The decision puts an end to a process that had been dragging on since 2019, the year the project was presented, which ended up being rejected in 2020 by the courts, forcing us to wait four years for a new attempt at legalization.
In September, the commission installing PRA-JA Servir Angola submitted a new legalization process to the Constitutional Court (TC), with 8000 declarations of acceptance, 500 more than those required by law.
This project was presented to Angolan society in 2019, by Abel Chivukuvuku, who was a member of UNITA between 1974 and 2012, when he assumed leadership of CASA-CE, a coalition of political parties that ran in the elections that same year, and in which he remained until 2019.
The political project is part of the United Patriotic Front (FPU), a platform created in the 2022 general elections, led by the National Union for the Total Independence of Angola (UNITA), coordinated by the leader of this largest opposition party, Adalberto Costa Júnior, assisted by Abel Chivukuvuku and the president of the Democratic Bloc, Filomeno Vieira Lopes.
PRA-JA Servir Angola is the second party legalized this year, after the Citizenship Initiative for the Development of Angola Party, with the national political panorama now counting on 13 political formations.