Elections in Sudan

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

In typical elections, Sudan elects on a national level head of state - the president - and a legislature. In the election of 2010, there were two presidential elections, one for the Presidency of the Republic of Sudan and one for the Presidency of the Government of Southern Sudan. Elections for the unicameral, 360-member National Assembly were last held in April 2015.

The National Legislature whose members were chosen in mid-2005 had two chambers. The National Assembly (Majlis Watani) consisted of 450 appointed members who represented the government, former rebels, and other opposition political parties. The Council of States (Majlis Welayat) had 50 members who were indirectly elected by state legislatures. All members of the National Legislature served six-year terms.

In the early twenty-first century, Sudan was a dominant-party state with the National Congress in power. Opposition parties were allowed, but were widely considered to have no real chance of gaining power.

On 11 April 2019, Sudan was taken over by a military junta after the military seized power from the President in a coup. Federal elections were tentatively scheduled for 2022 under the 2019 Sudanese transition to democracy deal.[1]

History[]

Sudan has had national level elections since 1948 while it was still an Anglo–Egyptian colony. Independence from or union with Egypt was a major electoral platform in the 1948 election.[2]

Following the Comprehensive Peace Agreement, elections initially did not play a role in determining the composition of the interim national government, the South Sudan government, or the state legislatures.[3] An out of date national census and, in the case of South Sudan, a complete lack of infrastructure for conducting an election, rendered the electoral process moot.[3] As a result, all government officials and all governing bodies consisted of appointed officials until the completion of a census in 2008 and national elections in 2010.[3] The SPLM rejected the results of the census, claiming that it underestimated populations in the South.[3] The National Elections Act of 2008 provided the legal framework for conducting elections in Sudan, South Sudan, and in each state.[3] The National Elections Commission was responsible for developing the regulations, rules, and orders for the election of the national president, South Sudan president, state governors, National Assembly, South Sudan Legislative Assembly, and state assemblies.[3]

Latest elections[]

Presidential elections[]

Turnout by state.
CandidatePartyVotes%
Omar al-BashirNational Congress Party5,252,47894.05
Fadl el-Sayed Shuiab79,7791.43
Fatima Abdel MahmoudSudanese Socialist Democratic Union47,6530.85
Mohamed Elhassan MohamedNational Reform Party42,3990.76
Abdul Mahmoud Abdul Jabar Rahamtalla41,1340.74
Hamdi Hassan AhmedIndependent18,0430.32
Mohamed Ahmed Abdul Gadir Al ArbabIndependent16,9660.30
Yasser Yahiya Salih Abdul GadirIndependent16,6090.30
Khairi BakhitIndependent11,8520.21
Adel Dafalla JabirIndependent9,4350.17
Mohamed Awad Al BarowIndependent9,3880.17
Asad Al Nil Adel Yassin Al SaafiIndependent9,3590.17
Alam Al Huda Ahmed Osman Mohamed AliIndependent8,1330.15
Ahmed Al Radhi Jadalla SalemIndependent7,7510.14
Isaam Al Ghali Tajj Eddin AliIndependent7,5870.14
Omar Awad Al Karim Hussein AliIndependent6,2970.11
Total5,584,863100.00
Valid votes5,584,86391.68
Invalid/blank votes506,5498.32
Total votes6,091,412100.00
Registered voters/turnout13,126,98946.40
Source: NEC

Parliamentary elections[]

Party Proportional seats Reserved seats Constituency seats Total
seats
+/–
Votes % Seats Votes % Seats Votes % Seats
National Congress 3,915,590 78.32% 67 4,321,901 83.37% 107 149 323 0
218,120 4.36% 4 249,768 4.82% 6 15 25 +23
214,531 4.29% 4 2 6 +5
Democratic Unionist Party 114,806 2.30% 2 137,265 2.65% 3 10 15 +11
79,292 1.59% 1 107,102 2.07% 3 3 7 +4
60,373 1.21% 1 36,899 0.71% 1 1 3
49,923 1.00% 1 63,770 1.23% 2 1 4
35,309 0.71% 1 45,199 0.87% 1 3 5
National Umma Party 30,966 0.62% 1 2 3 +2
30,254 0.61% 1 33,046 0.64% 1 0 2
30,079 0.60% 1 43,199 0.83% 1 0 2
29,642 0.59% 1 3 4
27,466 0.55% 0 39,783 0.77% 1 0 1
Movement for Justice and Equality Party 26,723 0.53% 0 18,493 0.36% 0 0 0
25,990 0.52% 0 30,107 0.58% 1 0 1
23,089 0.46% 0 27,260 0.53% 1 0 1
Justice Party 18,196 0.36% 0 0 0
National Movement for Peace and Development Party 17,231 0.34% 0 14,732 0.28% 0 0 0
Sudanese Socialist Democratic Union 16,508 0.33% 0 0 0
14,018 0.28% 0 15,595 0.30% 0 1 1
Sudanese National Front Party 12,740 0.25% 0 0 0
Sudanese Socialist Union Party al-Maywa 8,686 0.17% 0 0 0
1 1
1 1
1 1
1 1
Independents 19 19 +16
Invalid/blank votes
Total 4,999,532 100 85 5,184,119 100 128 213 426 –24
Registered voters/turnout
Source: NEC

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ Kirby, Jen (2019-07-06). "Sudan's military and civilian opposition have reached a power-sharing deal". Vox. Archived from the original on 2019-07-06. Retrieved 2019-07-06.
  2. ^ "The Sudan Elections". The Spectator. 1948-11-26. Archived from the original on 2019-07-13. Retrieved 2019-07-13.
  3. ^ a b c d e f Shinn, David H. (2015). "Elections" (PDF). In Berry, LaVerle (ed.). Sudan : a country study (5th ed.). Washington, D.C.: Federal Research Division, Library of Congress. pp. 232–234. ISBN 978-0-8444-0750-0. Public Domain This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.CS1 maint: postscript (link)

External links[]


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