1998 Cambodian general election

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1998 Cambodian general election

← 1993 26 July 1998 2003 →

All 122 seats in the National Assembly
62 seats needed for a majority
Registered5,395,595 Increase 13.2%
Turnout5,057,679 (93.7%) Increase 4.1%
  First party Second party Third party
  Hun Sen (2007).jpg Ranariddh 1990s.jpg Sam Rainsy 3x4.jpg
Leader Hun Sen Norodom Ranariddh Sam Rainsy
Party CPP FUNCINPEC SRP
Leader since 14 January 1985 February 1992 June 1995
Leader's seat Kandal Kampong Cham Kampong Cham
Last election 51 seats, 38.2% 58 seats, 45.5% Did not contest
Seats won 64 43 15
Seat change Increase 13 Decrease 15 New
Popular vote 2,030,790 1,554,405 699,665
Percentage 41.4% 31.7% 14.3%
Swing Increase 3.1% Decrease 13.8% New

1998 Cambodian general election - Results by constituency.svg

Prime Minister before election

Ung Huot
FUNCINPEC

Elected Prime Minister

Hun Sen
CPP

General elections were held in Cambodia on 26 July 1998. The result was a victory for the Cambodian People's Party (CPP), which won 64 of the 122 seats, resulting in its leader Hun Sen becoming Prime Minister. Opposition parties sought a recount and claimed there had been irregularities, claims supported by many international observers. Voter turnout was 93.7%.[1]

Background[]

Following the disputed 1993 general elections, Norodom Ranariddh of FUNCINPEC and Hun Sen of the CPP had become co-Prime Ministers. In July 1997, Sen forced Ranariddh out of government after a dispute on to handle rebellious members of FUNCINPEC and former Khmer Rouge leaders. Ranariddh was subsequently replaced by Ung Huot. The removal of Ranariddh led to at least 89 extra-judicial killings.[2]

General elections were announced for May 1998, but were later postponed until July by the National Assembly as preparations including voter registration were running late.[3]

On 30 March 1997 an opposition rally outside the National Assembly was hit by a grenade attack, with at least 16 killed and 100 injured.[2]

Electoral system[]

The 122 members of the National Assembly were elected by closed list proportional representation from 21 multi-member constituencies based on the provinces.

There were 1,380 individual polling stations. At the end of polling, ballot boxes were taken to Commune Election Commissions set up by the National Election Committee (NEC) and were counted the next day. Statements regarding the count were added up at the Provincial Election Commissions, and the national tally made at the NEC. Parties could make complaints at any of the four levels during the count.[4]

The results were countersigned and the statement of the count were announced outside the counting centers.

Conduct[]

The observation of the election was coordinated by the United Nations with its Joint International Observer Group (JIOG), which consisted of European Union and ASEAN representatives. More than 500 foreign monitors worked alongside a national observer group to keep track of the voting process.

Many observers and other international organizations reported that the electoral process was heavily influenced by the CPP and that there had been intimidation, violence, coercion, lack of accountability and transparency.[2] Following the elections, opposition party politicians and activists were reported to be relocating towards provincial cities and Phnom Penh and many were concerned about concealing their location due to fear of persecution.[5]

A lack of training, many complicated forms, and packing procedures caused difficulties with the election count, especially in areas with low levels of education, literacy, and electoral experience. The NEC noted that there was a lack of space and planning, to the point where it was difficult to retrieve controls and recounts. Ballot materials were stacked on top of each other, which made it hard for the NEC to deal with the large number of complaints and demands for recounts. In total there were 800 complaints filed, 304 passing preliminary investigation related to voter intimidation, recount demands, and other concerned programs.[5]

Results[]

Cambodian general election, 1998.svg
PartyVotes%Seats+/–
Cambodian People's Party2,030,79041.4264+13
FUNCINPEC1,554,40531.7143–15
Sam Rainsy Party699,66514.2715New
Khmer Democratic Party90,0001.840New
Cambodian National Sustaining Party71,0931.450New
Liberal Democratic Party for National Salvation46,4240.950New
Buddhist Liberal Democratic Party45,8490.940–10
Nationalist Party37,3080.760New
Buddhist Liberal Party32,9590.670New
Khmer Angkor Party26,4820.540New
Cambodian Citizens' Party23,7130.480New
Cambodian Unity Party19,2320.390New
Party of Women Salvaging Cambodia18,8920.390New
Farmers' Party15,5970.320New
New Society Party15,0660.310New
Republican Coalition Party14,8690.3000
Liberal Democratic Party14,0880.2900
Social Beehive Democratic Party13,9520.280New
Free Development Republican Party13,7800.2800
Rally for National Solidarity13,0380.2700
National Unification Party11,0890.230New
National Restoration Party10,4510.210New
Light of Freedom Party10,0270.200New
MOULINAKA8,3950.170–1
Free Independent Democracy Party3,9380.0800
Neutral Democratic Party of Cambodia3,8690.0800
Free Republican Party1,6540.0300
Twelve other parties55,8631.140
Total4,902,488100.00122+2
Valid votes4,902,48896.93
Invalid/blank votes155,1893.07
Total votes5,057,677100.00
Registered voters/turnout5,395,59593.74
Source: Nohlen et al.

Aftermath[]

On 30 June, there was controversy surrounding the seat allocation formula. The English-language press of Phnom Penh and opposition parties claimed that the formula had been tampered with after the election results have been collected in order to favor the CPP. Annex V of the Law on the Election of National Assembly described the seat allocation method and all parties were informed and agreed to it in June. However, there appeared to be a difference between the original Khmer version and the English version. The misunderstanding led to large protests from the opposition.[5]

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ Dieter Nohlen, Florian Grotz & Christof Hartmann (2001) Elections in Asia: A data handbook, Volume II, p70 ISBN 0-19-924959-8
  2. ^ a b c Downie, Sue (April 2000). "Cambodia's 1998 Election: Understanding Why it Was Not a 'Miracle on the Mekong'". Australian Journal of International Affairs. 54 (1): 43–61. doi:10.1080/00049910050007032. S2CID 154920354.
  3. ^ Elections held in 1998 IPU
  4. ^ Vander Weyden, Patrick (December 2000). "Parliamentary elections in Cambodia 1998". Electoral Studies. 19 (4): 615–621. doi:10.1016/S0261-3794(00)00004-4.
  5. ^ a b c Vander Weyden, Patrick (December 2000). "Parliamentary elections in Cambodia 1998". Electoral Studies. 19 (4): 615–621. doi:10.1016/S0261-3794(00)00004-4.
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