a peaceful vote, the Senegalese awaiting the results

a peaceful vote, the Senegalese awaiting the results

Around 7.3 million Senegalese voters (out of 18 million inhabitants) are called to vote on Sunday March 24 to elect their fifth President of the Republic. This is the twelfth presidential election since the country’s independence in 1960.

This election was at the heart of a political crisis in February following President Macky Sall decided to cancel the vote, triggering demonstrations repressed by security forces. The vote was subsequently postponed for ten months by a vote of the National Assembly. After a month of hesitation which alarmed national opinion and part of the international community, the date of the presidential election was finally set for March 24 – before the expiration of Macky Sall’s mandate – following a decision by the Council constitutional.

🗳️ What is the voting method ?

In Senegal, the President of the Republic is elected by direct universal suffrage and by single-member majority voting in two rounds. Since the constitutional referendum of 2016, the duration of his mandate is five years, renewable only once.

To win in the first round, a candidate must obtain an absolute majority (more than 50% of the votes). If none of the candidates achieves this score, a second round is organized within two weeks following the announcement of the results in order to decide between the two candidates who came first.

🗳️Who can vote ?

🗳️ Who are the candidates ?

For the first time in the political history of Senegal, the outgoing president, Macky Sall, in power since 2012, is not a candidate.

The final list of candidates for the presidential election was made public on January 20, initially consisting of 20 names. There are only 17 competitors left following the withdrawals of Rose Wardini – following suspicions surrounding his dual Senegalese and French nationality – then Cheikh Tidiane Dieye and Habib Sy, both for the benefit of the anti-system candidate Bassirou Diomaye Faye.

Ousmane Sonko, the central figure in a standoff lasting more than two years with the state which gave rise to several episodes of deadly unrest, was excluded from the presidential race in January.

🗳️ How were they chosen ?

To be able to run in the presidential election, candidates had to collect sponsorship from voters registered on the electoral lists.

  • the citizen sponsorshipaccording to which he must obtain nearly 45,000 valid sponsorships, or 0.6% of the electorate, with at least 2,000 signatures per region in seven regions, supplemented if necessary by signatures in the rest of the country or elsewhere. across the diaspora, knowing that the same voter can only sponsor one candidate;
  • sponsorship of deputies, which requires each candidate to be sponsored by a list of 13 elected representatives of the National Assembly;
  • sponsorship of elected officials which provides that each candidate can be sponsored by 120 mayors or presidents of departmental councils.

Added to these sponsorships is the payment of a compulsory deposit of 30 million CFA francs (nearly 46,000 euros) to validate an application file.

🗳️ When will the results be known ?

If the first results might be known as early as the night of Sunday to Monday, it is generally necessary to wait several days before the proclamation of the official results by the Constitutional Council.

In the meantime, the results reports are sent to each departmental court, compiled and then transmitted to the regional level.

After the announcement of the provisional results, candidates have 72 hours to file an appeal.

Once the deadlines for processing appeals have been exhausted, the Constitutional Council proclaims the official results and a second round is organized if no candidate has obtained an absolute majority.

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