The British refused to grant immediate independence, saying it could happen only after the war ended.
It called for immediate independence under a hereditary (Tutsi) constitutional monarchy.
At the same time it reformulated its agenda, supporting immediate independence.
Slovenia threatened to declare immediate independence if the army's demands were granted.
After long drawn negotiations, the two parties merged on March 12, 1906 to pursue "immediate, absolute and complete independence."
The Congress Party in 1942 demanded immediate independence, which Britain rejected.
The only one that has declared immediate independence is Lithuania.
There, these two parties debated whether to declare immediate independence from Mexico, or not.
Pro-independence: campaigns for immediate and total independence from Spain.
The openly nationalist parties in Slovakia that were calling for immediate independence ran poorly, winning only 12 percent of the vote.