Election Name: | 2019 Comorian presidential election |
Type: | Presidential |
Ongoing: | no |
Country: | Comoros |
Previous Election: | 2016 Comorian presidential election |
Previous Year: | 2016 |
Next Election: | 2024 Comorian presidential election |
Next Year: | 2024 |
Election Date: | 24 March 2019 |
Turnout: | 53.84% |
Candidate1: | Azali Assoumani |
Party1: | CRC |
Colour1: | 0471C3 |
Popular Vote1: | 96,635 |
Percentage1: | 60.77% |
Candidate2: | Mahamoud Ahamada |
Party2: | Independent politician |
Popular Vote2: | 23,233 |
Percentage2: | 14.61% |
Candidate3: | Mouigni Baraka Saïd Soilihi |
Party3: | Independent politician |
Popular Vote3: | 8,851 |
Percentage3: | 5.57% |
President | |
Before Election: | Azali Assoumani |
Before Party: | CRC |
After Election: | Azali Assoumani |
After Party: | CRC |
Vote Type: | Popular |
Early presidential elections were held in the Comoros on 24 March 2019 alongside regional elections.[1] A second round would have been held on 21 April if required,[2] but incumbent President Azali Assoumani was re-elected in the first round of voting.
Until 2018, the presidency of the Comoros rotated between the country's three main islands; Anjouan, Grande Comore and Mohéli. The 2010 elections were limited to Mohélian candidates and the 2016 elections saw candidates from Grand Comore contest the elections.[3] The next presidential election would have seen a president elected from Anjouan.
However, a constitutional referendum in July 2018 saw voters approve constitutional amendments that scrapped the rotation system and instituted a standard two-round system in which a candidate has to receive a majority of the vote in the first round to be elected, with a second round held if no candidate is able to win in the first round.[1] The changes also moved the next presidential elections forward to 2019 and allowed incumbent President Azali Assoumani run for a second term.[4]
The referendum led to violent protests and an armed uprising in Anjouan in October 2018, which was stopped by the military after several days.[5]
A total of 20 candidates registered to contest the elections, with the Supreme Court determining the final list of eligible participants.[6] Incumbent President Assoumani ran for reelection, whilst other candidates attempting to register included the two losing candidates from the nationwide vote in 2016 (Mohamed Ali Soilihi and Mouigni Baraka) and Salim Saadi, who contested the 2016 primary elections as an independent.[6] Seven of the 20 applicants were rejected, including the main opposition candidate Ibrahim Mohamed Soulé.[7]
Approved candidates | |||
---|---|---|---|
Candidate | Party | Notes | |
Mahamoud Ahamada | Independent | Lawyer to former President Ahmed Abdallah Mohamed Sambi | |
Azali Assoumani | Convention for the Renewal of the Comoros | Incumbent President | |
Said Djaffar Elmacely | Independent | ||
Hassani Hamadi | Independent | Governor of Grande Comore | |
Fahmi Said Ibrahim | Independent | ||
Hamidou Karihila | Independent | Former Secretary of State for the Arab Worldm, ex-CRC | |
Saïd Larifou | Independent | Leader of the RIDJA party | |
Ali Mhadji | Independent | MP for Hambou, ex-CRC | |
Ibrahim Ali Mzimba | Independent | President of the Bar Association | |
Salim Saadi | Independent | Entrepreneur | |
Achmet Saïd | Independent | Dean of the Faculty of Science and Technology | |
Mohamed Ali Soilihi | Union for the Development of the Comoros | ||
Mohamed Soilihi | Independent | Former Chief of Staff of the Comorian Army | |
Mouigni Baraka Saïd Soilihi | Independent | Former Governor of Grande Comore | |
Rejected candidates | |||
Bourhane Abdallah | Independent | Entrepreneur | |
Youssouf Boina | Independent | ||
Moustoifa Saïd Cheikh | Democratic Front | ||
Soilihi Mohamed Soilihi | Independent | Former ambassador to the United States | |
Zile Soilih | Independent | ||
Ibrahim Mohamed Soulé | Juwa Party | ||
Source: Al-Watwan |
Following the election, the fourth-placed candidate Mohamed Soilihi called for the results to be invalidated and for a campaign of civil disobedience. He was subsequently arrested.[7]