2015 Sudanese general election

2015 Sudanese general election

← 2010 13–16 April 2015 2023 →
Presidential election
Turnout46.40%
 
Nominee Omar al-Bashir Fadl el-Sayed Shuaib
Party National Congress Federal Truth
Popular vote 5,252,478 79,779
Percentage 94.05% 1.43%

President before election

Omar al-Bashir
National Congress

Elected President

Omar al-Bashir
National Congress

General elections were held in Sudan on 13–16 April 2015 to elect the President and the National Assembly. They were originally scheduled for 2 April, but were delayed by eleven days. These were the first elections to be held following the secession of South Sudan.

Incumbent President Omar al-Bashir won the presidential election by a landslide, amid a boycott from the majority of the opposition. The ruling National Congress of Sudan also won a majority in the 426 seat National Assembly.

Electoral system

The President was elected using the two-round system; if no candidate gained a majority of the vote in the first round, a run-off would have been held.

The 426 members of the National Assembly were elected by three methods; half were elected by majority voting in multi-member constituencies based on the 18 states and containing between two and 36 seats. 128 seats were reserved for women and elected by closed list proportional representation in a single national constituency, whilst a further 85 unreserved seats were elected by the same system.

Conduct

Campaign

Incumbent President Omar al-Bashir was re-selected as the presidential candidate of the National Congress (NCP) in October 2014. Fifteen other candidates registered to contest the elections, although they are relatively unknown.

The majority of opposition parties were boycotting the elections, although a total of 44 parties put forward candidates. However, the ruling NCP opted not to field candidates in 30% of constituencies in order to allow other parties to win seats.

Observers

Election observer missions (EOM) were deployed from the African Union (AU), Arab League, Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa (COMESA), Intergovernmental Authority on Development (IGAD), Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC); as well as from China, Russia and Turkey.

The African Union's EOM was led by former Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo. The AUEOM was "satisfied that voting went on peacefully" and noted that the country "still faces serious challenges to democracy building and national reconciliation". It concluded that the "results.. would reflect the expression of the will of the voters of Sudan".

COMESA EOM noted that the "general environment within which the general elections were organized ha[d] remarkably been peaceful" and commended the Sudanese people. It also noted with concern that the "general elections were boycotted by several opposition political parties".

Results

President

Turnout by state.
CandidatePartyVotes%
Omar al-BashirNational Congress Party5,252,47894.05
Fadl el-Sayed ShuaibFederal Truth Party79,7791.43
Fatima Abdel MahmoudSudanese Socialist Democratic Union47,6530.85
Mohamed Elhassan MohamedNational Reform Party42,3990.76
Abdul Mahmoud Abdul Jabar RahamtallaUnion of the Nation's Forces41,1340.74
Hamdi Hassan AhmedIndependent18,0430.32
Mohamed Ahmed Abdul Gadir Al ArbabIndependent16,9660.30
Yasser Yahiya Salih Abdul GadirIndependent16,6090.30
Khairi BakhitIndependent11,8520.21
Adel Dafalla JabirIndependent9,4350.17
Mohamed Awad Al BarowIndependent9,3880.17
Asad Al Nil Adel Yassin Al SaafiIndependent9,3590.17
Alam Al Huda Ahmed Osman Mohamed AliIndependent8,1330.15
Ahmed Al Radhi Jadalla SalemIndependent7,7510.14
Isaam Al Ghali Tajj Eddin AliIndependent7,5870.14
Omar Awad Al Karim Hussein AliIndependent6,2970.11
Total5,584,863100.00
Valid votes5,584,86391.68
Invalid/blank votes506,5498.32
Total votes6,091,412100.00
Registered voters/turnout13,126,98946.40
Source: NEC

National Assembly

PartyProportionalReservedConstituencyTotal
seats
+/–
Votes%SeatsVotes%SeatsVotes%Seats
National Congress Party3,915,59078.32674,321,90183.371071493230
Democratic Unionist Party–Original218,1204.364249,7684.8261525+23
Collective Leadership Umma Party214,5314.29426+5
Democratic Unionist Party114,8062.302137,2652.6531015+11
Federal Umma Party79,2921.591107,1022.07337+4
Freedom and Justice Party60,3731.21136,8990.71113
United Umma Party49,9231.00163,7701.23214
Umma Reform and Development Party35,3090.71145,1990.87135
National Umma Party30,9660.62123+2
Federal Truth Party30,2540.61133,0460.64102
National Bond Party30,0790.60143,1990.83102
National Freedom and Justice Party29,6420.59134
Constitution Party27,4660.55039,7830.77101
Movement for Justice and Equality26,7230.53018,4930.36000
National Reform Party25,9900.52030,1070.58101
Popular Forces for Rights and Democracy Movement23,0890.46027,2600.53101
Justice Party18,1960.36000
National Movement for Peace and Development17,2310.34014,7320.28000
Sudanese Socialist Democratic Union16,5080.33000
People's Movement Party14,0180.28015,5950.30011
Sudanese National Front Party12,7400.25000
Sudanese Socialist Union Party al-Maywa8,6860.17000
Centre Party for Justice and Development11
General Federation of North and South Funj11
Ana al-Sudan11
Black Free11
Independents1919+16
Total4,999,532100.00855,184,119100.00128213426–24
Source: NEC

Reactions

On 9 April 2015, the European Union said that there was a "lack of a conducive environment for the upcoming elections" and that it was disappointed that the Sudanese government missed an opportunity "by not responding to the efforts by the African Union to bring all stakeholders together."

On 20 April 2015; Norway, the United Kingdom and the United States issued a joint statement saying that the Sudanese Government failed "to create a free, fair, and conducive elections environment" and that the "outcome of these elections cannot be considered a credible expression of the will of the Sudanese people". Following this statement, the Sudanese Foreign Ministry summoned the ambassadors from these countries and condemned the statement as "erroneous information and prejudgment of the elections"; and also deemed it as "flagrant intervention in Sudan's internal affairs." President Bashir labeled the critics as "colonialist parties".

On 21 April 2015, the Sudanese Embassy in London issued a statement saying that other international bodies were clearly biased as they refused to even send their observers and "the claim that unrest in some isolated peripheries reduces the validity of elections does not hold water; because Northern Ireland suffered serious “troubles” for decades and that didn't stop UK elections."

On 28 April 2015, the Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Hong Lei said that they respect "the choice made by the Sudanese people" and congratulated President Bashir on his re-election.

President Bashir also received congratulatory messages from President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi of Egypt, King Abdullah of Jordan, Emir Sabah of Kuwait, Sultan Qaboos of Oman, Emir Tamim of Qatar, King Salman of Saudi Arabia and President Khalifa al Nahyan of the United Arab Emirates.


This page was last updated at 2023-12-23 11:35 UTC. Update now. View original page.

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