2016 Vanuatuan general election

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
2016 Vanuatuan general election

← 2012 22 January 2016 2020 →

All 52 seats in the Parliament of Vanuatu
  First party Second party Third party
  Ralph Regenvanu.jpg Joe Natuman 2014 (cropped).jpg Rialuth Serge Vohor (Imagicity 1307) (cropped).jpg
Leader Ralph Regenvanu Joe Natuman Serge Vohor
Party Land & Justice VP UMP
Last election 4 seats, 6.02% 8 seats, 11.29% 5 seats, 12.19%
Seats won 7 seats 6 seats 6 seats
Seat change Increase3 Decrease2 Increase1
Popular vote 8,376 13,463 10,999
Percentage 7.41% 11.91% 9.73%
Swing Increase1.4 Increase0.6 Decrease2.5

Prime Minister before election

Sato Kilman
People's Progress Party

Elected Prime Minister

Charlot Salwai
Reunification Movement for Change

General elections were held in Vanuatu on 22 January 2016. The previous elections occurred in October 2012. The president of Vanuatu, Baldwin Lonsdale, dissolved the Parliament of Vanuatu in November 2015.[1] This occurred after the conviction of 14 parliamentarians for bribery. The convicted MPs include former Prime Ministers Serge Vohor and Moana Carcasses Kalosil. The president called for a snap election to form a new government.

Background[]

Vanuatu has a unicameral parliament with 52 Members of Parliament. The people elect their members by voting for one candidate. In multi-member constituencies, Vanuatu uses the single non-transferable vote system and in single-member districts, first-past-the-post voting is used.[2] Each parliamentarian holds office for a term of 4 years. In Vanuatu, there are eight single-member districts and nine multi-seat constituencies. The district magnitude of multi-seat constituencies has a range of two members to seven members for each constituency. Citizens elect the President of Vanuatu and the government elects the Prime Minister of Vanuatu.

Historically, the Vanuatuan government and society divided itself along linguistic lines. The Vanua'aku Party represented the Anglophone interests and the Union of Moderate Parties represented the Francophone interests.[3] Over time the linguistic divide has diminished as Vanuatu established a stronger national identity post-independence. Party allegiances have become less strong as factions split and formed new political parties.

In recent years more than 30 parties have won seats in the Vanuatuan parliament.[4] A ruling government needs to have a majority of parliamentarians to pass legislation and effectively rule. Consequently, coalitions are necessary to govern in Vanuatu. Coalitions often struggle to find a common legislative agenda to lead the nation which can be a cause of political instability. Following the 2012 Vanuatu election, there were five successive Cabinets of Vanuatu which were either formed after votes of no-confidence or after members had deserted the cabinet for the opposition.

Clientelism has been a problem in Vanuatuan politics since the country's independence in 1980.[3] Often the lines between clientelism and corruption in Vanuatu have been ill-defined. The successful conviction of 14 MPs, including two former prime ministers, for bribery was one of the largest steps taken to combat corruption. The Supreme Court found that while in the opposition in 2014, former prime minister Moana Carcasses Kalosil bribed parliamentarians with 35 million vatu (US$300,000) to support a no-confidence motion. He then became deputy Prime Minister in Sato Kilman's Cabinet. The court convicted Carcasses and the other 13 parliamentarians, including the Speaker Marcellino Pipite, for offering and receiving bribes; they sentenced the MPs in November 2015 to three years in jail and banned them from public office for 10 years.[5] As this verdict was delivered while President Lonsdale was out of the country, the speaker assumed the role of the president and issued pardons for all involved including himself. Lonsdale overturned the pardons when he returned to Vanuatu the following day. As several of the convicted parliamentarians were members of the Cabinet of Vanuatu, Prime Minister Sato Kilman was unable to effectively rule. Kilman was not able to form a new government - nearly 1/3 of MPs were in jail - which led to governmental gridlock causing the Parliament to be dissolved by the president. The traditional chiefs of Vanuatu - the Malvatumauri - called for calm during this process and asked that the people allow for the legal process to unfold, suggesting that their power is mostly ceremonial and is limited politically.[5] Following this failure to form a new government, Lonsdale called a snap election for 22 January 2016.

Some of the jailed MPs reportedly formed a music group called the Vanuatu Political Croonies.[6]

Campaign[]

The official campaign began on 5 January 2016. A total of 261 candidates contested the elections, including 68 independents and 193 representing 36 political parties.[7] The convicted MPs were not permitted to run as one cannot run for office in Vanuatu if they have a criminal conviction.[8] Candidates who could afford to pay for airtime dominated mainstream media during the campaign; social media played an important role in this election.[9] Only 10 women contested seats in this election and youth engagement in the campaign and election appears to have increased from 2012 but remained low.[9]

Conduct[]

Polls opened throughout the country on 22 January at 7:30AM and closed at 4:30PM.[10] To facilitate high turnout levels, the government declared the day a public holiday. Schools, churches and other public centers transformed into polling stations. The Commonwealth and the Melanesian Spearhead Group observed the election to ensure electoral integrity.

Both groups of international observers remarked that turnout was low. The process of voting in Vanuatu works as follows: People who are 18 and above can vote if they have a voter card. The details are verified twice with the citizen then given an envelope with a sheet with the name, picture and political party symbol on a piece of paper. Each candidate had a different colored sticky paper attachment. In the voting booth, the voter identifies their preferred candidate, rips off the corresponding piece of paper and puts it into the envelope. The envelope is then dropped into a ballot box. The voter then retrieves their voter card and their thumb is inked. Voters are also able to proxy vote for two others while they cast their own vote.[10]

The election day was peaceful and orderly.[11] Voters headed to the polls early. Women and youth turned out to vote in high numbers. The conduct at polling stations did not vary around the country, suggesting relatively sufficient following of electoral rules.

After the polls closed at 4:30PM, the workers at the polling stations counted the ballots. As Vanuatu employs the first-past-the-post system and the single non-transferable vote system, the process of counting the votes was straightforward. Each candidate's number of votes were tallied and sent to the independently run Vanuatu Electoral Commission who announced the winners for each parliamentary seat.[10]

The Electoral Integrity Project, an academic group that aims to quantify the integrity of elections worldwide, studied Vanuatu's 2016 election. By asking experts on Vanuatuan politics to rank the integrity of various electoral issues, the group found that the election was generally fair and just. However, they also suggest in their rankings that voters may have been bribed and that some may have received cash for votes. It was found likely that politicians offered patronage to voters, confirming at least some clientelism in Vanuatuan politics.

Results[]

As candidates only need to receive more votes than their competitor, all MPs were elected with 41% or less of the vote.[12] All parties received less than 15% of the vote. The races were extremely tight – in the constituency of Paama, MP Fred William Tasso won his seat by seven votes.[13] The candidates who won represented diverse interests including different tribes and linguistic groups - although zero women won seats.[14] Multiple new political parties won seats in this Parliament and the percentage of votes roughly equaled the percentage of seats granted.

In the official results, the Melanesian Progressive Party obtained one seat at the Éfaté constituency; however, weeks later the Court ordered a recount of the ballots and awarded the disputed seat to the Land and Justice Party.[15]

Vanuatuan general election 2016 results.svg
PartyVotes%Seats+/–
Vanua'aku Pati13,46311.916–2
Union of Moderate Parties10,9999.736+1
Land and Justice Party8,3767.417+3
National United Party6,1965.4840
People's Progressive Party5,4694.841–5
Iauko Group4,9794.404+1
Vanuatu National Development Party4,9424.372New
Vanuatu Presidential Party4,2343.741+1
Nagriamel4,1283.6530
Reunification Movement for Change3,8873.4430
Natatok Indigenous People's Democratic Party3,0242.671–1
Green Confederation2,8512.522–1
Leaders Party of Vanuatu2,4592.171New
Vanuatu Republican Party1,9751.750–1
Vanuatu Labour Party1,7801.571+1
1,5651.380–1
Friend Melanesian Party1,4651.301+1
1,2841.140–1
Unity for Change1,2611.120New
Hope Party1,1801.040New
People's Services Party1,0320.9110
Melanesian Progressive Party9920.880–2
Moderate Alliance Party7010.620New
5970.530–1
Vanuatu New Vision in Development Party4470.400New
Tafea Moderate Alliance4290.380New
Vanuatu Progressive Republican Farmer Party3550.310New
United Liberation Front3270.2900
Vanuatu Democratic Party3270.2900
Leaders Party for Change3220.280New
Vete Alliance3060.270New
Vemarana3040.2700
2110.1900
Vanuatu Community Reform Party1570.140New
People's Action Party800.0700
Vanuatu United and Equal Rights Part470.040New
Vanuatu Democratic Alliance and Liberation Party for Change80.0100
Independents20,90418.498+4
Total113,063100.00520
Valid votes113,06399.00
Invalid/blank votes1,1411.00
Total votes114,204100.00
Registered voters/turnout200,15957.06
Source: Vanuatu Daily

Aftermath[]

As there was not a clear majority of seats won by a single political party, parliamentarians from eight political parties and independent groups created a coalition to form a government.[16] This coalition called for Charlot Salwai, a francophone, to be elected as Prime Minister on 11 February 2016. The opposition did not oppose this motion and Salwai was elected Prime Minister of Vanuatu by parliamentary vote.[16] He declared his Cabinet the following day.

Portfolio Minister Party
Prime Minister Charlot Salwai Reunification of Movements for Change
Deputy Prime Minister, Minister for Trade Joe Natuman Vanua'aku Pati
Minister for Internal Affairs Graon mo Jastis Party
Minister for Foreign Affairs National United Party
Minister for Finance Nagriamel
Minister for Lands Ralph Regenvanu Graon mo Jastis Party
Minister for Public Utilities Leaders Party of Vanuatu
Minister for Justice Vanua'aku Pati
Minister for Climate Change Ham Lini National United Party
Minister for Education Independent
Minister for Health Vanuatu Green Confederation
Minister for Youth and Sport Union of Moderate Parties
Minister for Agriculture Independent
Source: Vanuatu Daily

A by-election was called in June 2016 to elect an MP for the Malo/Aore constituency after the death of Havo Molisale. Uri Warawara of the Land and Justice Party defeated Bani Livo, an independent candidate.[17]

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ Clark, Helen (2015-12-01). "Vanuatu: President Dissolves Parliament". The Diplomat. Retrieved 2017-04-15.
  2. ^ International, IDEA (2016-01-01). "Electoral System for National Legislature - Vanuatu". www.idea.int. Retrieved 2017-04-15.[permanent dead link]
  3. ^ Jump up to: a b Van Trease, Howard (2005-11-01). "The Operation of the single non-transferable vote system in Vanuatu". Commonwealth & Comparative Politics. 43 (3): 296–332. doi:10.1080/14662040500304833. ISSN 1466-2043.
  4. ^ Union, Inter-Parliamentary. "IPU database: VANUATU (Parliament), Last elections". www.ipu.org. Retrieved 2017-04-15.
  5. ^ Jump up to: a b Forsyth, Miranda; Batley, James (2016-07-02). "What the Political Corruption Scandal of 2015 Reveals about Checks and Balances in Vanuatu Governance". The Journal of Pacific History. 51 (3): 255–277. doi:10.1080/00223344.2016.1214247. ISSN 0022-3344.
  6. ^ Digest, Vanuatu (2016-01-20). "Convicted MPs launch new musical career on Facebook". Vanuatu Digest. Retrieved 2017-04-15.
  7. ^ Republic of Vanuatu IFES
  8. ^ Union, Inter-Parliamentary. "IPU database: VANUATU (Parliament), Electoral system". www.ipu.org. Retrieved 2017-04-15.
  9. ^ Jump up to: a b Observer Group, Commonwealth (2016-01-22). "Vanuatu General Elections" (PDF). The Commonwealth.
  10. ^ Jump up to: a b c Observer Group, Commonwealth (2016-01-22). "Vanuatu General Elections" (PDF). The Commonwealth.
  11. ^ Saneem, Mohammed (2016-02-18). "The Voting and Counting Process in Vanuatu - 2016 (Snap) General Election". LinkedIn.
  12. ^ "A deeper look at the Vanuatu election". Pacific Institute of Public Policy. Retrieved 2017-04-15.
  13. ^ "Official results – 2016 Vanuatu General Election". Vanuatu Digest. 2016-02-01. Retrieved 2017-04-28.
  14. ^ Observer Group, Commonwealth (2016-01-22). "Vanuatu General Elections" (PDF). The Commonwealth.
  15. ^ "One more MP for Vanuatu's GJP". Radio New Zealand. 25 April 2016.
  16. ^ Jump up to: a b Forsyth, Miranda; Batley, James (2016-07-02). "What the Political Corruption Scandal of 2015 Reveals about Checks and Balances in Vanuatu Governance". The Journal of Pacific History. 51 (3): 255–277. doi:10.1080/00223344.2016.1214247. ISSN 0022-3344.
  17. ^ "Mini-census to take stock of population movements since Cyclone Pam; GJP victorious in Malo/Aore by-election". Vanuatu Digest. 2016-06-30. Retrieved 2017-04-15.
Retrieved from ""