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
5.79
Lower = more similar (Euclidean across shared axes, normalized by count)
Same country · MA. Different families (secular-liberal · islamist-sunni-electoral). Founded 20 years apart. Mean axis distance Δ̄ 5.79.
Where they split hardest
- Regional stance
National Rally of Independents +7.0 · Stability/normalization vs Justice and Development Party -3.0 · Resistance/maximalist
Δ 10.0 points
- Social
National Rally of Independents +3.0 · Libertarian vs Justice and Development Party -6.0 · Authority
Δ 9.0 points
- State & religion
National Rally of Independents +2.0 · Secular state vs Justice and Development Party -6.0 · Religious state
Δ 8.0 points
Where they almost overlap
- Centralism vs federalism
-6.0 vs -6.0
Δ 0.0 points
- Liberal democracy
+1.0 vs +1.5
Δ 0.5 points
- Civil liberties
+0.0 vs -2.0
Δ 2.0 points
National Rally of Independents vs. Justice and Development Party
Morocco's post-2011 settlement. PJD's Islamist-electoral project against RNI's liberal-monarchist business establishment — both inside the makhzen, on different sides of it.
Origins. The Justice and Development Party (PJD, Hizb al-Adala wa al-Tanmiya) was founded in 1998 as the political wing of Morocco's Islamist movement, ideologically rooted in the Movement of Unity and Reform (MUR). The National Rally of Independents (RNI, Rassemblement National des Indépendants) was founded in 1978 by Ahmed Osman, King Hassan II's prime minister and brother-in-law, as a centrist-liberal vehicle of business and administrative elites.
Where they diverge. The most direct cleavage is religion and the state. PJD seeks Islamic frames for social and educational policy; RNI is explicitly secular-liberal and pro-business. On the king's role: both are formally loyal to the throne (no Moroccan parliamentary party is otherwise), but PJD's 2011 mandate after the February 20 protests cast it as the reformist face within the makhzen; RNI's billionaire leader Aziz Akhannouch represents the establishment side. On political economy: RNI is the principal vehicle of Morocco's neoliberal coalition; PJD is more redistributive, with stronger ties to the informal sector. On personal-status law: PJD has resisted Mudawana reforms that RNI's urban constituency supports.
Where they overlap. Both formally accept the constitutional monarchy and the Commander of the Faithful's role over religious affairs. Both have governed in coalitions together (2016–2021). Both back the Moroccan Sahara Autonomy plan unconditionally.
Why it matters today. PJD was punished at the polls in 2021 — Akhannouch's RNI replaced it as the leading party in the same election. The current Akhannouch government represents the most consolidated liberal-monarchist coalition in Moroccan history.
Primary documents
Most recent docs in the Tayyar corpus from each party. Click through for full text.
A National Rally of Independents
B Justice and Development Party
Compass
A · National Rally of Independents and B · Justice and Development Party 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.
- Regional stance A+7.0B-3.0Δ +10.0
- Social A+3.0B-6.0Δ +9.0
- State & religion A+2.0B-6.0Δ +8.0
- Traditionalism vs modernization A+6.0B-2.0Δ +8.0
- Pan-Arab vs particularist A-5.0B+2.0Δ -7.0
- West alignment A+8.0B+2.0Δ +6.0
- Economic A+8.0B+3.0Δ +5.0
- Palestinian question A+5.0B+8.0Δ -3.0
- Civil liberties A+0.0B-2.0Δ +2.0
- Regime stance A+9.0B+7.0Δ +2.0
- Liberal democracy A+1.0B+1.5Δ -0.5
- Centralism vs federalism A-6.0B-6.0Δ +0.0