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During the existence of its 61-year Ba'ath party rule, the politics of Ba'athist Syria took place in the framework of a unitary one-party presidential republic where independent parties were outlawed, with a powerful secret police that cracked down on dissidents. with nominal multi-party representation in People's Council under the Ba'athist-dominated National Progressive Front. From the 1963 seizure of power by its neo-Ba'athist Military Committee to the fall of the Assad regime, the Arab Socialist Ba'ath Party operated a totalitarian police state in Syria. After a period of intra-party strife, Hafez al-Assad gained control of the party following the 1970 coup d'état and his family dominated the country's politics.
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