compare
Compare two parties
Pick any two parties for a compared brief — top divergences and convergences auto-computed from the dataset, a comparative political-science brief for canonical pairs, plus the compass overlay, spider overlay, and axis-by-axis table.
Average axis distance
8.32
Lower = more similar (Euclidean across shared axes, normalized by count)
Same country · BH. Different families (islamist-shia · islamist-salafi). Founded 1 year apart. Mean axis distance Δ̄ 8.32.
Where they split hardest
- Regime stance
Al-Wefaq National Islamic Society -7.0 · anti-regime vs Islamic Asalah Society +8.0 · pro-regime
Δ 15.0 points
- Civil liberties
Al-Wefaq National Islamic Society +6.5 · Expand vs Islamic Asalah Society -6.0 · Restrict
Δ 12.5 points
- Liberal democracy
Al-Wefaq National Islamic Society +5.5 · Strong commitment vs Islamic Asalah Society -6.0 · Weak/anti
Δ 11.5 points
Where they almost overlap
- Palestinian question
+9.0 vs +8.0
Δ 1.0 points
- State & religion
-6.0 vs -8.5
Δ 2.5 points
- Social
-6.0 vs -9.0
Δ 3.0 points
Al-Wefaq National Islamic Society vs. Islamic Asalah Society
Bahrain's confessional rift. Al-Wefaq's Shia opposition (now banned) against Al-Asalah's Sunni Salafi establishment. The structural cleavage of Bahraini politics.
Origins. Al-Wefaq National Islamic Society was founded in 2001 as the political vehicle of Bahrain's majority Shia population, drawing on Sheikh Isa Qassim's clerical leadership and the framework of Bahrain's Shia religious authorities (marja'iyya). It was the leading opposition party from 2001 until its dissolution. Islamic Asalah Society was founded in 2002 as the Salafi Sunni party, doctrinally aligned with Saudi-influenced Salafi thought, supportive of the Khalifa monarchy.
Where they diverge. The fundamental cleavage is sectarian and structural. Al-Wefaq's base is Shia (60-70% of Bahraini citizens); Al-Asalah's is Sunni (30-40%, including the ruling Khalifa family). On constitutional position: Al-Wefaq sought constitutional reform — an elected upper house, prime minister from parliament, end to political naturalisation of Sunni migrants — that would reshape Bahrain's political geography toward majority-rule; Al-Asalah supports the current monarchic framework. On 2011 protests: Al-Wefaq's elected MPs resigned en masse in February 2011 to join the pro-democracy Pearl Roundabout protests; Al-Asalah and the National Unity Gathering organised pro-monarchy counter-mobilisation. On regional alignment: Al-Wefaq has been accused (and explicitly accused itself) of receiving guidance from Iran-aligned clerics; Al-Asalah aligns with Saudi-Salafi institutional theology.
Where they overlap. Both operate (or operated, in Al-Wefaq's case) within Bahrain's constitutional framework. Both are religious parties accepting Islamic law's constitutional centrality. Both reject secular-liberal framings of the state. Neither has accepted the legitimacy of the other's mass base as a partner in governance.
Why it matters today. Al-Wefaq was dissolved by Bahraini courts in 2016 and its leadership including Ali Salman has been imprisoned since 2014. Al-Asalah holds seats in the elected Council of Representatives. The compression of the Shia opposition into illegality is the central feature of Bahraini politics, and any genuine political opening would have to reverse it.
Primary documents
Most recent docs in the Tayyar corpus from each party. Click through for full text.
A Al-Wefaq National Islamic Society
B Islamic Asalah Society
Compass
A · Al-Wefaq National Islamic Society and B · Islamic Asalah Society are pinned with always-on labels. Other parties stay visible as faded context so you can locate either side on the map at a glance.
Spider overlay
A is the solid teal polygon; B is the dashed amber overlay. Distinct colors so the eye can always tell them apart, regardless of family.
Axis-by-axis
Sorted by absolute difference. Δ is A − B.
- Regime stance A-7.0B+8.0Δ -15.0
- Civil liberties A+6.5B-6.0Δ +12.5
- Liberal democracy A+5.5B-6.0Δ +11.5
- West alignment A-5.0B+4.5Δ -9.5
- Regional stance A-5.0B+4.0Δ -9.0
- Centralism vs federalism A+1.0B-6.5Δ +7.5
- Traditionalism vs modernization A-2.0B-8.0Δ +6.0
- Economic A-2.0B+3.0Δ -5.0
- Pan-Arab vs particularist A+1.5B-2.0Δ +3.5
- Social A-6.0B-9.0Δ +3.0
- State & religion A-6.0B-8.5Δ +2.5
- Palestinian question A+9.0B+8.0Δ +1.0