2011 Cape Verdean parliamentary election

6 February 2011

All 72 seats in the National Assembly of Cape Verde
37 seats needed for a majority
Registered298,567
Turnout76.01%
  First party Second party Third party
 
Leader José Maria Neves Carlos Veiga António Monteiro
Party PAICV MpD UCID
Seats won 38 32 2
Seat change Decrease 3 Increase 3 Steady
Popular vote 117,967 94,674 9,842
Percentage 52.68% 42.27% 4.39%


Prime Minister before election

José Maria Neves
PAICV

Elected Prime Minister

José Maria Neves
PAICV

Parliamentary elections were held Cape Verde on 6 February 2011. The result was a victory for the ruling African Party for the Independence of Cape Verde (PAICV), led by Prime Minister Jose Maria Neves, which won 38 of the 72 seats in the National Assembly.[1]

Results

Although technical problems prevented a prompt announcement of official results, it quickly became clear that PAICV had won a parliamentary majority, and Veiga conceded defeat on 7 February 2011. The opposition's immediate acceptance of defeat, prior to an official announcement, was viewed as a sign of the strength of democracy in Cape Verde.[2]

PartyVotes%Seats+/–
African Party for the Independence of Cape Verde117,96752.6838–3
Movement for Democracy94,67442.2732+3
Democratic and Independent Cape Verdean Union9,8424.3920
Labour and Solidarity Party1,0400.460New
Social Democratic Party4290.1900
Total223,952100.00720
Valid votes223,95298.68
Invalid/blank votes2,9901.32
Total votes226,942100.00
Registered voters/turnout298,56776.01
Source: African Elections Database

By constituency

ConstituencySeatsDistribution
Santo Antão6PAICV 3, MpD 3
São Vicente11PAICV 5, MpD 4, UCID 2
São Nicolau2MpD 1, PAICV 1
Sal3MpD 2, PAICV 1
Boa Vista2PAICV 1, MpD 1
Maio2MpD 1, PAICV 1
Santiago North14PAICV 8, MpD 6
Santiago South19PAICV 11, MpD 8
Fogo5PAICV 3, MpD 2
Brava2PAICV 1, MpD 1
Africa2PAICV 1, MpD 1
Europe2PAICV 1, MpD 1
Americas2PAICV 1, MpD 1

References

  1. Elections in Cape Verde African Elections Database
  2. Cape Verde opposition concedes election defeat, Reuters 7 February 2011.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.