2020 Malian parliamentary election

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Parliamentary elections were held in Mali on 29 March 2020, with a second round on 19 April.[1] They were initially scheduled to be held on 25 November and 16 December 2018,[2] but were moved to April 2019 and then to June 2019,[3][4] before being postponed until 2020 by the Council of Ministers.[5] The elections were marred by violence in the north and center of the country.[6]

Quick facts Turnout, Party ...
2020 Malian parliamentary election

 2013
29 March 2020 (first round)
19 April 2020 (second round)
Next 

All 147 seats in the National Assembly
74 seats needed for a majority
Turnout35.58% (first round)
35.25% (second round)
Party Leader Seats +/–
RPM Ibrahim Boubacar Keïta 51 −15
ADEMA-PASJ Tiémoko Sangaré 24 +8
URD Soumaïla Cissé 19 +2
MPM Hadi Niangado [fr] 10 New
ADP-MALIBA Aliou Boubacar Diallo [fr] 6 +4
CODEM Housseini Amion Guindo 5 0
ASMA-CFP Soumeylou Boubèye Maïga 4 +2
UDL Hassane Barry 4 +3
SADI Oumar Mariko 3 −2
Yéléma 2 +2
PARENA Tiébilé Dramé 2 −1
CDS-Mogotiguiya Mamadou Bakary Sangaré 2 0
PRVM Mamadou Sidibé 1 0
UM-RDA Mamadou Bamou Touré 1 −1
PDES Hamed Diané Séméga [fr] 1 −2
APR 1 New
MPR Choguel Kokalla Maïga 1 −2
UFDP Youssouf Traoré 1 +1
PMK 1 New
PS Yelen Kura 1 New
Other parties 5
Independents 2 −2
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.
President of the National Assembly before President of the National Assembly after
Issaka Sidibé
RPM
Moussa Timbiné
RPM
Close

These were the first elections to fill Mali's 147-seat parliament since 2013.[7]

Thousands of Malians have died as the country suffered sporadic attacks by jihadists as well as cases of inter-ethnic violence since unrest began in 2012.[7]

Electoral system

The 147 members of the National Assembly are elected from 125 constituencies using the two-round system to serve five-year terms. In constituencies where there is more than one seat to be elected, block voting is used.[8]

A gender parity law requiring a minimum percentage of thirty percent women for candidates for Malian elected bodies and for appointments to governmental bodies was established as Law 2015-052 of 18 December 2015,[9] after winning a vote in the National Assembly on 12 November 2015.[10] In the first round of the 2020 legislative election, 427 out of 1451 candidates were women. In the final result from the second round, the new parliament had 42 women out of 147 seats (29%), about three times the 9.5% fraction in the previous parliament.[9]

Conduct

Leader of the opposition Soumaïla Cissé was kidnapped on 26 March, three days prior to the elections.[11] Village chiefs, election officials, and an election observer were kidnapped; there were death threats and a police station was ransacked according to the Coalition for the Observation of Elections in Mali, which had sent 1,600 observers. Nine people were killed when their vehicle hit a landmine on 29 March. Three soldiers were killed and three injured in another landmine explosion on 30 March. An al-Qaeda-aligned group took responsibility for the bombings, as well as an attack on soldiers and the killing of a group of Dozo hunters on 27 March.[6]

Some people were not able to vote on 19 April, and on 30 April the Constitutional Court overturned the results for 31 seats. Keita's Rally for Mali was given ten additional seats in Parliament, making it the largest bloc.[12]

Results

Parties formed different alliances in different constituencies, making it impossible to determine a national set of vote figures.[13] The election continued a decades-long trend of turnout being under 40% in the country, and the first-round elections were marred by violence in the north and center of the country.[6] The Voice of America reported voter turnout of only 12% in Bamako because of concerns about COVID-19, violence, and voter indifference.[14]

More information Party, Seats ...
Party Seats
First
round
Second
round
Total +/−
Rally for Mali104151−15
Alliance for Democracy in Mali22224+8
Union for the Republic and Democracy41519+2
Movement for Mali [fr]01010New
Democratic Alliance for Peace336+4
Convergence for the Development of Mali0550
Alliance for Solidarity in Mali044+2
Union for Democracy and Development044+3
African Solidarity for Democracy and Independence123−2
Yéléma112+2
Party for National Rebirth022−1
Social Democratic Convention0220
Party for the Restoration of Malian Values0110
Malian Union for the African Democratic Rally101−1
Party for Economic Development and Solidarity011−2
Alliance for the Republic011New
Patriotic Movement for Renewal011−2
Union of Democratic Forces for Progress011+1
Mali Kanu Party011New
Socialist Party Yelen Kura011New
Other parties055
Independents022−2
Votes cast First round Second round
Votes%Votes%
Valid votes2,603,15795.482,186,07792.67
Invalid/blank votes123,1354.52172,8327.33
Total2,726,2921002,358,909100
Registered voters/turnout7,663,46435.586,691,30535.25
Source: First round:[15][16] Second round:[17][18]
Close

Aftermath

Opposition parties established the Mouvement du 5 juin - Rassemblement des forces patriotiques (in French) (5 June Movement - Rally of Patriotic Forces) and thousands led by Mahmoud Dicko marched in protest on 5 June.[12] Soumaïla Cissé was reappointed Prime Minister on 11 June, and massive protests calling for President Keita's resignation were held on 19 June.[12]

A coup forced the resignation of Keita and Dicko as well as the dissolution of parliament on 19 August.[12][19]

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI