2006 Bosnian general election explained

Country:Bosnia and Herzegovina
Previous Election:2002 Bosnian general election
Previous Year:2002
Next Election:2010 Bosnian general election
Next Year:2010
Election Date:1 October 2006
Turnout:55.31% (presidential) 0.14 pp
55.36% (parliamentary) 0.10 pp
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Election Name:Bosniak member of the Presidency
Image1:Visit to the Western Balkans region (cropped).jpg
Candidate1:Haris Silajdžić
Party1:Party for Bosnia and Herzegovina
Popular Vote1:350,520
Percentage1:62.80%
Candidate2:Sulejman Tihić
Party2:Party of Democratic Action
Popular Vote2:153,683
Percentage2:27.53%
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Election Name:Croat member of the Presidency
Image1:McElhaney Radmanovic Komsic (cropped).jpg
Candidate1:Željko Komšić
Party1:Social Democratic Party (Bosnia and Herzegovina)
Popular Vote1:116,062
Percentage1:39.56%
Candidate2:Ivo Miro Jović
Party2:Croatian Democratic Union of Bosnia and Herzegovina
Popular Vote2:76,681
Percentage2:26.14%
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Election Name:Serb member of the Presidency
Image1:Nebojsa Radmanovic.jpg
Candidate1:Nebojša Radmanović
Party1:Alliance of Independent Social Democrats
Popular Vote1:287,675
Percentage1:53.26%
Candidate2:Mladen Bosić
Party2:Serb Democratic Party (Bosnia and Herzegovina)
Popular Vote2:130,824
Percentage2:24.22%
Presidency members
Before Election:Sulejman Tihić (Bosniak)
Ivo Miro Jović (Croat)
Borislav Paravac (Serb)
After Election:Haris Silajdžić (Bosniak)
Željko Komšić (Croat)
Nebojša Radmanović (Serb)
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Seats For Election:All 42 seats in the House of Representatives
Majority Seats:22
Election Name:House of Representatives
Last Election1:3
Seats1:7
Percentage1:19.08
Last Election2:10
Seats2:9
Percentage2:16.89
Leader3:Haris Silajdžić
Last Election3:6
Seats3:8
Percentage3:15.54
Last Election4:4
Seats4:5
Percentage4:10.15
Last Election5:5
Seats5:3
Percentage5:7.69
Last Election6:5
Seats6:3
Percentage6:4.91
Last Election7:0
Seats7:2
Percentage7:3.73
Last Election8:0
Percentage8:2.72
Seats8:1
Last Election9:1
Percentage9:2.34
Seats9:1
Party10:Party of Democratic Progress
Last Election10:2
Seats10:1
Percentage10:2.01
Party11:Democratic People's Alliance
Last Election11:0
Seats11:1
Percentage11:1.42
Last Election12:1
Seats12:1
Percentage12:1.17
Map:Bosnia and Herzegovina, parliamentary election, 2006.png
Chairman
Before Election:Adnan Terzić
Before Party:Party of Democratic Action
After Election:Nikola Špirić
After Party:Alliance of Independent Social Democrats

General elections were held in Bosnia and Herzegovina on 1 October 2006. They decided the makeup of Bosnia and Herzegovina's Presidency as well as national, entity, and cantonal governments.

The elections for the House of Representatives were divided into two; one for the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina and one for Republika Srpska. In the presidential election, voters in the Federation elected Bosniak Haris Silajdžić and Croat Željko Komšić, while voters in Republika Srpska elected Serb Nebojša Radmanović. The Party of Democratic Action emerged as the largest party in the House of Representatives, winning 9 of the 42 seats.

Background

Analysts claimed that the 2006 election would be the most important since Bosnia and Herzegovina's independence from Yugoslavia, and the subsequent Bosnian War. With the previous government failing to agree reforms to the constitution, and Bosnian Muslim politicians continuing to threaten the abolition of Republika Srpska and officials in Republika Srpska continuing to speak of possible secession from the country in response, the election was seen as crucial in determining the future of Bosnia and Herzegovina. The results were tentatively welcomed by commentators, and described as bringing "small signs of change to a Bosnia where institutional fragmentation has cemented ethnic division", with the result suggesting "a certain retreat of nationalism among the Muslim and Croat communities".[1]

Controversy

A controversy emerged over the election of the Croatian member of Presidency. Although Željko Komšić, an ethnic Croat and member of the Social Democratic Party, he was alleged by his political opponents to have received votes mainly from Bosniaks. He was accused by his opponents that he was not the choice of Croats, but rather Bosniaks, citing that he did not win majority for Croat representative in any of the cantons with Croat majority. This is the result of the fact that in the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, both Bosniak and Croat Presidency members are on one ballot, letting the voter choose to vote in either category regardless of their own ethnicity.

Results

Presidency

One Presidency member was elected from each of the country's three constitutional peoples: Bosniaks, Croats and Serbs.[2]

House of Representatives

According to the constitution of Bosnia and Herzegovina, the representatives from the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina are allocated 28 seats, while the representatives from Republika Srpska have 14 seats. There are 42 seats in total.

By entity

House of Peoples

The 15 members of the House of Peoples were elected in the entities' Parliaments - 10 members by the House of Representatives of the Federal Parliament (5 Bosniaks and 5 Croats); and 5 members by the National Assembly of Republika Srpska.

Entity Parliaments

On the entity level, the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina and Republika Srpska elected new governments.

Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina

In the Federation this includes:

House of Representatives of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina

Republika Srpska

See main article: 2006 Republika Srpska general election. In the Republika Srpska, the government is made up of:

Canton Parliaments

All 289 mandates in the assemblies of the Cantons of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina were up for election; the same parties elected into the Federal Parliament were elected onto cantonal assemblies (skupština kantona/скупштина кантона in Bosnian and Serbian, sabor županije in Croatian).

Party
USK

PK

TK

ZDK

BPK

SBK

HNK

ZHK

KS

K10
Total
bgcolor=green Party of Democratic Action (SDA)1221213986align=right-10274
bgcolor=yellow Party for Bosnia and Herzegovina (Za BiH)61711875align=right-13159
bgcolor=red Social Democratic Party (SDP)62115632align=right-7143
bgcolor=blue Croatian Democratic Union BiH (HDZ BiH)align=right-7align=right-2align=right-679align=right-536
bgcolor=darkblue Croatian Democratic Union 1990 (HDZ1990)align=right-5align=right-align=right-align=right-378align=right-629
bgcolor=black Croatian Party of Right/New Croatian Initiativealign=right-2align=right-align=right-align=right-224align=right-414
bgcolor=blue People's Party Work for Bettermentalign=right-22111align=right-2align=right-110
bgcolor=orange Bosnian-Herzegovinian Patriotic Party-Sefer Halilović (BPS)align=right-align=right-131align=right-1align=right-2align=right-8
bgcolor=lightblue Democratic People's Community6align=right-align=right-align=right-align=right-align=right-align=right-align=right-align=right-align=right-6
bgcolor=darkred Bosnian Party/Social Democratic Union (BOSS/SDU)align=right-align=right-2align=right-align=right-align=right-align=right-align=right-3align=right-5
bgcolor=red Alliance of Independent Social Democratsalign=right-align=right-align=right-align=right-align=right-align=right-align=right-align=right-align=right-55
Source - Central Electoral Commission of Bosnia and Herzegovina

External links

Notes and References

  1. Nicholas Walton, A house divided: Bosnia after the elections, openDemocracy, 3 October 2006, accessed 25 November 2006
  2. [Dieter Nohlen]