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2000 Mauritian general election

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FieldValue
countryMauritius
typeparliamentary
previous_election1995 Mauritian general election
previous_year1995
next_election2005 Mauritian general election
next_year2005
seats_for_electionAll 62 directly elected seats in the National Assembly (and up to 8 BLS seats)
election_date11 September 2000
turnout80.86% ( 1.17pp)
image1Anerood Jugnauth, 1995.jpg
leader1Anerood Jugnauth
party1Militant Socialist Movement
alliance1MSM/MMM
popular_vote1951,643
percentage151.34%
seats158
image2Navin Ramgoolam, 1995.jpg
leader2Navin Ramgoolam
party2Labour Party (Mauritius)
alliance2Ptr–PMXD
seats28
popular_vote2672,336
percentage236.27%
map_image2000 Mauritian general election - Results by constituency.svg
map_captionResult by constituency. The colour shade shows the percentage of the elected candidate with the highest number of votes
titlePrime Minister
posttitleSubsequent Prime Minister
before_electionNavin Ramgoolam
before_partyLabour Party (Mauritius)
after_electionAnerood Jugnauth
after_partyMilitant Socialist Movement

General elections were held in Mauritius on 11 September 2000 to elect the members of the National Assembly.

The opposition Mauritian Militant Movement (MMM) party decisively won the elections in coalition with the Militant Socialist Movement (MSM), defeating the governing Mauritian Labour Party (MLP) led coalition. They formed together the MSM/MMM As a result, in a pre-election deal Anerood Jugnauth of the Militant Socialist Movement became Prime Minister of Mauritius before handing over to Paul Bérenger of the Mauritian Militant Movement in 2003.

Background

The Labour Party led by Navin Ramgoolam had governed Mauritius since winning the 1995 election. A new election had to be held by December 2000 and Ramgoolam dissolved parliament to call the election on 11 August 2000. He expected to be able to win the election in a three-way contest with the Mauritian Militant Movement and Militant Socialist Movement parties splitting the opposition vote between them. However ten days after the election was called the two main opposition parties agreed a deal.

The MSM led by Anerood Jugnauth and MMM led by Paul Bérenger agreed that if they won the election Jugnauth would become prime minister. They agreed that after three years he would step down as prime minister to become the president of Mauritius with enhanced powers, and that Bérenger would become prime minister, the first non-Hindu to do so.

Electoral system

The election was conducted under the first past the post system with three Members of parliament being elected from each of 20 mainland constituencies. A further two MPs were elected from the island of Rodrigues. Each voter was required to vote for three candidates with the possibility of panachage. Once these 62 MPs were decided the Supervisory Electoral Commission chose the eight 'best losers' to prevent any ethnic community or political party from being underrepresented. The Commission chose four MPs to balance the ethnic groups (Hindus, Muslims, Chinese and general population) and another four to balance the political parties. The 'best losers' could only come from candidates who came fourth in the 20 mainland constituencies.

Campaign

There were 43 parties putting forth 535 candidates but the main contest was between the two main coalitions that campaigned on similar platforms with the economy being the dominant election issue. The governing Mauritian Labour Party promised to raise civil servants' wages and reduce the prices of drinks while the main opposition attacked corruption. Both the government and opposition parties pledged to create 70,000 jobs.

The campaign was peaceful and election day was quiet with the sale or serving of alcohol banned for two days during the election to prevent trouble. Observers from the Southern African Development Community praised the election for its efficient and fair conduct and the high turnout. The opposition Mauritian Militant Movement and Militant Socialist Movement parties won a decisive victory almost wiping out the governing party and the Prime Minister Navin Ramgoolam admitted defeat the day after the election. Gender activists were disappointed with the results which saw only four seats won by women, a decline on the previous election in 1995.

Results

By constituency

ConstituencyMPPartyNotes
1Grand River North West–
Port Louis WestJean-Claude Barbier
Arianne Navarre-MarieReelected
Jean-Claude ArmanceElected
James Burty DavidBest Loser; Reelected
2Port Louis South–
Port Louis CentralEmmanuel Leung Shing
Rashid BeebeejaunReelected
Sahid MaudarbocusElected
Ahmad JeewahBest Loser; Reelected
3Port Louis Maritime–
Port Louis EastSam Lauthan
Siddick ChadyReelected
Mohammad NanchuckReelected
Anwar OomarBest Loser
4Port Louis North–
Montagne LongueMeckduth Chumroo
Gérard GrivonElected
Joe LesjongardElected
5Pamplemousses–TrioletNavin Ramgoolam
Jyaneshwur JhurryElected
Dev HurnamElected
6Grand Baie–Poudre D'OrPradeep Jeeha
Ashit GungahElected
Madan DullooElected
7Piton–Riviere du RempartAnerood Jugnauth
Balkissoon HookoomElected
Jai Prakash MeenowaReelected
Ravi YerrigadooBest Loser
8Quartier Militaire–MokaParmessur Ramloll
Ashok JugnauthElected
Deven NagalingumElected
9Flacq–Bon AccueilAnil Bachoo
Sangeet FowdarElected
Prem KoonjooElected
10Montagne Blanche–
Grand River South EastMookhesswur Choonee
Ajay GunnessElected
Rashad DaureeawooElected
11Vieux Grand Port–Rose BellePravind Jugnauth
Arvin BoolellReelected
Rajesh BhowonElected
Motee RamdassBest Loser
12Mahebourg–Plaine MagnienAnil Gayan
Soudesh RoopunElected
Ivan CollendavellooElected
13Riviere des Anguilles–SouillacHurreeprem Aumeer
Abdool Nasser IssimdarElected
Veda BaloomoodyReelected
14Savanne–Black RiverAlan Ganoo
José ArunasalomReelected
Prithvirajsing RoopunElected
15La Caverne–PhoenixLeela Dookun-Luchoomun
Steven ObeegadooReelected
Showkutally SoodhunElected
16Vacoas–FlorealNando Bodha
Sewram SakaramReelected
Sylvio MichelElected
17Curepipe–MidlandsEric Guimbeau
Gérard PayaElected
Sunil DowarkasingElected
Xavier-Luc DuvalBest Loser
18Belle Rose–Quatre BornesSushil Khushiram
Prithviraj PuttenElected
Danielle PerrierReelected
19Stanley–Rose HillPaul Bérenger
Jayen CuttareeReelected
Feroz AbdoolaElected
20Beau Bassin–Petite RiviereRajesh Bhagwan
Françoise LabelleElected
Maurice AlletElected
21RodriguesAlex Nancy
Serge ClairReelected
Nicolas Von MallyBest Loser; Reelected
Christian LeopoldBest Loser
Source: Government of Mauritius

References

References

  1. (2000-09-12). "Early results indicate opposition landslide in Mauritius elections". [[CNN]].
  2. (2000-09-08). "Mauritius Pundits Predict Opposition Victory". Sustainable democracy.
  3. (2000-09-10). "Carnival Atmosphere As Thousands End Mauritian Polls". Sustainable democracy.
  4. (2000-09-14). "Smooth Turnover Following Mauritian Election". Sustainable democracy.
  5. (September 2022). "Opposition alliance wins by landslide in Mauritius vote". [[CNN]] }}{{Dead link.
  6. (2000-09-10). "Color, contradictions mark run-up to Mauritius elections". [[CNN]].
  7. (2000-09-11). "Mauritian voters trek to polls in ideal conditions". Sustainable democracy.
  8. (2000-09-13). "Sadc Parliamentary Forum Applauds Mauritian Election". Sustainable democracy.
  9. (2000-09-12). "Mauritius opposition landslide win". [[BBC Online]].
  10. (2000-09-14). "Mauritian Election Results Disappoint Gender Activists". Sustainable democracy.
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