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2007 Moroccan general election

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2007 Moroccan general election
Morocco
← 2002 7 September 2007 2011 →

325 seats in the House of Representatives
163 seats needed for a majority
Party Leader % Seats +/–
Istiqlal Abbas El Fassi 8.51 52 +4
PJD Saadeddine Othmani 9.15 46 +4
MP Mohand Laenser 7.30 41 +14
RNI Ahmed Osman 7.65 39 −2
USFP Mohamed El Yazghi 7.00 38 −12
UC Mohamed Abied 2.92 27 +11
PPS Ismail Alaoui 4.38 17 +6
FFD Thami Khiari 3.57 9 −3
MDS Mahmoud Archane 2.90 9 +2
PNDAl Ahd Union 3.12 11 New
Labour 2.44 5 New
PED Ahmed Alami 2.00 5 +3
PADSCNIPSU Union 1.90 6 New
PRE 1.56 4 New
PND Abdellah Kadiri 0.49 3 −9
UMD 1.33 2 New
Socialist Abdelmajid Bouzoubaa 1.21 2 New
ICD 0.89 1 New
PRV Mohamed Khalidi 0.66 1 New
Citizens' Forces Abderrahim Lahyuyi 0.57 1 −1
Alliance of Liberties 0.30 1 −3
Independent 0.71 5 +5
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.
Prime Minister before Prime Minister after
Driss Jettou
Independent
Abbas El Fassi
Istiqlal

Parliamentary elections were held in Morocco on 7 September 2007,[1] the second of King Mohammed VI's reign. Voter turnout was estimated to be 37%, the lowest in Moroccan political history.[2] There were 33 different parties and 13 independent candidates competing for 325 assembly seats. An amount of $61 million was allocated by the Moroccan government to organize the 2007 elections.[3]

The number of constituencies was increased from 91 to 95 before this election.[4] Interior minister Chakib Benmoussa claimed the changes were made "in accordance with objectivity and transparency."[4] However, BBC correspondent Richard Hamilton accused the government of gerrymandering in order to prevent the Justice and Development Party from winning.[5]

According to many analysts the complex voting system makes it almost impossible for any group to win an outright majority, although others have disagreed with this view, arguing that the electoral system is not particularly unusual and should favor large parties.[1]. Whatever the outcome, real power will remain with the king, who is executive head of state, military chief and religious leader.[6]

For the first time in the history of elections in Morocco, they are being monitored by foreign observers including the U.S.'s National Democratic Institute for International Affairs and 42 others.[3]

Turnout in the election was only 37% - the lowest in the history of Moroccan national elections. The Socialist Union of People's Forces (USFP), the largest party in the outgoing government lost nearly a quarter of its seats, and was replaced as the largest party by its coalition partner, the Istiqlal Party. The main gainers were the pro-government liberal People's Movement and Constitutional Union parties. The opposition Islamist Justice and Development Party had a modest increase in its tally as did the pro-government leftist Party of Progress and Socialism.

Following the election the USFP was expected to leave the governing coalition.[7] Istiqlal Party leader Abbas El Fassi became PM on 19 September 2007.

Results

Party National seats Local seats Total
seats
+/–
Votes % Seats Votes % Seats
Justice and Development Party 545,636 13.4 6 503,396 10.9 40 46 +4
Independence Party 480,561 11.8 6 494,256 10.7 46 52 +4
National Rally of Independents 429,053 10.5 5 447,244 9.7 34 39 –4
Popular Movement 410,197 10.0 5 426,849 9.3 36 41 +14
Socialist Union of Popular Forces 389,471 9.5 5 408,945 8.9 33 38 –12
Party of Progress and Socialism 253,929 6.2 3 248,103 5.4 14 17 +6
PNDAl Ahd Union 217,827 5.3 0 139,688 3.0 8 8
Front of Democratic Forces 200,846 4.9 0 207,982 4.5 9 9 –3
Democratic and Social Movement 163,799 4.0 0 168,960 3.7 9 9 +2
Labour Party 139,907 3.4 0 140,224 3.0 5 5 +5
Environment and Development Party 133,023 3.3 0 131,524 2.9 5 5 +3
PADSCNIPSU Union 119,688 2.9 0 98,202 2.1 5 5
Party of Renewal and Equity 95,456 2.3 0 83,516 1.8 4 4 +4
Moroccan Union for Democracy 76,049 1.9 0 76,795 1.7 2 2 +2
Socialist Party 70,607 1.7 0 67,786 1.5 2 2 +2
Moroccan Liberal Party 58,419 1.4 0 46,526 1.0 0 0 –3
Citizen Initiative for Development 51,217 1.3 0 50,278 1.1 1 1 +1
Reform and Development Party 50,285 1.2 0 47,141 1.0 0 0 –3
Party of Renaissance and Virtue 39,134 1.0 0 36,781 0.8 1 1 +1
Citizens' Forces 33,764 0.8 0 31,207 0.7 1 1 –1
Democratic Independence Party 35,922 0.9 0 31,105 0.7 0 0 –2
Action Party 30,789 0.8 0 24,384 0.5 0 0 0
Social Centre Party 26,240 0.6 0 22,826 0.5 0 0 0
Party of Hope 23,107 0.6 0 16,376 0.4 0 0 0
Party of Liberty and Social Justice 11,568 0.3 0 5,452 0.1 0 0 0
Constitutional Union 335,116 7.3 27 27 +11
Covenant Party 57,952 1.3 3 3
National Democratic Party 56,176 1.2 3 3
Alliance of Liberties 34,801 0.8 1 1 –3
National Congress Party 25,695 0.6 1 1
United Socialist Party 20,353 0.4 0 0
Party of al-Badil al-Hadari 15,600 0.3 0 0 0
Democratic Socialist Party 10,973 0.2 0 0 –6
Renaissance Party 10,156 0.2 0 0 0
Democratic Socialist Vanguard Party 3,761 0.1 0 0
Independents 81,364 1.8 5 5 +5
Invalid/blank votes 1,634,579 1,131,393
Total 5,721,073 100 30 5,738,886 100 295 325 0
Registered voters/turnout 15,462,362 37.00 15,462,362 37.12
Source: Desrues & Garcia

External links

References

  1. ^ Electoral Calendar Maximiliano Herrera
  2. ^ Morocco nationalists in poll win BBC News, 9 September 2007
  3. ^ a b "Morocco votes in parliamentary poll". AlJazeera.net. Retrieved 2007-09-07.
  4. ^ a b Morocco's electoral constituencies increased to 95 People's Daily, 24 August 2007
  5. ^ Morocco poll - choice or façade? BBC News, 1 September 2007
  6. ^ Morocco conservatives win most assembly seats Archived 2008-02-07 at the Wayback Machine, Reuters South Africa, September 9, 2007.
  7. ^ Moroccan elections bring victory for conservatives, Magharebia, 2007-09-10, accessed on 2007-09-12