In the 1961 election only Helen
Suzman kept her seat in Parliament
for the PP. Thus began one of the great parliamentary performances
of all time. Suzman sat alone for 13 years, the sole principled opponent
of racial discrimination in the whole South African Parliament. She
fought against detention without trial, pass laws, influx control,
and job reservation on grounds of colour, racially separate amenities,
Group Areas and forced removals. She demanded trade union rights
for black people and fought for better wages and working conditions.
In 1974 six more PP members won seats in Parliament. Soon after
this the PP merged with a new breakaway group from the United Party,
the Reform Party, to become the Progressive Reform Party in 1975.
In 1977 another group of UP members left the Party to form the Committee
for a United Opposition, which then joined the PRP to form the Progressive
Federal Party.
During 1987 Denis Worrall resigned as South African Ambassador in
London to return to politics. He formed the Independent Movement
to fight the 1987 general election. Only Wynand Malan won a seat
for the party and when he left the Independent Movement, Worrall
formed the Independent Party. Malan, together with others, formed
the National Democratic Movement. The PFP had lost a number of Parliamentary
seats in the 1987 election and in 1988 Zach de Beer became the PFP
leader. He continued negotiations, which culminated in the IP, NDM
and PFP disbanding to form the Democratic Party in April 1989. The
National Party government immediately called a general election for
September of that year, in which the DP improved its position while
the NP lost seats both to the DP and to the right-wing Conservative
Party.
Source:
Gary Selikow, 2 Aug 2000