Moroccan general election, 2016

Moroccan general election, 2016
Morocco
7 October 2016

All 395 seats to the Assembly of Representatives of Morocco
198 seats were needed for a majority
Turnout 43%
  First party Second party Third party
 
Leader Abdelilah Benkirane Ilyas El Omari Hamid Chabat
Party PJD PAM Istiqlal
Leader's seat Salé Al Hoceima Fes
Last election 107 47 60
Seats won 125 102 46
Seat change Increase 18 Increase 55 Decrease 14
Percentage 31.65% 25.82% 11.65%

  Fourth party Fifth party Sixth party
 
Leader Salaheddine Mezouar Mohand Laenser Driss Lachgar
Party RNI Popular Movement USFP
Leader's seat Meknes Boulmane Rabat
Last election 52 32 39
Seats won 37 27 20
Seat change Decrease 15 Decrease 5 Decrease 19
Percentage 9.37% 6.08% 5.06%

Prime Minister before election

Abdelillah Benkirane
PJD

Elected Prime Minister

Abdelillah Benkirane[1]
PJD

This article is part of a series on the
politics and government of
Morocco
Judiciary

General elections were held in Morocco on 7 October 2016.[2] The ruling Justice and Development Party remained the largest party, winning 125 of the 395 seats in the House of Representatives, a gain of 18 seats compared to the 2011 elections. Abdelillah Benkirane was reappointed Prime Minister by the King on 10 October.[1]

Background

The elections were announced by the Moroccan government in late January 2016.[3] They were the second elections after the constitutional reforms introduced in 2011 by King Mohammed VI in response to the Arab Spring.[3] Despite the reforms, most executive powers still lie with the king.[4][5]

The 2011 elections were won by the Justice and Development Party (PJD), which has led the government since then. The party is described as "moderate Islamist", but its government coalition included parties with differing ideologies.[6] The incumbent Prime Minister is Abdelilah Benkirane.[3]

The largest opposing party is the Party of Authenticity and Modernity (PAM), which is described as being pro-monarchy.[7][8] PJD and PAM ran an unusually hostile campaign.[4] The largest Islamist opposition group, Justice and Spirituality, as well as several left-wing organizations boycotted the election, protesting the monarchy's still considerable executive powers.[5][4]

Electoral system

The 395 seats in the House of Representatives are elected by two methods: 305 seats are elected from 92 multi-member constituencies, with the electoral threshold set at 6%, and the remaining 90 seats are elected from a single nationwide constituency with the electoral threshold set at 3%. The nationwide seats are reserved, with 60 for women and 30 for people under the age of 40.[9]

Under the electoral system no party can win a majority in the parliament, and parties must form a coalition government.[5]

Results

The vote had 43% turnout.[4][10] The Justice and Development Party won the most votes and 125 out of the 395 seats. The Authenticity and Modernity Party won 102 seats, and the rest of the seats were split among smaller parties.

Party Votes % Seats
Constituency Women Youth Total +/–
Justice and Development Party1,618,96331.6598189125+18
Authenticity and Modernity Party1,216,55225.8281147102+55
Istiqlal Party621,28011.65357446–14
National Rally of Independents558,8759.37286337–15
Popular Movement409,0856.84205227–5
Socialist Union of Popular Forces367,6225.06144220–19
Constitutional Union268,8134.81153119–4
Party of Progress and Socialism279,2263.0473212–6
Democratic and Social Movement77,6300.753003+1
Federation of the Democratic Left164,5750.502002New
Union and Democracy Party23,5740.2510010
Green Left Party13,9890.2510010
Invalid/blank votes
Total 10030560303950
Registered voters/turnout15,702,592
Source: Le Matin (Total seats, Women's seats)

Reaction

Morocco's election observer body said that the voting was largely free and fair. It reported some cases of vote-buying, but said that they were rare and sporadic. It also expressed concern about the relatively low (43%) turnout.[4] Critics also alleged that the royal establishment used its influence to favour the pro-monarchy PAM.[5]

Coalition formation

The king chooses a prime minister from the winning party, who must form a coalition. The second-placed Authenticity and Modernity Party (PAM) spokesman Khalid Adnoun ruled out being part of the coalition. This potentially forces the PJD to partner with multiple smaller parties in order to secure a majority.[5]

On 10 October, Abdelillah Benkirane was reappointed Prime Minister by the King, in accordance to the 2011 constitutional reforms which say that the king must name a prime minister from the party that won the most votes.[1]

References

  1. 1 2 3 http://www.aljazeera.com/news/2016/10/moroccan-king-reappoints-abdelilah-bekirane-pm-161010182453418.html
  2. Central Intelligence Agency. "Morocco". The World Factbook.
  3. 1 2 3 Morocco to hold parliamentary elections on Oct. 7 -government Reuters, 28 January 2016
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 Observers: Moroccan election overall fair, but turnout Washington Post, 9 October 2016
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 "Moderate Moroccan Islamists win election, coalition talks seen tough". 8 October 2016 via Reuters.
  6. "Moroccan Islamist Party Wins New Mandate in Elections". Associated Press. 8 October 2016 via Wall Street Journal.
  7. The report: Morocco 2009, Oxford Business Group, 2009, p. 19
  8. Michael J. Willis (2012), Politics and Power in the Maghreb: Algeria, Tunisia and Morocco from Independence to the Arab Spring, C. Hurst & Co., pp. 149–150
  9. Union, Inter-Parliamentary. "IPU PARLINE database: MOROCCO (Majliss-annouwab), Electoral system". ipu.org.
  10. Parliamentary Elections 2016 Maroc.ma, 7 October 2016
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