1905 Cuban general election explained

Country:Cuba
Election Date:1 December 1905
Previous Election:1901 Cuban general election
Previous Year:1901
Next Election:1908 Cuban general election
Next Year:1908
Module:
Embed:yes
Election Name:Presidential election
Type:presidential
Image1:Portrait of Tomás Estrada Palma.jpg
Nominee1:Tomás Estrada Palma
Party1:Moderate Party
Popular Vote1:306,874
President
Before Election:Tomás Estrada Palma
Before Party:Independent politician
After Election:Tomás Estrada Palma
After Party:Moderate Party

General elections were held in Cuba on 1 December 1905.[1] Tomás Estrada Palma won the presidential election, whilst his Moderate Party won all twelve seats in the Senate and 31 of the 32 seats in the House of Representatives, winning 27 of the 63 seats. Voter turnout was 74%.[2]

Results

House of Representatives

Aftermath

The election results were highly contested and accusations of fraud were made. Registration of voters by local electoral boards resulted in an electoral roll of 423,313, a figure American Secretary of War William Howard Taft and Assistant Secretary of State Robert Bacon declared to be 150,000 names too high. According to American professor Russell H. Fitzgibbon, La Discussion, a leading moderate newspaper, protested about electoral fraud. According to a Taft Bacon report of 1906, Freyre de Andrade, a Cuban minister, told American commissioners that it was "impossible to hold an election in Cuba without fraud" and that thousands of extra names had perhaps been added "out of spirit of mischief."[3]

In 1906 American President Theodore Roosevelt created a Peace Commission following the Cuban rebellions of the summer of 1906. The commission was sent to Cuba to investigate the situation and "attempt to restore peace and re-establish law and Order." The Peace Commission found that the congressional elections of 1905 had been "so tainted by fraud as to render them illegal". Taft as self-declared provisional governor of Cuba subsequently suspended the Congress.[4]

Notes and References

  1. [Dieter Nohlen]
  2. Nohlen, p204
  3. Russell H. Fitzgibbon (1935) Cuba and the United States: 1900-1935, p115
  4. https://archive.org/details/annualreportcha01magogoog/page/n20/mode/2up Annual Report of Charles E. Magoon, Provisional Governor of Cuba, to the Secretary of War