2020 Burkinabé general election

General elections were held in Burkina Faso on 22 November 2020 to elect the President and National Assembly.[1] In the presidential elections, incumbent president Roch Marc Christian Kaboré of the People's Movement for Progress was re-elected in the first round with 57.9% of the vote, avoiding the need for second round. The main campaign focus of the major presidential candidates was the growing insecurity in the country with the rise in terrorism and ethnic violence.[2]

2020 Burkinabé presidential election

22 November 2020 (2020-11-22)
 
Nominee Roch Marc Christian Kaboré Eddie Komboïgo Zéphirin Diabré
Party MPP CDP UPC
Popular vote 1,654,982 442,742 356,388
Percentage 57.87% 15.48% 12.46%

Presidential Election Results by Province. Orange denotes districts won by Kaboré, Red denotes districts won by Komboïgo and Green denotes districts won by Diabré.

President before election

Roch Marc Christian Kaboré
MPP

Elected President

Roch Marc Christian Kaboré
MPP

Electoral system

The President is elected using the two-round system;[3] if no candidate receives a majority of the vote in the first round, a second round will be held.

The 127 members of the National Assembly are elected by proportional representation; 111 are elected from 45 multi-member constituencies with between two and nine seats, with 16 elected from a single nationwide constituency.[4]

Campaign

In February 2019 former Prime Minister Kadré Désiré Ouédraogo announced that he would contest the presidential elections.[5]

Conduct

Due to instability, the election commission was unable to conduct voter registration in more than 17% of the country.[6] Fifty-two out of 127 members of parliament suggested that they would not be able to campaign in their constituency due to security concerns. With increased pressure from the government not to postpone the elections, the National Assembly passed a bill on 24 August to introduce a force majeure clause.[7] The clause allowed the elections to continue as normal and in areas where insecurity limited the vote from being held, the results from polling stations that were able to open dictated the result for the entire constituency. At the start of the campaign period, municipalities in six of the thirteen regions had cases of force majeure.[7] [8]

The COVID-19 pandemic also prevented voter registrations between 30 March and 25 May.[9]

On election day, voting did not take place in 926 of the 19,836 polling stations, disenfranchising 596,756 registered voters.[10]

Results

President

CandidatePartyVotes%
Roch Marc Christian KaboréPeople's Movement for Progress1,654,98257.87
Eddie KomboïgoCongress for Democracy and Progress442,74215.48
Zéphirin DiabréUnion for Progress and Reform356,38812.46
Kadré Désiré OuédraogoAct Together95,9773.36
Tahirou BarryNational Rebirth Party62,6392.19
Ablassé OuedraogoAlternative Faso51,5751.80
Gilbert Noël OuédraogoADF–RDA44,3471.55
Yacouba Isaac ZidaPatriotic Movement for Salvation43,4031.52
Abdoulaye SomaSun of the Future Movement40,2171.41
Segui Ambroise FaramaOrganisation of African Peoples – Burkina Faso25,7830.90
Kiemdoro do Pascalo SessoumaVision Burkina20,1580.70
Yéli Monique KamMovement for the Renaissance of Burkina Faso15,1240.53
Claude Aimé TassembedoIndependent6,4490.23
Total2,859,784100.00
Valid votes2,859,78495.54
Invalid/blank votes133,4964.46
Total votes2,993,280100.00
Registered voters/turnout5,893,40650.79
Source: CENI

National Assembly

The results for the National Assembly elections are as follows:[11]

Party National District Seats
Votes % Seats Votes % Seats Total +/–
People's Movement for Progress56+1
Congress for Democracy and Progress20+2
NTD13+10
UPC12-21
Union for Rebirth / Sankarist Party50
Movement for the Future of Burkina Faso4+4
ADF-RDA30
Patriotic Movement For Salvation3+3
Party for Development and Change3+3
Act Together2+2
National Congress for Progress2+2
Party for Democracy and Socialism/Metba10
Convergence for Progress and Solidarity-Generation 31+1
Pan-African Alliance for Reconstruction1+1
Progressives United for Renewal1+1

Aftermath

Although the opposition accused the government of committing electoral fraud before and after the election, on 27 November opposition leader Zephirin Diabre conceded defeat and met with Kabore to congratulate him on his re-election.[12]The opposition failed to produce substantial evidence of electoral fraud and the election commission quickly dismissed the claims of irregularities.[12] However, it did not necessarily mean that the election was without any irregularities at all. In the country's east, 30 people voted using fake ballot papers as there were not any "original" ballot papers available. However, Halidou Ouedraogo, President of local election monitoring organization CODEL said that it was not a widespread phenomenon and gave the election a mostly clean bill.[13]

References

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