2023 Mauritanian parliamentary election

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2023 Mauritanian parliamentary election
Mauritania
 2018 13 May 2023 (first round)
27 May 2023 (second round)
2028 

All 176 seats in the National Assembly
89 seats needed for a majority
Turnout71.59% (Decrease0.87pp)
Party Leader Vote % Seats +/–
El Insaf Mohamed Ould Meguett[a] 35.25 107 +14
Tewassoul Hamadi Ould Sid'El Moctar 10.24 11 −3
UDP Naha Mint Mouknass 6.06 10 +4
Sawab–RAG Biram Dah Abeid 4.10 5 +2
Hope MR Collective leadership 3.33 7 +7
AND Yacoub Ould Moine 3.30 6 +2
El Islah Mohamed Ould Talebna 3.28 6 +5
HATEM Saleh Ould Hanenna 2.90 3 +3
El Karama Cheikhna Ould Hajbou 2.62 5 −1
NW Daoud Ould Ahmed Aicha 2.50 5 +5
AJD/MR+ Ibrahima Moctar Sarr 2.18 4 +3
HIWAR Valle Mint Mini 2.08 3 +2
PMM El Khalil Ould Ennahoui 2.08 1 +1
El Vadila Ethmane Ould Eboul Mealy 1.78 2 +2
CED Collective leadership 1.55 1 +1
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.
Prime Minister before Prime Minister-designate
Mohamed Ould Bilal
El Insaf
Mohamed Ould Bilal
El Insaf

Parliamentary elections were held in Mauritania on 13 and 27 May 2023, alongside regional and local elections.[1][2]

The elections were the first parliamentary elections held after the first peaceful transition of power in the country as a result of the 2019 presidential elections, in which Mohamed Ould Ghazouani was elected president after incumbent Mohamed Ould Abdel Aziz was not able to run due to the two-term constitutional limit.

Ruling El Insaf (Equity Party) managed to secure a majority in the National Assembly and increase its national list vote percentage, in part due to the smaller number of parties contesting this election. The party was forced into several runoffs and didn't sweep into all constituencies elected through a general ticket as in 2018. The opposition was completely restructured, with left-wing Union of the Forces of Progress, centre-left Rally of Democratic Forces and Haratine minority interests People's Progressive Alliance losing all of their seats in the National Assembly, with left-leaning Hope Mauritania replacing them as the hegemonic left-wing opposition.

The previous parliamentary elections in 2018 saw the incumbent Union for the Republic (UPR) re-elected with an absolute majority,[3] forming a coalition government with the Union for Democracy and Progress (UDP) with support of parties from the presidential majority, giving the UPR a comfortable majority in the National Assembly.[4]

After the elections, 76 parties from both the presidential majority and opposition camps were dissolved for not obtaining more than 1% or not participating in two consecutive local elections, based on an election law passed the year before, with only 28 parties left registered.[5][6][7]

Mohamed Ould Ghazouani from the UPR was elected president in the 2019 presidential elections, leading to the first peaceful transition of power in the country. Ghazouani quickly distanced himself from outgoing president Mohamed Ould Abdel Aziz, a divide that was made effective when Sidi Mohamed Ould Taleb Omar was elected president of the UPR, with Ould Abdel Aziz leaving the party. Ould Abdel Aziz was subsequently charged with "corruption, money laundering, illicit enrichment and abuse of influence" by the Public Prosecutor in March 2021 and referred to court in June 2022.[8] He had been jailed in June 2021,[9] until a bail was granted in January 2022 over health concerns.[10]

After the split between Ghazouani and Aziz, the parties of the presidential majority reaffirmed their support to Ghazouani when creating the Coordination of Parties of the Majority in April 2021, as the new alliance gathering the parties of the presidential majority heavily criticised the legacy of the former president.[11]

Four major political parties merged into the Union for the Republic. On 18 October 2018, a month after the previous parliamentary elections, the Unionist Party for the Construction of Mauritania (PUCM) voted to merge into the UPR.[12] On 21 October Choura for Development made the same decision,[13] while centrist El Wiam, a moderate opposition party, did the same on 29 October.[14] The last party to merge into the UPR was the National Pact for Democracy and Development (PNDD-ADIL), which was the ruling party from 2007 until the 2008 coup. PNDD-ADIL merged into the UPR on 27 December 2019.[15]

During the legislative term there were several cabinet reshuffles, the first one due to ministers appearing in papers from a parliamentary commission investigating corruption during the Aziz era, leading to the fall of Ismail Ould Bedde Ould Cheikh Sidiya's government in August 2020 and Mohamed Ould Bilal becoming the new PM.[16] The second one was in May 2021 to restructure several ministries.[17][18] The third one was in March–April 2022 after the resignation of Prime Minister Mohamed Ould Bilal, who was re-appointed the following day with a new cabinet.[19] The fourth and fifth ones were in September 2022, the first due to the government wanting to fit in former PM Moulaye Ould Mohamed Laghdaf since he was seen as more capable of negotiating with the opposition and helping the government win the next elections,[20][21] with the second one happening two weeks later.[22]

On 26 September 2022 an agreement between the Ministry of the Interior and Decentralisation and all political parties registered in Mauritania was reached to renew the Independent National Electoral Commission and hold the elections in the first semester of 2023, with parties justifying it due to climatic and logistical conditions.[23][24]

Electoral system

The signing ceremony of the final document of the consultation between the parties and the Ministry of Interior

On 26 September 2022 all Mauritanian political parties reached an agreement sponsored by the Ministry of Interior and Decentralisation to reform the election system ahead of the upcoming elections after weeks of meetings between all parties.[24]

The 176 members (an increase of 17 members compared to 2018) of the National Assembly will be elected by two methods (with Mauritanians being able to cast four different votes in a parallel voting system); 125 are elected from single- or multi-member electoral districts based on the departments (or moughataas) that the country is subdivided in[b] (which the exception of Nouakchott, which has been divided in three 7-seat constituencies for this election based on the three regions (or wilayas) the city is subdivided in instead of the single 18-seat constituency that was used in 2018),[24] using either the two-round system or proportional representation; in single-member constituencies candidates require a majority of the vote to be elected in the first round and a plurality in the second round. In two-seat constituencies, voters vote for a party list (which must contain one man and one woman); if no list receives more than 50% of the vote in the first round, a second round is held, with the winning party taking both seats. In constituencies with three or more seats, closed list proportional representation is used, with seats allocated using the largest remainder method.[26] For three-seat constituencies, party lists must include a female candidate in first or second on the list; for larger constituencies a zipper system is used, with alternate male and female candidates.[26]

The Mauritanian diaspora gets allocated four seats, with this election being the first time Mauritanians in the diaspora are able to directly elect their representatives.[24]

The remaining 51 seats are elected from three nationwide constituencies, also using closed list proportional representation: a 20-seat national list (which uses a zipper system), a 20-seat women's national list and a new 11-seat youth list (with two reserved for people with special needs), which also uses a zipper system to guarantee the representation of women.[24][26]

"One vote" system

In November 2022 President Ould Ghazouani called the parties supporting him to support the introduction of a single ballot system in the election, reducing the number of ballots from four to one.[27] It has been suggested that Ghazouani started to further push for this reform after ex-president Ould Abdel Aziz starting working on his election strategy, as the ruling party wants to ensure a victory in the upcoming elections.[28]

Political analyst Abdellahi Ould Mohamed Lemine told Maghreb Voices that he believes that adopting this option in voting will cancel the current method of election, which relies on ability of voters in choosing different parties per ballot (national lists and constituency), and that such reform would benefit the largest parties, especially El Insaf, which is capable of fielding candidates in all constituencies. This reform would also open the door to further disputes between the government and the opposition, which strongly opposed this method.[28]

Tewassoul called on political parties to coordinate to stand up to "the circumvention of the agreement", expressing their surprised at "the recent confusion about issues that were decided by the agreement", in reference to the "one vote" system. The party's spokesperson, Salek Ould Sidi Mahmoud, affirmed that he considers the issue as "an indication that does not encourage confidence in the government's commitment to the [election reform] agreement" and said that "the proposal to unify the card was put forward under the pretext of reducing the void cards, but it is a fact that greatly limits the voter's freedom of choice".[29]

On 16 February 2023, the National Independent Election Commission and the political parties agreed to ditch the idea of a unified ballot, deciding to keep the ballot design as it was.[30]

Parliamentary composition

The table below shows the composition of the parliamentary groups in the chamber when the National Assembly was dissolved on 13 March 2023.[6][7][31]

Parliamentary composition at dissolution
Groups Parties Legislators
Seats Total
El Insaf's Parliamentary Group El Insaf 103 103
Balance Parliamentary Group UDP 6 24[c]
El Karama 6
AND 4
PSJN 3
HIWAR 1
El Islah 1
Independent 3[d]
Tewassoul's Parliamentary Group Tewassoul 14 14
Sawab-APP's Parliamentary Group APP 3 7[34]
RAG 2[e]
Sawab 1
AJD/MR 1
UFP-RFD's Parliamentary Group RFD 3 7
UFP 3
Independent 1[f]
Non-Inscrits Independent 2[g] 2

Parties and alliances

The table below lists parties with parliamentary representation in the 9th National Assembly at the time of dissolution.[6][7][31]

Name Main ideology Position Party leader Deputies Government
El Insaf Populism
Liberal conservatism
Centre-right Mohamed Melainine Ould Eyih
103 / 157
Government
Tewassoul Sunni Islamism
Religious conservatism
Right-wing Hamadi Ould Sidi Mokhtar
14 / 157
Opposition
UDP Centrism
Civic nationalism
Centre Naha Mint Mouknass
6 / 157
Government
El Karama Social liberalism
Social democracy
Centre Cheikhna Ould Hajbou
6 / 157
External support
AND Social democracy Centre Yacoub Ould Moine
4 / 157
External support
UFP Left-wing nationalism
Democratic socialism
Left-wing Mohamed Ould Maouloud
3 / 157
Opposition
RFD Social democracy Centre-left Ahmed Ould Daddah
3 / 157
Opposition
APP Haratine interests
Social liberalism
Centre-left Messaoud Ould Boulkheir
3 / 157
Opposition
Sawab RAG Haratine interests
Social democracy
Centre-left Biram Dah Abeid
2 / 157
Opposition
Sawab Ba'athism
Arab nationalism
Syncretic Ahmed Salem Ould Horma
1 / 157
Opposition
PSJN Populism
Youth interests
Big tent Lalla Mint Cheriva
3 / 157
External support
CVECVE/VR AJD/MR Black minority interests Big tent Ibrahima Moctar Sarr
1 / 157
Opposition
HIWAR Youth interests
Social conservatism
Right-wing Valle Mint Mini
1 / 157
External support
El Islah Populism
Reformism
Centre Mohamed Ould Talebna
1 / 157
External support

In July 2022 the UPR rebranded itself as the Equity Party (El Insaf), electing Minister of Education and government spokesperson Mohamed Melainine Ould Eyih as president of the party,[36] with him leaving the cabinet shortly after to focus on leading the party.[37]

On 5 October 2022 the Union for Planning and Construction (UPC), until then a member of the Coordination of Parties of the Majority, decided to form a coalition with four political movements that were not allowed to be registered as political parties, forming the State of Justice Coalition, which would run under the UPC party label.[38]

On 22 December 2022, Hope Mauritania was presented as a left-leaning opposition alliance which was joined by several major politicians, including ex-MP Kadiata Malick Diallo (ex-UFP) and MPs Mohamed Lemine Ould Sidi Maouloud (ex-Choura) and Elid Ould Mohameden (RFD).[39][40]

On 25 December 2022, Tewassoul chose MP for Kiffa Hamadi Ould Sidi Mokhtar as the new party leader, replacing Mohamed Mahmoud Ould Seyidi.[41]

Campaign

Election debates

Private TV channel El Mourabitoun organised several television debates for candidates and representatives of major parties to talk about the election and its campaign and to debate about electoral issues.

2023 Mauritanian parliamentary election debates
Date Organisers     P  Present[h]    R  Representative    NI  Not invited 
El Insaf Tewassoul El Karama UFP RFD APP Sawab HIWAR El Islah HATEM CED Ribat CAP Ref.
30 April El Mourabitoun TV
The Electoral Scene
R
Sidi Heiba
R
Ahmed Salek
NI NI NI NI NI NI NI NI NI NI NI [42]
1 May El Mourabitoun TV
The Electoral Scene
NI NI R
Naha
R
Dedde
NI NI NI NI NI NI NI NI NI [43]
2 May El Mourabitoun TV
The Electoral Scene
NI NI NI NI R
El Mehdi
NI NI NI NI R
Deide
NI NI NI [44]
3 May El Mourabitoun TV
The Electoral Scene
NI NI NI NI NI NI NI NI R
El Nejib
NI P
Lemrabet
NI NI [45]
4 May El Mourabitoun TV
The Electoral Scene
NI NI R
Sidi
NI NI NI R
Abeid
NI NI NI NI NI NI [46]
5 May El Mourabitoun TV
The Electoral Scene
R
Arafat
NI NI NI NI R
Barka
NI NI NI NI NI NI NI [47]
7 May El Mourabitoun TV
The Electoral Scene
R
El Ghassem
NI NI NI NI NI NI R
Baba Ahmed
NI NI NI NI NI [48]
10 May El Mourabitoun TV
The Electoral Scene
NI NI NI NI NI NI NI NI NI NI NI R
Eilal
R
Nebagha
[49]

Opinion polls

Polling firm Fieldwork date Sample
size
Abs. UPR RNRD UDP El Karama AND UFP APP HATEM Others N/A Lead
Arab Barometer 21 November 2021 – 25 January 2022 2,000 10.40 18.60 5.95 2.50 1.35 1.50 3.05 3.20 1.65
1.85%
El Wiam on 1.15%
PNDD-ADIL on 0.7%
49.0 12.65
2018 election 1 Sep 2018 27.54 19.47 11.28 4.34 3.52 3.15 2.80 1.84 0.93 8.19

Conduct

Polling stations opened at 7AM local time (GMT).[50] Armed and security forces voted on the same day as the rest of eligible voters, breaking an old tradition of them voting the day before the scrutiny.[51] An election observation mission was sent by the African Union.[52]

Voting was stopped on at least three polling stations in Magta Lahjar after a grievance was submitted by El Insaf due to ballots missing for the local elections in these polling stations.[53]

Tewassoul asked for voting to be stopped in four polling stations in a village of Boutilimit and the dismissal of the head of the National Independent Election Commission (CENI) in the department of Boutlimit. In a statement, the party said it was "surprised" by the replacement of the heads of the four offices, "after the spread of audio clips of the head of CENI's branch in Boutilimit, directed by some of the activists and leaders of El Insaf in the department". The party pointed out that "under these suspicious changes, the head of El Insaf's youth wing in Boutilimit was appointed head of one of the four polling stations, while the remaining three appointed are activists known for their relations with the leadership of El Insaf and influential military figures, unlike the heads of the polling stations who remained accredited until yesterday [12 May] afternoon".[54]

Polling stations closed at 7PM local time, with polling stations that opened late being opened for the same duration of the delay. Both parties in government and opposition parties complained about the voting process, with Tewassoul's leader qualifying the election as "messy" and "disorganised"; while El Insaf also insisted on them being affected by the delays and some of their representatives being prevented from entering polling stations.[55] Meanwhile, the National Independent Election Commission praised the election for being conducted in a "calm and responsible atmosphere", insisting that there were no significant incidents that could impact the results or the credibility of the election.[56]

CENI announced during the scrutiny of votes that it detected the manipulation of the results of the El Mina department of Nouakchott where some votes were transferred from the null and neutral cards to a particular candidate, confirming that the matter had been corrected, and judicial procedures had taken its course after a candidate complained about the results and an inner investigation was launched.[57]

Voter turnout

Turnout updates

Time
12:00 16:00 18:30
18.00% 31.24% 41.12%
Sources[58][59][60]

Turnout by wilaya

Wilaya N W Y D
Adrar 71.27% 71.57% 71.61% 71.64%
Assaba 73.41% 73.01% 73.22% 73.87%
Brakna 76.82% 76.66% 76.49% 76.90%
Dakhlet Nouadhibou 69.64% 69.66% 69.42% 69.51%
Gorgol 77.37% 77.13% 77.36% 77.07%
Guidimagha 81.74% 81.70% 81.49% 81.40%
Hodh Ech Chargui 75.69% 75.87% 75.71% 76.86%
Hodh El Gharbi 77.23% 77.35% 77.19% 77.66%
Inchiri 61.24% 60.91% 77.19% 60.89%
Nouakchott-Nord 61.22% 61.29% 61.29% 61.10%
Nouakchott-Ouest 61.46% 61.19% 61.14% 60.88%
Nouakchott-Sud 66.83% 67.04% 66.76% 66.63%
Tagant 74.15% 73.91% 74.12% 74.39%
Tiris Zemmour 71.33% 71.18% 71.33% 71.21%
Trarza 67.58% 67.47% 67.53% 67.61%
Diaspora 62.49% 62.42% 62.52% 62.46%
Total 71.59% 71.53% 71.50% 71.71%

Turnout by district

Results

El Insaf secured a majority in the National Assembly and increased its national list vote percentage, in part due to the smaller number of parties contesting this election.[61] The party was forced into several runoffs and did not sweep into all constituencies elected through a general ticket as in 2018. The opposition saw a complete restructuring, with the left-wing UFP, the centre-left RFD and the APP, which represents Haratine interests, losing all of their seats in the National Assembly, with the left-leaning Hope Mauritania replaced them as the hegemonic left-wing opposition.[62]

PartyNational mixed listNational women's listNational youth listSeats
Votes%SeatsVotes%SeatsVotes%SeatsDistrictsTotal+/−
El Insaf342,15335.257329,35434.377333,39834.62489107+14
National Rally for Reform and Development99,43110.242103,36310.792103,05610.701611−3
Union for Democracy and Progress58,8236.06159,3976.20158,9836.121710+4
Sawab and allies39,8074.10138,5464.02138,4804.00125+2
Republican Front for Unity and Democracy and allies32,2963.33135,7223.73133,8473.51147New
National Democratic Alliance32,0273.30126,3122.75129,1433.03136+2
El Islah31,8773.28133,3143.48132,9463.42136+5
Mauritanian Party of Union and Change28,1242.90132,6603.41131,9883.32103+2
El Karama25,4372.62123,5922.46124,3182.52035−1
Nida El Watan24,2682.50125,0202.61125,3162.63035+5
Alliance for Justice and Democracy/Movement for Renewal and allies21,1632.18119,5502.04119,6662.04024+3
Party of Conciliation and Prosperity20,2082.08120,0532.09118,5391.92013+2
Party of the Mauritanian Masses20,2062.08113,9011.45011,2181.16001+1
Republican Party for Democracy and Renewal19,1101.97015,8801.66015,2911.590000
Union of the Forces of Progress17,3871.79016,3791.71015,7091.63000−3
El Vadila17,3031.78020,5892.15116,8501.75012+2
Party of Unity and Development16,1341.66015,6081.63018,9501.970000
Union for Planning and Building and allies15,0281.55016,5501.73025,0892.60011+1
Rally of Democratic Forces14,6481.51012,0401.26013,9371.45000−3
Burst of Youth for the Nation14,3451.48010,3741.08010,7281.11000−3
El Ravah13,8581.43013,8381.44016,2241.680000
People's Progressive Alliance12,1151.25013,1231.37012,5531.30000−3
National Cohesion for Rights and the Construction of Generations10,4201.07013,5321.41010,4371.080000
Party of Construction and Progress9,2810.96010,6281.1106,0520.630000
Centre through Action for Progress8,8130.91010,6991.12013,2941.38000New
Blank votes26,2912.7128,1382.9427,1202.82
Total970,553100.0020958,162100.0020963,132100.0011125176+19
Valid votes970,55375.88958,16274.98963,13275.41
Invalid/blank votes308,43324.12319,67325.02314,12824.59
Total votes1,278,986100.001,277,835100.001,277,260100.00
Registered voters/turnout1,786,44871.591,786,44871.531,786,44871.50
Source: National Independent Election Commission (CENI)[62]

National list results by wilaya

Party AD AS BR DN GO GU HC HG IN NN NO NS TA TZ TR XM MRT
El Insaf 37.42% 33.59% 37.54% 23.41% 28.49% 29.25% 40.13% 30.02% 46.30% 28.41% 26.00% 37.87% 49.67% 30.17% 48.70% 20.04% 35.26%
Tewassoul 7.61% 17.13% 6.34% 7.93% 4.02% 6.18% 9.16% 13.33% 6.30% 16.32% 10.90% 14.26% 6.42% 10.71% 10.07% 20.25% 10.25%
UDP 2.32% 2.19% 4.08% 4.07% 15.54% 25.50% 10.35% 6.60% 8.02% 2.71% 2.74% 1.82% 3.60% 4.87% 0.90% 4.03% 6.06%
Sawab–RAG 1.96% 2.86% 1.88% 5.59% 3.75% 13.39% 1.55% 1.15% 2.72% 5.28% 3.98% 5.65% 0.88% 3.30% 4.86% 13.83% 4.10%
Hope MR 1.03% 0.79% 4.93% 4.77% 3.04% 1.55% 0.47% 0.77% 1.20% 3.84% 6.67% 8.02% 0.59% 8.73% 3.14% 5.50% 3.33%
AND 2.22% 2.79% 1.01% 2.91% 6.26% 6.51% 2.59% 0.87% 2.76% 7.08% 4.50% 1.78% 1.99% 1.63% 3.55% 1.58% 3.30%
El Islah 13.26% 3.34% 1.71% 2.17% 1.54% 0.48% 4.70% 5.34% 2.08% 2.80% 4.24% 2.15% 3.11% 10.71% 2.35% 2.65% 3.28%
HATEM 1.76% 3.37% 0.98% 3.03% 0.38% 0.35% 5.74% 11.79% 1.54% 2.18% 2.07% 3.41% 1.43% 3.01% 1.32% 1.49% 2.90%
El Karama 0.62% 0.46% 5.55% 13.07% 8.99% 0.96% 1.22% 1.35% 0.51% 0.94% 1.14% 1.67% 0.45% 0.37% 0.56% 1.05% 2.62%
NW 0.69% 8.03% 0.59% 0.73% 0.75% 0.24% 2.64% 7.00% 1.29% 1.32% 3.01% 1.31% 0.63% 1.12% 2.79% 1.35% 2.50%
AJD/MR+ 0.37% 0.23% 6.50% 5.71% 4.42% 0.61% 0.15% 0.15% 1.46% 0.89% 3.08% 3.26% 0.09% 2.00% 0.35% 9.88% 2.18%
HIWAR 6.48% 3.87% 3.44% 2.20% 1.76% 1.62% 3.10% 1.71% 1.85% 0.88% 0.60% 0.77% 0.88% 2.08% 1.41% 0.67% 2.08%
PMM 3.87% 1.54% 0.66% 1.29% 0.46% 0.56% 1.97% 3.65% 1.26% 2.41% 4.07% 1.39% 1.43% 3.43% 3.35% 1.23% 2.08%
PRDR 1.06% 5.70% 1.38% 2.38% 4.74% 0.18% 0.63% 1.93% 1.12% 1.97% 1.39% 0.94% 1.51% 0.94% 1.53% 1.10% 1.97%
UFP 1.79% 2.97% 1.76% 1.69% 3.18% 1.41% 0.93% 1.04% 1.38% 2.02% 2.31% 1.91% 2.90% 1.58% 0.86% 1.16% 1.79%
El Vadila 1.08% 2.13% 4.44% 0.81% 1.29% 2.37% 1.08% 2.27% 0.60% 1.82% 1.05% 0.99% 2.13% 1.53% 0.87% 1.81% 1.78%
PUD 1.32% 0.65% 4.26% 0.99% 1.15% 0.42% 0.79% 3.40% 0.62% 1.93% 2.73% 0.83% 2.37% 0.70% 0.51% 1.63% 1.66%
CED 2.47% 0.73% 0.54% 1.95% 0.30% 0.27% 0.96% 0.81% 1.55% 2.38% 5.36% 1.75% 2.05% 2.24% 1.71% 2.35% 1.55%
RFD 0.83% 0.61% 1.23% 3.68% 0.67% 0.14% 1.48% 0.90% 1.47% 2.89% 2.51% 1.09% 2.76% 1.09% 1.86% 3.23% 1.51%
PSJN 1.89% 1.39% 3.64% 1.31% 4.61% 0.43% 0.94% 0.46% 0.46% 1.33% 0.89% 0.62% 1.55% 0.82% 0.32% 0.38% 1.48%
El Ravah 2.94% 0.66% 0.98% 1.25% 0.36% 1.14% 1.28% 0.75% 1.00% 1.37% 1.51% 0.96% 10.04% 0.53% 1.54% 0.92% 1.43%
APP 1.27% 0.56% 1.95% 1.47% 0.85% 1.77% 1.01% 0.55% 0.46% 1.91% 0.98% 2.58% 1.07% 2.52% 0.72% 0.67% 1.25%
Ribat 1.45% 0.25% 0.41% 3.39% 0.31% 0.52% 0.91% 0.30% 10.62% 2.59% 2.39% 0.95% 0.57% 2.30% 0.45% 0.85% 1.07%
PCP 0.72% 1.38% 1.13% 0.88% 0.60% 0.23% 1.19% 1.37% 0.57% 1.64% 1.33% 0.86% 0.42% 0.50% 0.61% 0.52% 0.96%
CAP 0.33% 0.25% 0.23% 0.56% 0.45% 0.31% 0.25% 0.24% 0.30% 0.65% 1.18% 0.71% 0.19% 0.38% 3.75% 0.14% 0.91%
Blank votes 3.24% 2.53% 2.84% 2.76% 2.09% 3.61% 4.78% 2.25% 2.56% 2.44% 3.37% 2.45% 1.27% 2.74% 1.92% 1.69% 2.70%
Valid votes 81.73% 64.79% 79.47% 86.82% 76.72% 78.37% 51.47% 67.24% 85.86% 85.33% 85.43% 85.76% 77.95% 86.63% 86.10% 86.30% 75.88%
Null votes 18.27% 35.21% 20.53% 13.18% 23.28% 21.63% 48.53% 32.76% 14.14% 14.67% 14.57% 14.24% 22.05% 13.37% 13.90% 13.70% 24.12%
Turnout 71.27% 73.41% 76.82% 69.64% 77.37% 81.74% 75.69% 77.23% 61.24% 61.22% 61.46% 66.83% 74.15% 71.33% 67.58% 62.49% 71.59%
Abstentions 28.73% 26.59% 23.18% 30.36% 22.63% 18.26% 24.31% 22.77% 38.76% 38.78% 38.54% 33.17% 25.85% 28.67% 32.42% 37.51% 28.41%
Registered voters 53,331 164,442 180,078 66,423 135,491 91,826 198,099 152,255 19,789 120,387 141,914 119,367 55,836 28,182 236,739 22,289 1,786,448
Source: National Independent Election Commission (CENI)[62]

Results by electoral district

Maps

Aftermath

Notes

References

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