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2002 Costa Rican general election

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2002 Costa Rican general election

← 1998 3 February 2002 (2002-02-03) (first round)
7 April 2002 (2002-04-07) (second round)
2006 →
Presidential election
 
Nominee Abel Pacheco Rolando Araya
Party PUSC PLN
Home state San José Alajuela
Popular vote 776,278 563,202
Percentage 58.0% 42.0%

President before election

Miguel Ángel Rodríguez
PUSC

Elected President

Abel Pacheco
PUSC

Legislative election
Party Leader % Seats +/–
PUSC Abel Pacheco 29.8% 19 −8
PLN Rolando Araya Monge 27.1% 17 −6
PAC Ottón Solís 22.0% 14 New
PML Otto Guevara 9.3% 6 +5
PRC Justo Orozco Álvarez 3.6% 1 0
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.
Map on the left shows the seats won by each party by province. The map on the right shows which party won the plurality in each province in both rounds of the Presidential election.

General elections were held in Costa Rica on 3 February 2002.[1] For the first time in the country's history, no candidate in the presidential election passed the 40% threshold.[2] This meant a second round of voting had to be held on 7 April which saw Abel Pacheco of the Social Christian Unity Party defeat the National Liberation Party's Rolando Araya Monge.[3]

Many analysts consider this election the beginning of the end of Costa Rica’s decades-long two party system.[4][5][6] For the first time in many years alternative political forces become really relevant in the Parliament and the plenary had three large party groups; PUSC (19), PLN (17) and PAC (14).[7]

While PUSC won the presidential election and the majority in Congress, PLN became the primal opposition force in Parliament. Centre-left PAC with a progressive proposal seem to had gravely affected traditional third forces at the left of the spectrum like Democratic Force that fail to win any seat on that election even when for some years was Costa Rica’s main third party.[7] Right-wing Libertarian Movement also increases its representation from one to six deputies[7] while conservative[8] Costa Rican Renewal Party won one seat as usual.[7]

Despite the close contest, voter turnout was only 68.8% on 3 February the lowest since the 1958 elections. For the second round of the presidential elections it fell to 60.2%, the lowest since 1949.[9]

Background

Before the election, the country's Supreme Electoral Tribinal attempted to make several reforms to the electoral system. These included allowing independents to run in local elections, using electronic voting machines, allowing Costa Ricans living abroad to vote, and allowing voters to choose the top two places on parliamentary lists.[2] However, the changes were rejected by the Legislative Assembly, which noted that independent candidature was incompatible with the constitution, and that electronic voting could not be guaranteed to be secure or transparent.[2]

Results

President

Candidate Party First round Second round
Votes % Votes %
Abel Pacheco Social Christian Unity Party 590,277 38.58 776,278 57.95
Rolando Araya Monge National Liberation Party 475,030 31.05 563,202 42.05
Ottón Solís Citizens' Action Party 400,681 26.19
Otto Guevara Libertarian Movement 25,815 1.69
Justo Orozco Álvarez Costa Rican Renewal Party 16,404 1.07
Walter Muñoz Céspedes National Integration Party 6,235 0.41
Vladimir De la Cruz De Lemos Democratic Force 4,121 0.27
Walter Coto Molina Coalition Change 2000 3,970 0.26
Rolando Angulo Zeledón General Union Partyes 2,655 0.17
Daniel Reynolds Vargas National Patriotic Partyes 1,680 0.11
Marvin Calvo Montoya Christian National Alliancees 1,271 0.08
José Hine García National Rescue Party 905 0.06
Pablo Galo Angulo Casasola Independent Workers' Partyes 801 0.05
Invalid/blank votes 39,573 33,463
Total 1,569,418 100 1,372,943 100
Registered voters/turnout 2,279,851 68.84 2,279,851 60.22
Source: TSE, TSE
Popular Vote-First round
Social Christian Unity
38.6%
National Liberation
31.1%
Citizens' Action
26.2%
Libertarian Movement
1.7%
Costa Rican Renewal
1.1%
National Integration
0.4%
Other
0.9%
Popular Vote-Second round
Social Christian Unity
58%
National Liberation
42%

By province

First round

Province % PUSC % PLN % PAC % ML % PRC % PIN % FD % Other %
 San José 36.6 28.5 31.1 1.6 0.8 0.6 0.2 0.7
 Alajuela 37.8 34.1 24.7 1.4 0.9 0.3 0.2 0.6
 Cartago 35.4 31.8 28.4 1.9 0.7 0.5 0.4 1.0
 Heredia 36.1 26.8 33.2 1.6 1.1 0.4 0.2 0.7
 Puntarenas 45.0 33.8 15.8 2.5 1.7 0.2 0.3 0.9
 Limón 48.6 28.4 14.9 2.8 3.1 0.3 0.4 1.5
 Guanacaste 44.3 40.6 12.1 0.9 1.2 0.2 0.2 0.8
Total 38.6 31.1 26.2 1.7 1.1 0.4 0.3 0.9

Second round

Province PUSC % PLN %
 San José 57.7 42.3
 Alajuela 56.1 43.9
 Cartago 55.6 44.4
 Heredia 58.1 41.9
 Puntarenas 59.7 40.3
 Limón 67.0 33.0
 Guanacaste 57.1 42.9
Total 58.0 42.0

Parliament

Popular vote
Social Christian Unity
29.8%
National Liberation
27.1%
Citizens' Action
22.0%
Libertarian Movement
9.3%
Costa Rican Renewal
3.6%
Democratic Force
2.0%
National Integration
1.7%
Other
4.8%
Seats
Social Christian Unity
33.33%
National Liberation
29.82%
Citizens' Action
24.56%
Libertarian Movement
10.52%
Costa Rican Renewal
1.75%
Party Votes % Seats +/–
Social Christian Unity Party 453,201 29.8 19 –8
National Liberation Party 412,383 27.1 17 –6
Citizens' Action Party 334,162 22.0 14 New
Libertarian Movement 142,152 9.3 6 +5
Costa Rican Renewal Party 54,699 3.6 1 0
Democratic Force 30,172 2.0 0 –3
National Integration Party 26,084 1.7 0 –1
Coalition Change 2000 12,992 0.8 0 New
Agrarian Labour Action Party 10,890 0.7 0 –1
Workers' Independent Party 8,044 0.5 0 New
National Patriotic Party 7,123 0.5 0 New
Cartago Agrarian Union Party 6,974 0.5 0 0
Christian National Alliance Party 6,825 0.4 0 New
General Union Party 5,883 0.4 0 0
National Rescue Party 4,937 0.3 0 0
National Agrarian Party 2,595 0.2 0 New
Cartago Agrarian Force Party 1,390 0.1 0 New
National Convergence 1,348 0.1 0 New
Invalid/blank votes 47,484
Total 1,569,338 100 57 0
Registered voters/turnout 2,279,851 68.8
Source: Election Resources

By province

Province PUSC PLN PAC ML PRC FD PIN Other
% S % S % S % S % S % S % S % S
 San José 27.1 6 24.2 5 27.0 6 11.8 2 3.6 1 1.7 0 1.8 0 2.8 0
 Alajuela 30.2 4 30.5 4 20.7 2 7.5 1 2.8 0 1.3 0 1.4 0 5.4 0
 Cartago 25.7 2 25.4 2 20.8 2 7.3 1 2.0 0 3.7 0 4.5 0 10.4 0
 Heredia 27.5 1 24.3 1 27.6 2 10.7 1 3.5 0 2.3 0 1.0 0 3.0 0
 Puntarenas 37.8 2 29.8 1 12.9 1 10.0 1 4.2 0 1.8 0 0.4 0 3.2 0
 Limón 37.3 2 26.2 2 12.7 1 8.1 1 5.6 0 2.7 0 0.8 0 9.4 0
 Guanacaste 37.9 2 39.1 2 10.3 0 2.8 0 6.2 0 1.2 0 0.4 0 2.2 0
Total 29.8 19 27.1 17 22.0 14 9.3 6 3.6 1 2.0 0 1.7 0 4.6 0

Municipal Councils

The elections of municipal councilors of Costa Rica in 2002 were an electoral process held in parallel with the presidential and legislative elections. In them the 495 tenure aldermen and the 495 alternates that conform the 81 Municipal Councils were chosen.

The Central Canton of San José, the most populous, named 13 aldermen. Desamparados and Alajuela named 11. Others less populated (Puntarenas, Limón, Pococí, Heredia, Cartago, La Unión, San Carlos, Goicoechea, Pérez Zeledón, etc.) named 9. Others even smaller (Tibás, Grecia, Vázquez de Coronado, Montes de Oca, Siquirres, Escazú, Turrialba, etc.) appointed 7 council members. Finally, the smallest (Turrubares, San Mateo, Santa Ana, Mora, Montes de Oro, Talamanca, etc.) named 5.

Party Aldermen Range
Social Christian Unity Party 178 National
National Liberation Party 178 National
Citizens' Action Party 101 National
Libertarian Movement 13 National
Costa Rican Renewal Party 7 National
Democratic Force 4 National
Escazu's Progressive Yoke 3 Escazu Canton
Agrarian Labour Action Party 2 National
Quepan Action 2 Quepos Canton
Party of the Sun 2 Santa Ana Canton
National Agrarian Party 1 National
Ecological Garabito Party 2 Garabito Canton
21st Century Curridabat 1 Curridabat Canton
New Alajuelita 1 Alajuelita Canton
Paraisan Authentic Party 1 Paraiso Canton
Sarapican Authentic Party 1 Sarapiqui Canton
Independent Worker's Party 1 National
National Integration Party 1 National
National Rescue 1 National
Coalition Change 2000 1

Maps

President

First round

Runoff

Parliament

Source: Atlas Electoral

References

  1. ^ Nohlen, D (2005) Elections in the Americas: A data handbook, Volume I, p155 ISBN 978-0-19-928357-6
  2. ^ a b c Nohlen, p. 150.
  3. ^ "Election profile: Costa Rica". International Foundation for Electoral Systems. 1 September 2006. Retrieved 26 June 2011.
  4. ^ Landsford, Tom. Political Handbook of the World 2014. Retrieved 13 March 2016.
  5. ^ Landsford, Tom. Political Handbook of the World 2012. Retrieved 13 March 2016.
  6. ^ Greenspana, Eliot; Gill, Nicholas; O'Malley, Charlie; Gilsenan, Patrick; Perill, Jisel. Elecciones legislativas de Costa Rica de 2002. Frommer's Central America.
  7. ^ a b c d "5 February 2002 Legislative Assembly Election Results - Costa Rica Totals". Election Resources. Retrieved 13 March 2016.
  8. ^ Lopez, Jaime (July 18, 2013). "Civic Groups Move Against Gay Marriage in Costa Rica". Costa Rica Star. Retrieved 13 March 2016.
  9. ^ Nohlen, pp. 156–157.