2009 Tunisian general election explained

Election Name:2009 Tunisian general election
Country:Tunisia
Previous Election:2004 Tunisian general election
Previous Year:2004
Election Date:25 October 2009
Next Election:2011 Tunisian Constituent Assembly election
Next Year:2011
Module:
Embed:yes
Election Name:Presidential election
Type:presidential
Ongoing:no
Turnout:89.45%
Image1:Zine El Abidine Ben Ali.jpg
Party1:Democratic Constitutional Rally
Popular Vote1:4,238,711
Percentage1:89.62%
Party2:Popular Unity Party (Tunisia)
Popular Vote2:236,955
Percentage2:5.01%
President
Before Election:Zine El Abidine Ben Ali
Before Party:Democratic Constitutional Rally
After Election:Zine El Abidine Ben Ali
After Party:Democratic Constitutional Rally

General elections were held in Tunisia on 25 October 2009.[1] Results released on 26 October 2009 indicated a substantial victory for incumbent President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali, who won the reelection for a fifth five-year term, and the governing Constitutional Democratic Rally. It was the last election contested under the Ben Ali regime, prior to the Tunisian Revolution.

Observers

The African Union sent a team of election observers to cover the election. The delegation was led by Benjamin Bounkoulou who described the election as "free and fair".[2] However, a spokesperson from the United States State Department indicated that Tunisia did not allow international monitoring of elections, but the U.S. was still committed to working with the president of Tunisia and its government.[3] There also were reports of mistreatment of an opposition candidate.[4]

Results

President

The Interior Ministry released the official results for the election on Monday 26 October 2009.[5] Voter turnout was recorded at 89.40% with 4,447,388 of Tunisia's 5.3 million registered voters participating.[6] In the presidential race, incumbent president Zine El Abidine Ben Ali won 89.62% of the vote.[5] His nearest rivals were Mohamed Bouchiha with 5.01% of the vote and Ahmed Inoubli with 3.80%, and Ahmed Brahum with 1.57%.[5]

Parliament

In the Chamber of Deputies election, the Democratic Constitutional Rally, which had governed continuously from Tunisia's independence from France in 1956 until the Tunisian Revolution, won 84.59% of the vote and 161 seats.[5] [6] The Movement of Socialist Democrats won 16 seats with 4.63% of the vote, the Popular Unity Party won 12 seats and 3.39% of votes, The Unionist Democratic Union won 9 seats with 2.56%.[6] The remaining 16 seats were divided between the Social Liberal Party, who won eight seats, the Green Party for Progress, who won six and the Movement Ettajdid who won two seats.[6]

External links

Media

Notes and References

  1. Official decree of 7 July 2009
  2. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/africa/8325378.stm Tunisian president in fifth win
  3. http://www.deseretnews.com/article/705339747/World-datelines.html World datelines
  4. http://www.menassat.com/?q=en/alerts/7221-opposition-leader-who-gave-tv-interview-paris-beaten-police-his-return Opposition leader who gave TV interview in Paris is beaten by police on his return
  5. https://www.google.com/hostednews/ukpress/article/ALeqM5hD3mJTU5193L_HktJ82jcSykTyIQ Fifth term for Tunisia's president
  6. http://www.tunisiaonlinenews.com/?p=27502 A parliamentary majority for the Constitutional Democratic Rally (RCD) with 89.59%