Jordanian general election, 2016

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search
Coat of arms of Jordan.svg
This article is part of a series on the
politics and government of
Jordan
Foreign relations

General elections will be held in Jordan on 20 September 2016. Parliament was dissolved near its end by King Abdullah II on 29 May, with the King appointing Hani Al-Mulki as interim Prime Minister following the resignation of Abdullah Ensour.

Following electoral reforms announced in 2015, they will be the first elections since 1989 to be held primarily under a form of proportional representation; intervening elections were held under the “one-man one-vote” system, which systematically disadvantaged Islamic political parties, specifically the Islamic Action Front (IAF), the political wing of the Muslim Brotherhood in Jordan, after they managed to obtain 22 seats out of 80 in 1989. The elections will be run by the Independent Electoral Commission.

The reforms led to opposition parties deciding to contest this election, including the Islamic Action Front, who boycotted multiple previous elections including the two immediately preceding this one. To reduce IAF influence in these elections the Jordanian government fomented splits in the Muslim Brotherhood, leading to the seizure of Muslim Brotherhood properties and the defection of hundreds of Muslim Brotherhood figures to form a new supposedly more moderate party; Zamzam. The defectors announced that they have no ties to any Muslim Brotherhood organizations in the region.

Electoral system[edit]

The Parliament of Jordan consists of two chambers, an upper Senate appointed by the King, and a lower Chamber of Deputies elected through popular vote.[1] These share equal legislative responsibility. The King appoints the Prime Minister and Cabinet from the lower house, and also hold wide legislative and executive powers.[2] After parliament is dissolved, the constitution mandates elections be held within four months,[3] although the King may delay elections or suspend parliament and rule by decree. The government can be dismissed by a two-thirds vote of no confidence by the Chamber of Deputies.[2]

The age of suffrage is 18. Those who are bankrupt or mentally disabled are not allowed to vote, and there have historically been no provisions to help absentee or special needs voters. Employees of the armed forces, state security services, public security services, Gendarmie, and Civil Defence forces cannot vote during their employment,[4] and the right to vote is voided for some convicts.[5]

Parliament has quotas for women, as well as for some ethnic and religious minorities. Women have 15 reserved seats, Christians have nine seats, and Circassians and Chechens share three.[6] Bedouin tribes have their own electoral districts, and elect nine members of parliament, three of which overlap with the women’s quota.[7] While political parties do exist, they have historically been repressed, and for many decades the political system has been designed to weaken them.[2] Political parties come under the jurisdiction of the Ministry of Interior, and may not be established on the basis of religion.[2] They have low membership, with tribes playing roles traditionally associated with political parties.[4] Elections are therefore often based on patronage. Politics mirrors the demographic split between those of Palestinian origin and those of East Bank origin. The state is dominated by East Bankers and they form the core of monarchical support, whereas Jordanian Palestinians had little political representation and were systematically discriminated against.[2] Gerrymandered constituencies have meant elections often focus on local affairs rather than national ones.[8]

Electoral reforms[edit]

Protesters in the streets of Amman
Economic protesters in Amman in 2012

Political parties were long suppressed in Jordan under martial law. An economic crash and resultant unrest led to political liberalisation in 1989.[2] The 1989 elections were run using block voting, a system leftover from the era of British rule. Political parties were banned, but independents were often affiliated with underground parties, and the results gave a majority to parties opposing the monarchy’s political direction.[9] Due to the 1989 election results, King Hussein changed the political system for the 1993 elections in order to suppress Islamist votes.[9] The new system, which became known as “one-man one-vote”, disproportionately benefitted rural East Bank communities over urban and Palestinian communities.[2] While political parties were legalised, the new system weakened them.[10] This system was unpopular with many political parties, and subsequent elections held under this system faced boycotts by numerous groups, notably the Islamic Action Front.[4]

Political grievances emerged alongside other causes of unrest during the 2011–12 Jordanian protests that occurred as part of the wider Arab Spring.[2] King Abdullah moved to assuage the populace, promising reform and firing governments in quick succession, meaning that in the two years after the unrest began there were five Prime Ministers.[11] Reform bodies were set up, and some substantial changes were made including the introduction of an Independent Election Committee (IEC), and the introduction of a mixed electoral system whereby 27 of the 150 elected seats would be determined through nation-wide proportional representation. Most changes however were cosmetic at best, and political parties including the IAF boycotted the 2013 election. [2]

In 2015 the government announced new reforms, promising an end to the one-man one-vote system.[12] The proposed reforms were revealed on 31 August 2015. The new electoral system was very similar to the 1989 elections, in that it fully did away with one-man one-vote, reintroducing block voting for all seats.[13] One major difference was that in addition to voting for individual candidates, voters will also have a single vote for a multi-member party list, an adaptation taken from the experiment with proportional representation in the 2013 elections.[14] All candidates will run as members of lists, with open list PR used to determine all seats falling outside of quotas. For the Circassian/Chechen and Christian seats, the seat is given to the highest candidate from within those groups. The female quota seats however are assigned to women who would not otherwise be elected.[5] Re-elections will be held in the case of ties.[13] After minor changes in both houses, the new law was approved by the King on 13 March 2016.[15] Parliament was dissolved on 29 May and the government of Abdullah Ensour resigned, with the King appointing Hani Al-Mulki as caretaker Prime Minister in the lead-up to the election.[3] The IEC set 20 September 2016 as the date of the election shortly afterwards.[16]

Electoral districts[edit]

A map of Jordan showing the 12 governates
Aside from the Bedouin badia districts, the districts for the 2016 election cover either one governorate or part of a governorate.

There are 23 electoral districts; five in the Amman government, four in the Irbid governorate, two in the Zarqa governorate, one each for the other nine governorates, and three badia districts for Bedouins. The Circassian/Chechen and Christian quotas were included among seats assigned within the governorate districts.[15] Of the nine seats for the Christian quota, two are in both the Balqa district and the Karak district, and there is one in each of the following: Irbid’s 3rd district, the Ajloun district, Zarqa’s 1st district, Amman’s 3rd district, and the Madaba district. The three Circassian/Chechen seats are in Zarqa’s 1st district, Amman’s 3rd district, and Amman’s 4th district.[5] The female quota is divided so that there is one seat in each governorate, and one in each badia.[15] While the division of population between districts remains imperfect, it was an improvement upon previous elections.[14]

Administration[edit]

Like with the 2013 election, the 2016 election will be run by the IEC. The IEC has stated one of its aims for the 2016 election is the restoration of public faith in the electoral system. Candidates were required to register by 16 August. Campaign spending is capped by the IEC to 5 dinars per voter in a district for large urban districts.[5]

This is the first election where special centres are to be provided for deaf and blind voters. Voter registration was automatic, carried out using lists provided to the IEC by the Civil Service and the Passport Division. Indelible ink will be compulsory for voters.[5]

Campaign[edit]

The reforms led to fears that Palestinians and Islamists would increase their influence.[3] In 2015 internal divisions emerged among the Muslim Brotherhood, with splinter groups encouraged by the government. One splinter group, known as the Muslim Brotherhood Association, registered itself as the official Muslim Brotherhood in Jordan, taking advantage of the fact that the Muslim Brotherhood was affiliated with its Egyptian founders rather than being registered as a Jordanian organisation. [17] The Muslim Brotherhood Association, which emphasises its Jordanian identity, was given official status in March 2015. Subsequent internal dissent among the original Muslim Brotherhood led to the resignation of hundreds of members.[18] Two other splinter groups have also broken away from the Muslim Brotherhood.[19] The Muslim Brotherhood Association leveraged its official status to launch lawsuits claiming ownership of Muslim Brotherhood property,[17] and in April 2016 the lawsuits were decided in the favour of the Association, leading them to seizing control of a wide swathe of Muslim Brotherhood property.[20] The government also prevented a celebration of the 70th anniversary of the founding of the Muslim Brotherhood.[18]

Despite the original Muslim Brotherhood becoming illegal after the official recognition of their splinter group, the IAF remained legal as it was registered as a Jordanian organisation.[19] After the announcement of election reform in 2015, the IAF reported that they found the changes to be positive reforms, especially the removal of one-man one-vote.[13] Despite its internal splits, the IAF held an internal vote on whether to compete in the 2016 elections, and it reported 76% of its members supported participation, whereas 17% opposed participation without substantial limitations to the King’s constitutional powers. The government wanted the IAF to compete in order to enhance the election’s legitimacy in western eyes. This along with the fear of obscurity may have contributed to the IAF vote result, and it is thought that they may be attempting to emulate the gains of elected Islamist parties in Tunisia and Morocco who co-operated with their governments, while avoiding suppression similar to that occurring in Egypt.[18]

After the vote, the IAF announced that it was ending its boycott and would compete, and that it was reaching out to other opposition parties to discuss campaigning.[17] On 20 August it announced it would be running on 20 national lists in various electoral districts, all under the banner of the “National Coalition for Reform”. These lists are shared with representatives from other political parties and some tribes, including five Christians contesting the Christian seats, four candidates for the Circassian and Chechen seats, and 19 women.[21]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "National Level". European Union. Retrieved 22 August 2016. 
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Countries at the Crossroads Jordan". Freedom House. 2012. Retrieved 16 August 2016. 
  3. ^ a b c Suleiman Al-Khalidi (29 May 2016). "Jordan's King Abdullah dissolves parliament, names caretaker PM". Reuters. Retrieved 22 August 2016. 
  4. ^ a b c "The Carter Center Releases Study Mission Report on Jordan's 2013 Parliamentary Elections" (PDF). The Carter Center. 14 February 2013. Retrieved 16 August 2016. 
  5. ^ a b c d e Omar Obeidat; Khetam Malkawi (15 June 2016). "IEC chief promises flawless parliamentary polls; high-tech will help". The Jordan Times. Retrieved 16 August 2016. 
  6. ^ Olimat, Muhamad (26 November 2013). Arab Spring and Arab Women. Routledge. p. 2011. Retrieved 15 October 2015. 
  7. ^ Omar Obejdat (15 June 2016). "IEC chief promises flawless parliamentary polls; high-tech will help". The Jordan Times. Retrieved 22 August 2016. 
  8. ^ Dima Toukan Tabbaa (22 June 2010). "Jordan's New Electoral Law Disappoints Reformers". Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. Retrieved 16 August 2016. 
  9. ^ a b "Jordan – Electoral System Design in the Arab World". 2005. Retrieved 16 August 2016. 
  10. ^ Mohammad Yaghi (4 October 2012). "Jordan's Election Law: Reform or Perish?". The Washington Institute. Retrieved 16 August 2016. 
  11. ^ "As beleaguered as ever". The Economist. 11 October 2012. Retrieved 16 August 2016. 
  12. ^ "'No one-person, one-vote formula in new elections bill'". The Jordan Times. 17 May 2015. Retrieved 16 August 2016. 
  13. ^ a b c "New elections bill sheds one-vote system". The Jordan Times. 1 September 2015. Retrieved 16 August 2016. 
  14. ^ a b Curtis R. Ryan (2 September 2015). "Deja vu for Jordanian election reforms". The Washington Post. Retrieved 16 August 2016. 
  15. ^ a b c "King endorses new elections bill". The Jordan Times. 13 March 2016. Retrieved 16 August 2016. 
  16. ^ "Jordan, Parliamentary Elections Set for Sept. 20". Asharq Al-Awsat. 9 June 2016. Retrieved 26 August 2016. 
  17. ^ a b c "IAF seeks partners ahead of elections — spokesperson". The Jordan Times. 23 June 2016. Retrieved 22 August 2016. 
  18. ^ a b c Aaron Magid (13 July 2016). "ANALYSIS: Jordan's Muslim Brotherhood comes in from the cold". Middle East Eye. Retrieved 22 August 2016. 
  19. ^ a b "Muslim Brotherhood's political arm to compete in Jordan vote". Al Arabiya. 11 June 2016. Retrieved 22 August 2016. 
  20. ^ Khetam Malkawi (13 June 2016). "Jordan's Muslim Brotherhood creates 'interim committee' after internal election ban". Albawaba. Retrieved 22 August 2016. 
  21. ^ Khetam Malkawi (20 August 2016). "IAF running on 20 'national' lists in elections — official". The Jordan Times. Retrieved 26 August 2016.