2020 Mostar municipal elections explained
See main article: 2020 Bosnian municipal elections.
Election Name: | 2020 Mostar municipal elections |
Previous Election: | 2008 Mostar municipal elections |
Previous Year: | 2008 |
Next Election: | 2024 Mostar municipal elections |
Next Year: | 2024 |
Country: | Mostar |
Election Date: | 20 December 2020 |
Module: | Embed: | yes | Election Name: | Mayoral election | Type: | presidential | Ongoing: | no | 1Blank: | First round | 2Blank: | Second round | 3Blank: | Third round | Image1: | Mario Kordić.jpg | Candidate1: | Mario Kordić | Party1: | HDZ BiH | Electoral Vote1: | 17 | Percentage1: | 48.57% | Candidate2: | Zlatko Guzin | Party2: | SDA | Electoral Vote2: | 16 | Percentage2: | 45.71% | Mayor | Before Election: | Ljubo Bešlić | Before Party: | HDZ BiH | After Election: | Mario Kordić | After Party: | HDZ BiH | Module: | Embed: | yes | Election Name: | Assembly election | Ongoing: | no | Seats For Election: | All 35 seats in the City Council | Majority Seats: | 18 | Turnout: | 55.59% | Percentage1: | 35.27 | Last Election1: | 7 | Seats1: | 13 | Party2: | SDA | Leader2: | Zlatko Guzin | Percentage2: | 30.08 | Last Election2: | 12 | Seats2: | 11 | Leader3: | Arman Zalihić | Percentage3: | 13.19 | Last Election3: | 3 | Seats3: | 6 | Percentage4: | 7.08 | Last Election4: | New | Seats4: | 3 | Percentage5: | 4.83 | Last Election5: | 0 | Seats5: | 1 | Party6: | PMP | Colour6: | blue | Leader6: | Nazif Derviškadić | Percentage6: | 3.89 | Last Election6: | New | Seats6: | 1 | Speaker | Before Election: | Vacant | After Election: | Salem Marić | After Party: | SDA |
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Type: | presidential |
Municipal elections were held in Mostar on 20 December 2020 to elect members of the City Council and the mayor of Mostar. The elections were part of the Bosnian municipal elections, although the elections in the rest of the country the elections were held earlier, on 15 November.
Background
The first local elections after a twelve-year intermission were held in Mostar after the Constitutional Court of Bosnia and Herzegovina amended the election regulations relating to that city, and in the middle of the year a political agreement was reached with the mediation of international officials on the method of electing city councilors. Croatian Democratic Union of Bosnia and Herzegovina and the Party of Democratic Action have unsuccessfully negotiated new election rules for more than nine years, that is, how many councilors will be elected from which constituency. They agreed on this only in the middle of 2020, after strong pressure from the international community and after the judgment of the European Court of Human Rights from October 2019 following the lawsuit of Irma Baralija from Mostar. The European Court ruled that the fact that there were no elections in Mostar for so long represented a violation of the human and civil rights of the inhabitants of that city.[1]
Mostar is one of the cities in Bosnia and Herzegovina known for its ethnic division. Since the end of the war in Bosnia, the city has been divided into a western part with a Croat majority and an eastern part with a Bosniak majority. According to the 2013 census, Croats make up 48.4% of the city, Bosniaks 44.1% and Serbs 4.1%.
Election system
When electing councilors to the City Council of the City of Mostar, voters vote on two ballots. One is used to elect parties at the level of the entire city, and the other at the level of six city areas, in three of which Bosniaks make up the majority, and in three Croats. There are 35 councilors in the council, of which 13 are elected from the city constituency, and 22 are proportionally divided according to the number of voters in six city areas. Seats distributed by the Sainte-Laguë method for parties that have crossed the electoral threshold of 3%.
The mayor of Mostar is elected indirectly from the City Council. If in two rounds of voting none of the candidates receives two-thirds support from 35 councilors, a third round is organized in which a simple majority is sufficient.[2] In case of a tie, the mayor will become a younger candidate.[3]
City council elections
City areas
The six city areas were divided in such a way that the city is divided into two parts, i.e. three cover majority Bosniak settlements and three majority Croats. The settlement of Mostar is divided into three parts, which belong to the city areas of Old City, West and Southwest. On the other hand North, Southeast and South includes rural parts on both riversides of Neretva.
North
Party list | Votes | % | Seats |
---|
| Coalition for Mostar | 3,825 | 65.90 | 2 |
| SDP - NS | 1,069 | 18.42 | 0 |
| HDZ BiH | 456 | 7.86 | 0 |
| SNSD - SDS | 439 | 7.56 | 0 |
others | 15 | 0.26 | - |
Total: | 5,804 | 100.00 | 2 |
---|
Invalid votes: | 394 | 6.36 | |
Turnout: | 6,198 | 58.48 | |
Registered voters: | 10,598 | | |
Source: Central Election Commission | |
Old City
Party list | Votes | % | Seats |
---|
| Coalition for Mostar | 5,309 | 44.66 | 2 |
| SDP - NS | 4,732 | 39.80 | 2 |
| PMP | 1,111 | 9.35 | 1 |
| PzP | 419 | 3.52 | 0 |
| SNSD - SDS | 242 | 2.04 | - |
others | 75 | 0.63 | - |
Total: | 11,888 | 100.00 | 5 |
---|
Invalid votes: | 870 | 6.82 | |
Turnout: | 12,758 | 54.44 | |
Registered voters: | 23,436 | | |
Source: Central Election Commission | |
Southeast
South
Southwest
West
City constituency
Party list | Votes | % | Seats |
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| HDZ BiH | 18,901 | 35.35 | 5 |
| Coalition for Mostar | 15,903 | 29.74 | 4 |
| SDP - NS | 7,148 | 13.37 | 2 |
| HRS | 3,798 | 7.10 | 1 |
| SNSD - SDS | 2,585 | 4.83 | 1 |
| PzP | 1,445 | 2.70 | - |
| Independent list right on the city | 1,310 | 2.45 | - |
| HDZ 1990 | 1,206 | 2.26 | - |
others | 1,171 | 2.20 | - |
Total: | 53,467 | 100.00 | 13 |
---|
Invalid votes: | 2,605 | 4.65 | |
Turnout: | 56,072 | 55.59 | |
Registered voters: | 100,864 | | |
Source: Central Election Commission | |
Combined results
Mayoral election
The city council was constituted on 5 February 2021, and the first round of elections for mayor was held there, in which none of the candidates received the required majority. Before voting in the second round, the representatives of the Coalition for Mostar, which includes the SDA, SBB, DF, SBIH and BPS, left the session, resulting in a lack of quorum, which is why the voting was postponed to February 10.[4] After the first round, High Representative Valentin Inzko sent a message to the councilors that the election in the first round was invalid because the voting was held in public, which is contrary to the city's statute, which provides for secret voting. For this reason, on February 10, the first round of elections was repeated, which enabled new candidacies. In the end, Mario Kordić with 14 votes and Zlatko Guzin with 12 went to the second round, the other candidates were eliminated. The second round of elections was planned for February 12, but was postponed to February 15 at the request of several councilors.[5] The second round was held on 15 February, and even then no one got the required majority, 17 councilors voted for Kordić and 14 for Guzin. The third round was held immediately after that, and Kordić again won 17 votes, which was enough for him to be elected mayor, while Guzin won 16 votes.[6]
Candidate | Party | 1st ballot | 1st ballot | 2nd ballot | 3rd ballot |
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Mario Kordić | HDZ BiH | 14 | 14 | 17 | 17 |
Zlatko Guzin | SDA | 11 | 12 | 14 | 16 |
Irma Baralija | NS | 5 | 2 | colspan="2" |
Arman Zalihić | SDP | - | 0 | colspan="2" |
Invalid votes | - | 3 | 1 | 2 |
Abstained | 5 | 4 | 3 | - |
Total: | 35 | 35 | 35 | 35 |
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Majority needed | 24 | 24 | 24 | Relative | |
Notes and References
- Web site: 21 December 2020 . Privremeni rezultati izbora u Mostaru: HDZ-u BiH 37, a SDA 29 posto glasova . Provisional election results in Mostar: HDZ BiH 37 and SDA 29 percent of votes . 31 January 2023 . Telegram . hr.
- Web site: 10 February 2021 . HDZ-ov Kordić i SDA-ov Guzin se plasirali u drugi krug izbora za gradonačelnika Mostara, u prvome tajnim glasovanjem dobili najveću potporu . HDZ's Kordić and SDA's Guzin made it to the second round of the election for the mayor of Mostar, in the first round they received the most support by secret ballot. . 31 January 2023 . Slobodna Dalmacija . hr.
- Web site: 10 February 2021 . Kordić i Guzin u drugom krugu izbora za gradonačelnika Mostara . Kordić and Guzin in the second round of the election for mayor of Mostar . 31 January 2023 . Al Jazeera . bs.
- Web site: 5 February 2021 . Prekinuta sjednica Gradskog vijeća: Mostar i dalje bez gradonačelnika . Interrupted session of the City Council: Mostar still without a mayor . 31 January 2023 . Al Jazeera . bs.
- Web site: 12 February 2021 . Mostar bez gradonačelnika, nastavak sjednice GV-a u ponedjeljak . Mostar without a mayor, continuation of the City council session on Monday . 31 January 2023 . Al Jazeera . bs.
- Web site: 15 February 2021 . Mario Kordić novi gradonačelnik Mostara . Mario Kordić, the new mayor of Mostar . 31 January 2023 . Al Jazeera . hr.