1983 Mauritian general election

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1983 Mauritian general election

← 1982 21 July 1983 (1983-07-21) 1987 →

All 60 seats in the National Assembly
31 seats needed for a majority
  First party Second party
  Anerood Jugnauth 1991 (cropped).jpg Paul Berenger in1992 (cropped).jpg
Leader Anerood Jugnauth Paul Berenger
Party MSMPTRPMSD MMM
Leader since 1983 1983
Leader's seat Piton & Riviere Du Rempart Belle Rose and Quatre Bornes
Last election 4 seats 42 seats
Seats won 46 20
Seat change Increase 42 Decrease 20
Popular vote 708,440 629,536
Percentage 51.9% 45.6%

Prime Minister before election

Anerood Jugnauth
MMM

Subsequent Prime Minister

Anerood Jugnauth
MSM

General elections were held in Mauritius on 21 August 1983. The result was a victory for an alliance of the Militant Socialist Movement, the Labour Party and the Mauritian Social Democrat Party, which between them won 46 seats.[1] The Militant Socialist Movement (MSM) won 32 seats, whilst the Labour Party secured 9 seats and PMSD five. This alliance allowed Jugnauth to continue as Prime Minister while bringing Seewoosagur Ramgoolam and Gaetan Duval back into the government after their severe defeat in the 1982 elections. Shortly after, Ramgoolam was appointed as Governor General, Duval became Deputy Prime Minister and Satcam Boolell (new leader of the labour Party) became Minister of Foreign Affairs.

The Mauritian Militant Movement (MMM) suffered after the departure of Anerood Jugnauth (who resigned as Leader of the MMM in 1983 to form the MSM) and the Mauritian Socialist Party (the MMM's coalition party since 1982) from the government. The party's leader, Paul Berenger, was not popularly elected in his own constituency. However, under the best loser system, he secured his seat through the representational system. Berenger was afterwards appointed as Leader of the Opposition, a post he held until 1987.

Electoral system[]

The voting system involved twenty constituencies on Mauritius, which each elected three members. Two seats were elected by residents of Rodrigues, and up to eight seats were filled by the "best losers".[2] Voter turnout was 81.1%.[3]

Results[]

PartyVotes%Seats
ConsBLTotal+/–
Mauritian Militant Movement629,52845.5819322–20
MSMLabour Party575,99641.7037441
Mauritian Social Democrat Party140,86410.20415
Rodrigues People's Organisation15,9811.162020
Lalit3,1160.23000New
Independent Mauritian Front2,6370.19000New
Progressive Labour Party2,1430.16000New
Mauritian Democratic Movement1,0360.08000New
Mauritian Grouping7350.05000New
Communist Party of Mauritius7040.05000New
Liberal Movement of the North5720.040000
Progressive Movement4260.03000New
Mauritian People's Party3580.03000New
Socialist Grouping of the South2410.02000New
Mauritian Muslim Rights1560.01000New
Independents6,6580.480000
Total1,381,151100.0062870+4
Valid votes464,46598.82
Invalid/blank votes5,5431.18
Total votes470,008100.00
Registered voters/turnout551,70885.19
Source: African Elections Database, Nohlen et al.

References[]

  1. ^ Dieter Nohlen, Michael Krennerich & Bernhard Thibaut (1999) Elections in Africa: A data handbook, p618 ISBN 0-19-829645-2
  2. ^ Mauritius: Background to the 1967 Legislative Assembly election EISA
  3. ^ Mauritius: 1983 Legislative Assembly election results EISA
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