December 2012 Kuwaiti general election

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Early general elections were held in Kuwait on 1 December 2012 after early elections in February 2012 were declared invalid.[1]

In the elections, Shi'as won 17 out of 50 seats in the National Assembly,[2] an increase from the seven won in the February elections.[3] Sunni Islamists were reduced to a minority.[2] Three women also entered the Parliament compared to men-only from the February election, but their number decreased compared to the 2009 election.[3]

Turnout was officially reported to be 43%, the lowest in the Kuwaiti electoral history.

Background

Six weeks before the elections, the electoral system was changed, with voters restricted to voting for only one candidate, having previously been allowed to vote for four.[4] The changes resulted in mass protests and an opposition boycott of the elections.[4] Shafeeq Ghabra, professor at the Faculty of Political Sciences at Kuwait University said that, "it's clear that the boycott was very successful."[5] The opposition rejected an unilateral amendment of the electoral law that reduced the number of votes per person from four to one.[6]

Results

District Candidate Votes % Notes
First Kamel Mahmoud al-Awadhi 5,747 13.4 Elected
Adnan Zahid Abdulsamad 4,986 11.6 Elected
Faisal Saud Saleh Duwaisan 4,851 11.3 Elected
Yusuf Sayed Zalzalah 3,500 8.2 Elected
Massouma al-Mubarak 3,197 7.5 Elected
Hamid Abbas Hussein Dashti 2,723 6.4 Elected
Saleh Ashour 2,260 5.3 Elected
Nawaf Suleiman al-Fezia 2,143 5.0 Elected
Khalid Hussain al-Shatti 1,902 4.4 Elected
Hussain Al-Qallaf Al-Bahrani 1,696 4.0 Elected
41 other candidates 9,830 22.9
Second Ali Al-Rashid 3,041 11.6 Elected
Adnan Ibrahim al-Mutawa 2,608 9.9 Elected
Abdul Rahman al-Jiran 2,335 8.9 Elected
Badr Rashid Bathali 1,919 7.3 Elected
Adel Jarallah al-Kharafi 1,838 7.0 Elected
Ahmed Lari 1,639 6.2 Elected
Khalaf Al-Enezi 1,553 5.9 Elected
Khalil Ibrahim Saleh 1,485 5.7 Elected
Hamad Saif al-Hrchana 1,043 4.0 Elected
Salah Abdullatif al-Ateeqi 910 3.5 Elected
40 other candidates 7,857 30.0
Third Ali al-Omair 5,850 15.2 Elected
Khalil Abdullah Ali Abdullah 3,887 10.1 Elected
Ahmed Al-Mulaifi 2,984 7.7 Elected
Safa Abdulrahman al-Hashem 2,622 6.8 Elected
Saadoun Hammad Otaibi 2,159 5.6 Elected
Hisham Hussein al-Baghli 2,016 5.2 Elected
Abdullah Yusuf Rajab Mayouf 1,952 5.1 Elected
Nabil Nuri al-Fadl 1,883 4.9 Elected
Yacoub Mohsen al-Sahneh 1,381 3.6 Elected
Mohammed Nasser al-Jabri 1,250 3.2 Elected
50 other candidates 12,570 32.6
Fourth Askar Al-Enezi 2,479 8.0 Elected
Saad al-Khanfour al-Rasheedi 2,469 8.0 Elected
Saud Al-Harija 2,084 6.7 Elected
Mubarak al-Khurainej 1,772 5.7 Elected
Thekra Ayed al-Rashidi 1,282 4.1 Elected
Khaled Rifai Mohammed Al-Shuleyma 1,236 4.0 Elected
Mohammed Al-Rasheedi 1,213 3.9 Elected
Mubarak Hamdan al-Orf 1,105 3.6 Elected
Mishari Zahir al-Husseini 1,101 3.6 Elected
Mubarak Saleh al-Nejadhu 1,085 3.5 Elected
56 other candidates 15,107 48.8
Fifth Faisal Mohammed al-Kandari 3,570 14.3 Elected
Abdullah Ibrahim al-Tamimi 2,932 11.7 Elected
Nasser Abdel al-Marri 1,667 6.7 Elected
Hani Hussein Shams 1,666 6.7 Elected
Essam Al-Dabbous 1,319 5.3 Elected
Tahir Ali al-Failakawi 887 3.5 Elected
Hammad Hammad al-Dossari 882 3.5 Elected
Khaled Salem al-Ajmi 851 3.4 Elected
Saad Fahad al-Bous 791 3.2 Elected
Nasser Abdullah al-Shammari 519 2.1 Elected
70 other candidates 9,932 39.7
Invalid/blank votes 3,639
Total 167,205 100
Registered voters/turnout 422,569 39.6
Source: Adam Carr

Aftermath

On 5 December, despite calls for political reforms, Jaber Al-Mubarak Al-Hamad Al-Sabah was reappointed Prime Minister.[7]

In June 2013, the Constitutional Court ordered the dissolution of the National Assembly and the holding of fresh elections.[4]

References

  1. ^ "Kuwait calls December election after months of unrest". BBC. 20 October 2012. Retrieved 23 October 2012.
  2. ^ a b "Shia minority makes gains in Kuwait election". Al Jazeera. 2 December 2012. Retrieved 3 December 2012.
  3. ^ a b "New faces in Kuwait parliament as opposition boycotts 'unconstitutional' poll". RT. 2 December 2012. Retrieved 3 December 2012.
  4. ^ a b c Kuwait elections: Constitutional Court orders fresh poll BBC News, 16 June 2013
  5. ^ Hall, Camila (2 December 2012). "Kuwait suffers lowest election turnout". Financial Times. Retrieved 3 December 2012.
  6. ^ Black, Ian (2 December 2012). "Kuwait election turnout shrinks after opposition boycott". The Guardian. Retrieved 3 December 2012.
  7. ^ "Protests continue in Kuwait as emir reappoints PM". Al Bawaba. 6 December 2012. Retrieved 7 December 2012.