2021 Ethiopian general election

General elections were supposed to be held in Ethiopia on 29 August 2020 to elect officials to the House of Peoples' Representatives,[1] but were delayed due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[2] Regional and municipal council elections were also planned to be held at the same time around the country.[3] In May the sitting House of Representatives voted to postpone the election until 2021.[4] In late December 2020, the National Election Board of Ethiopia stated that it would take place on 5 June 2021.[5]

2021 Ethiopian general election

5 June 2021

All 547 seats in the House of Peoples' Representatives
274 seats needed for a majority
 
Leader Abiy Ahmed Berhanu Nega Merera Gudina
Party Prosperity Party Ethiopian Citizens for Social Justice Medrek
Last election 512 seats New party 0 seats
Current seats 512 New party 0 seats
Seats needed 274 274

 
Leader Dawud Ibsa Ayana Mohammed Omar Osman Belete Molla
Party Oromo Liberation Front Ogaden National Liberation Front National Movement of Amhara
Last election New party New party New party
Current seats New party New party New party
Seats needed 274 274 274

Incumbent Prime Minister

Abiy Ahmed
Prosperity Party


The Ethiopian People's Revolutionary Democratic Front, along with three out of the four member parties of the political coalition which had dominated Ethiopian politics since the overthrow of the Derg regime in 1991, namely Amhara Democratic Party (ADP), Oromo Democratic Party (ODP) and Southern Ethiopian People's Democratic Movement (SEPDM), was dissolved on 1 December 2019. Most of its member parties were merged into the Prosperity Party, which inherited the EPRDF's role as the governing party. The last leader of the EPRDF, Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed, became the first leader of the new party.

Tigray conflict

The Tigray People's Liberation Front, a powerful entity within the EPRDF, was the only constituent party that did not merge into the new Prosperity Party. In September 2020, Tigray Region held parliamentary elections that Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed's government deemed illegal.[6]

Attacks on 4 November 2020 by Tigray regional security forces on the headquarters of the Northern Command of the Ethiopian National Defense Force (ENDF) belonging to the Government of Ethiopia led to the armed Tigray conflict between the Government and the TPLF.[7][8] In late November and in December, the Tigray Region government was replaced by the Transitional Government of Tigray.[9] TPLF was then dissolved by the National Election Board of Ethiopia [10]

References

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