2019 Mauritian general election explained

Country:Mauritius
Type:parliamentary
Previous Election:2014 Mauritian general election
Previous Year:2014
Next Election:2024 Mauritian general election
Next Year:2024
Majority Seats:35
Image1:Pravind Kumar Jugnauth March 12, 2018 (1) (cropped).jpg
Leader1:Pravind Jugnauth
Party1:Militant Socialist Movement
Alliance1:Mauritian Alliance
Seats1:42
Popular Vote1:805,036
Percentage1:37.68%
Leader2:Navin Ramgoolam
Party2:Labour Party (Mauritius)
Alliance2:National Alliance
Seats2:17
Popular Vote2:699,807
Percentage2:32.76%
Leader4:Paul Bérenger
Party4:Mauritian Militant Movement
Popular Vote4:439,402
Percentage4:20.57%
Seats4:9
Image5: OPR
Leader5:Serge Clair
Party5:Rodrigues People's Organisation
Popular Vote5:20,777
Percentage5:0.97%
Seats5:2
Prime Minister
Before Election:Pravind Jugnauth
Before Party:Militant Socialist Movement
After Election:Pravind Jugnauth
After Party:Militant Socialist Movement

General elections were held in Mauritius on 7 November 2019. The result was a victory for the Mauritian Alliance, a coalition of the Militant Socialist Movement (MSM), Muvman Liberater, Alan Ganoo Movement and Plateforme Militante, which won 42 of the 70 seats. Pravind Jugnauth of the MSM remained Prime Minister.

Electoral system

The National Assembly has 62 elected members elected in 20 three-seat constituencies and one two-seat constituency (the island of Rodrigues). The elections are held using the block vote system, whereby voters have as many votes as there are seats available.[1]

In addition to the elected members, the Electoral Supervisory Commission has the power to appoint a further eight members. The additional members are chosen from amongst the unsuccessful candidates who received the highest number of votes, and are appointed with the aim of balancing the parliamentary representation of different ethnic groups.[2]

Results

The ruling Militant Socialist Movement (MSM) won over half of the seats in Parliament, meaning incumbent Prime Minister Pravind Jugnauth, who took over from his father Anerood Jugnauth in 2017, will serve a full five-year term as Prime Minister.[3]

Of the 62 directly-elected seats, the MSM won 38, the Labour Party won 14, the Mauritian Militant Movement (MMM) won 8, and the Rodrigues People's Organisation (OPR) won 2 seats from the island of Rodrigues.

Aftermath

Following the announcement of the results and the formation of a new government, several legal petitions were lodged in Supreme Court challenging the validity of the results, claiming electoral irregularities, a lack of transparency, undue influence by political activists and allegations of fraud and electoral bribery.[4] The presence of independent monitors was claimed to have been ineffective.[5] The government was also criticised for its intensive use of state media.[6] Murdered activist Kistnen was rumoured to be about to disclose details of how 1,200 Bangladeshi nationals had been taken to vote multiple times in different constituencies and that the MSM had exceeded spending limits.[7] However, according to international observers from the SADC and from the French diplomacy, the election was free and fair.[8] [9]

Notes and References

  1. http://www.ipu.org/parline-e/reports/2209_B.htm Electoral system
  2. http://www.ipu.org/parline-e/reports/2209_A.htm General information
  3. News: Mauritius elects incumbent PM for five-year term. Jean Paul Arouff. www.nasdaq.com. en. 8 November 2019.
  4. Web site: Kasenally . Roukaya . 2019 General election in Mauritius: Is our democracy in danger? . 8 January 2020 . L'Express . 8 January 2020.
  5. News: Contestation des élections: quels autres recours que la justice pour l'opposition ? . L'Express . November 2019.
  6. Web site: Spooner . Moina . How Pravind Jugnauth clinched the win in Mauritius' elections . The Conversation.
  7. Web site: Jasodanand . Narain . Affaire Kistnen: une bande organisée sévit-elle en toute liberté et sous haute protection? . 28 December 2020 . L'Express . 2020-12-28.
  8. Web site: Mauritius: SADC Observer Mission Endorses Mauritius Poll. 11 November 2019.
  9. Web site: Présentation de Maurice.