Langbahn Team – Weltmeisterschaft

2018 São Toméan parliamentary election

2018 São Toméan parliamentary election
São Tomé and Príncipe
← 2014 7 October 2018 2022 →

All 55 seats in the National Assembly
28 seats needed for a majority
Party Leader Vote % Seats +/–
ADI Patrice Trovoada 41.81 25 −8
MLSTP–PSD Jorge Bom Jesus 40.32 23 +7
PCD-GRUDD Arlindo Carvalho 9.50 5 −1
MCI/PS Aurélio Martins 2.11 2 New
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.
Results by district.
Prime Minister before Prime Minister after
Patrice Trovoada
ADI
Jorge Bom Jesus
MLSTP–PSD

Parliamentary elections were held in São Tomé and Príncipe on 7 October 2018.[1] Municipal elections and elections to the regional council on Príncipe were held alongside them.

Electoral system

The 55 members of the National Assembly are elected by closed list proportional representation in seven multi-member constituencies.[2]

Parties

The elections were contested by five parties and two electoral alliances,[3] three of which presented a candidate for Prime Minister; the ruling Independent Democratic Action (ADI) under Prime Minister Patrice Trovoada, the main opposition party the centre-left MLSTP-PSD led by its newly elected president former Minister of Education and Culture Jorge Bom Jesus, and a centre-right coalition formed in August between the MDFM–UDD Union (a merger between the MDFM-PL and UDD)[4] and the Democratic Convergence Party (PCD). The coalition fielded the leader of PCD Arlindo Carvalho as its candidate for Prime Minister.

In addition, the newly established People's Strength Party, the alliance between the Social Democratic Movement and the Green Party (MSD–PVSTP), the Party for all Santomerese (PTOS), and the Caué-based Movement of Independent Citizens of São Tomé and Príncipe (MCISTP) contested the election.

Results

Unlike previous elections in the multi-party era, results were not announced on election night for the two largest constituencies, Água Grande and Mé-Zóchi, containing a total of 26 seats. Results from the five smaller constituencies gave 14 seats to the ADI, 12 to the MLSTP/PSD, one to the PCD–MDFM–UDD coalition and two to the MCISTP in the Caué constituency.

On election night the Secretary General of the ADI Levy Nazaré announced the party had gotten 26 seats and would continue to govern with support from the MCISTP, whereas MLSTP/PSD had only gotten 23 seats, but this announcement was made before all votes had been counted.[5]

The final result was 25 seats to the ADI, 23 to the MLSTP-PSD, 5 to the PCD/MDFM-UDD coalition and 2 to the MCISTP, both in the Caué constituency.

Party Votes % Seats +/−
Independent Democratic Action 32,805 41.81 25 –8
MLSTP/PSD 31,634 40.32 23 +7
PCDMDFMUDD 7,451 9.50 5 –1
MCISTP 1,659 2.11 2 New
People's Strength Party 823 1.05 0 New
MSD–PVSTP 499 0.64 0 0
Party for All Santomerese 224 0.29 0 New
Invalid/blank votes 3,236
Total 78,456 100 55 0
Registered voters/turnout 97,274 80.65
Source: CEN

Aftermath

At a joint press conference the leaders of MLSTP/PSD and the PCD–MDFM–UDD coalition announced they had a pre-election agreement to govern together and requested that Jorge Bom Jesus should be made Prime Minister, but ADI insisted that the country had had minority governments before and that they as the biggest party should form the government.

The ADI asked for verification of the more than 2,000 blank and void votes hoping to gain an extra seat and obtain a majority together with MCISTP.[6] This unleashed riots in parts of the country as opposition supporters feared the government would rig the results.

On 12 October the police announced that there would be a 72 hour ban on demonstrations after the Constitutional Court declares the final results.[7] The opposition claimed that this was illegal, as only the President could authorize a ban on the advice of the government and with the consent of the National Assembly, and that they would not comply with the ban if the final results deviate from the ones issued by the electoral commission.[8]

The proclamation of the ban happened after President Evaristo Carvalho had left the country to participate in the celebration of the 50th anniversary of Equatorial Guinea's independence. In the airport Carvalho said that he would follow the constitution and authorize the party with the most seats to form the new government,[9] indicating that Patrice Trovoada could continue as Prime Minister despite the ADI losing their majority.

On 30 November the President nominated Jorge Bom Jesus as Prime Minister.[10] The new government was sworn in on 3 December.[11]

References