[4] The goals of the new front were to unify Kurdish factions during the Lebanese civil war, improve the sociopolitical status of Kurds in Lebanon, and uphold their rights in employment and citizenship.
This group rejected the formation of the Progressive Kurdish Front because it included the leadership of Jamil Mihhu, the leader of the KDP-L, who was deemed by them to be right-wing.
The splinter faction continued to function until the Israeli invasion of Lebanon in June 1982, when its secretary-general Abdi Ibrahim fled to Syria.
[6] In 2009, the then-secretary-general of the Rezgari Party, Mahmud Khidr Fattah Ahmad, met with a delegation from Hezbollah,[7] a group they have close ties to.
[2] As of 2015, Rudaw reported that the Rezgari Party, at that point the only political organization representing the Kurds of Lebanon, was suffering from financial difficulties, with some believing that it would not survive much longer.