Syria party
Hayat Tahrir al-Sham
هيئة تحرير الشامSalafi-jihadist-rooted Islamist movement that took Damascus in December 2024 and is the dominant political force in the post-Assad Syrian transition.
- Founded
- 2017
- Current leader
- Ahmad al-Sharaa
- Founders
- Ahmad al-Sharaa (Abu Mohammad al-Jolani)
Position — compass as of 2026-06-08
First-pass hand-coded estimate; pending second-pass external review. See methodology for the rubric.
Across the dataset
Open full comparison →Nearest
Closest by average Euclidean distance across all axes.
Most divergent
Farthest by the same metric. Useful for "anti-axis" framing.
Position — all axes
Members & affiliated figures
Politicians currently identified with this party — leaders, ministers, MPs, and other active figures. All affiliated politicians →
Recent events
Political events involving this party — formations, mergers, leadership changes, designation shifts. All events at /pulse →
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Syrian constitutional declaration
The transitional Syrian government under al-Sharaa issued a constitutional declaration on 2025-03-13 establishing the legal framework for a five-year transition period. Islam was named the religion of the head of state and "main source" of legislation. Drew mixed reactions from Syrian civil society and the international community.
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Israeli operations into Syria post-Assad
Following the fall of the Assad regime, Israel conducted widespread airstrikes on former Syrian military assets in December 2024 and seized additional territory in the Golan buffer zone. The new HTS-led government has expressed concern but has not militarily responded.
Declared vs. behavioral
For the axes below, this party's declared position (what the party says in its platform / official rhetoric) diverges from its behavioral position (its record of votes, coalition choices, or public actions). The spread itself is the methodological point — capturing the gap that a single composite score collapses.
- Civil liberties spread: 5.0D: +0.0 B: -5.0 C: -6.5
- Liberal democracy spread: 8.0D: +3.0 B: -5.0 C: -7.0
- Gender equality spread: 3.0D: -3.0 B: -6.0 C: -7.5
- Traditionalism vs modernization spread: 8.0D: +2.0 B: -6.0 C: -3.0
- State & religion spread: 4.0D: -3.0 B: -7.0 C: -8.0
Lens spreads are currently hand-coded on a curated set of cases where the gap is well-documented. Document-grounded scoring against the party's own platform documents (declared) and its voting / coalition record (behavioral) will scale this across the dataset. See methodology for the full lens-system roadmap.
Source documents
Texts the scoring pipeline reads — manifestos, speeches, platforms. Each document's verbatim content backs the position score above; the model cites specific phrases from these texts when scoring. All documents →
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Press release Arabic 2025-03-13 Constitutional Declaration of the Syrian Arab Republic (13 March 2025) — the HTS-led transitional government's foundational instrument
Article 1 The Syrian Arab Republic is an independent, fully sovereign state. It is an indivisible geographical and political unit, and no part of it may be relinquished. Article 2 The state establishes a political…
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Speech Arabic 2025-01-30 Ahmad al-Sharaa's Address to the Syrian Nation, 30 Jan 2025 (HTS leader's first programmatic address; English translation of Arabic original)
I address you today not as a ruler but as a servant for our wounded homeland, striving with all power and will I have been given to realise Syria's unity and renaissance, as we should all understand that this is a…
Sources
Per-field citations for the verified claims above. Other fields (notably the compass scores) remain hand-coded priors and are marked unverified until they pass the methodology pipeline — see methodology.
- founded_year en.wikipedia.org 2026-06-06 Formed January 2017 as merger of Jabhat Fateh al-Sham and other groups
- current_leader_text en.wikipedia.org 2026-06-06 Founder and leader since 2017
- government_role en.wikipedia.org 2026-06-06 Took Damascus 2024-12-08, dominant force in transition
How to cite
Each record carries a retrieval date because the dataset is live — individual entries update as verification deepens. Use the per-record citation when referencing this specific profile; use the dataset citation below when referencing the project as a whole.
In-text: (Gara, 2026)
Per-record citation
APA 7Reference list · academic default
Gara, T. (2026). Hayat Tahrir al-Sham [Party profile]. Tayyar: A MENA political-position dataset. Retrieved June 21, 2026, from https://tarekgara.com/tayyar/p/hts
Chicago author-dateCommon in political-science journals
Gara, Tarek. 2026. "Hayat Tahrir al-Sham." Party profile, Tayyar: A MENA political-position dataset. Accessed June 21, 2026. https://tarekgara.com/tayyar/p/hts.
BibTeXFor LaTeX / Zotero / reference managers
@misc{tayyar-hts,
title = {{Hayat Tahrir al-Sham}},
author = {Gara, Tarek},
year = {2026},
publisher = {Tayyar: A MENA political-position dataset},
type = {Party profile},
url = {https://tarekgara.com/tayyar/p/hts},
urldate = {2026-06-21},
note = {First-pass entry; second-pass external review planned before publication.}
} Dataset / working-paper citation
If you're citing Tayyar as a project rather than this individual record.
APA 7Preprint
Gara, T. (2026). Tayyar: A MENA political-position dataset [Preprint]. Retrieved June 21, 2026, from https://tarekgara.com/tayyar/paper
BibTeXPreprint
@unpublished{tayyar-preprint,
title = {{Tayyar: A MENA political-position dataset}},
author = {Gara, Tarek},
year = {2026},
type = {Preprint},
url = {https://tarekgara.com/tayyar/paper},
urldate = {2026-06-21},
note = {Living document, regenerated from the live dataset on page load.}
} First-pass entry; second-pass external review planned before publication.