should attend the UP event, citing persistent patterns of disrespect and exclusion by the ruling party.

Senior LP figures said their decision stemmed from months of unresolved grievances, including, exclusion of LP senators and representatives from key coalition strategy meetings

Internal UP officials allegedly referring to coalition partners as mere “helping verbs,” a remark LP views as insulting and dismissive, an incident  which the UP Chairman reportedly ordered LP representatives out of a strategy session, insisting the 2023 election victory “belonged solely to the Unity Party.”

“These actions have gone far enough,” a high-ranking LP official told this paper.

“The Unity Party must understand that we are partners, not subordinates or spectators.”

Another senior figure added: “We supported the Unity Party because of Joseph Boakai, not because we intended to become an auxiliary unit of the UP.

No one is foolish here; we are a political institution and we demand respect.”

LP leaders were quick to clarify that the boycott does not signal a withdrawal of political support for President Boakai himself.

Instead, they argued, the decision is a warning to the Unity Party leadership to correct what they describe as “a creeping culture of dominance.”

Sources emphasized that LP remains committed to the alliance but expects a more equitable partnership moving forward.

The boycott was dramatically underscored on Saturday when Senator Karnga-Lawrence was not seen at the UP-homecoming event, a development that confirmed the party’s hardline stance and hinted at deeper fractures within the governing coalition.

As at press time, the Unity Party has issued no formal response to the boycott or to the allegations of marginalization, leaving political observers to speculate on the potential impact on governance and coalition stability.

With the Boakai administration entering a critical phase of policy implementation and political consolidation, the standoff raises new questions about whether the alliance that secured victory in 2023 can survive growing internal discontent.