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2010 Trinidad and Tobago general election

Congressional elections for all 41 seats


Congressional elections for all 41 seats

FieldValue
countryTrinidad and Tobago
typeparliamentary
previous_election2007 Trinidad and Tobago general election
previous_year2007
next_election2015 Trinidad and Tobago general election
next_year2015
seats_for_electionAll 41 seats in the House of Representatives
turnout69.88% ( 3.66pp)
election_date
image1Kamla Persad-Bissessar, 2012.jpg
leader1Kamla Persad-Bissessar
party1United National Congress
alliance1PP
last_election129.85%, 15 seats
seats121
seat_change1 6
popular_vote1316,600
percentage143.72%
swing1 13.87pp
image2Patrick Manning 2008 (cropped).jpg
leader2Patrick Manning
party2People's National Movement
last_election245.99%, 26 seats
seats212
seat_change214
popular_vote2287,458
percentage239.70%
swing26.29pp
image4Winston Dookeran (cropped).jpg
leader4Winston Dookeran
party4Congress of the People (Trinidad and Tobago)
alliance4PP
last_election422.71%, 0 seats
seats46
seat_change46
popular_vote4102,265
percentage414.12%
swing48.59pp
image5TOP
leader5Ashworth Jack
color5f4d937
party5TOP
alliance5PP
last_election5
seats52
seat_change5New
popular_vote515,371
percentage52.12%
swing5New
map_image2010 trinidad and tobago general election transparent.png
map_captionResults by constituency
titlePrime Minister
posttitleSubsequent Prime Minister
before_electionPatrick Manning
before_partyPeople's National Movement
after_electionKamla Persad-Bissessar
after_partyUnited National Congress

General elections were held in Trinidad and Tobago on 24 May 2010. The date of the general elections was announced by Prime Minister Patrick Manning on April 16, 2010, via a press release. The election was called over two years earlier than required by law. Polls showing that the UNC-led opposition coalition was likely to win the election were confirmed by the subsequent results.

With preliminary results showing the People's Partnership coalition likely to win a majority of 29 out of a possible 41 seats, Patrick Manning conceded defeat on election night. The final outcome has the People's Partnership winning 29 seats, and the PNM winning 12 seats. As a consequence of the People's Partnership's win, Kamla Persad-Bissessar of the People's Partnership coalition was elected Trinidad and Tobago's first female prime minister.

In 2015 former minister and international football executive Jack Warner alleged financial connections between himself, world football and the conduct of the 2010 general election.

Background

The 2007 general elections awarded 26 of the 41 seats in the House of Representatives to the People's National Movement (PNM) and 15 to the United National Congress-Alliance (UNC-A). Despite receiving almost 23% of the votes cast, the Congress of the People (COP) received no seats. Several smaller parties, including the Tobago United Front/Democratic Action Congress, also failed to secure any seats. PNM leader Patrick Manning retained the position of Prime Minister, while UNC-A leader Basdeo Panday remained Leader of the Opposition.

These were the first elections for a House which had been expanded from 36 seats to 41. Previous elections were mostly decided by five marginal seats—Barataria/San Juan, Mayaro, San Fernando West, St. Joseph and Tunapuna. The 2007 election raised the number of marginal seats to 10, with Chaguanas East, Lopinot/Bon Air West, Princes Town South/Tableland (renamed Moruga/Tableland for the 2010 election), Pointe-à-Pierre and Tobago East ending up among the marginals.

Candidates

7 April 2010, was the start of screening of 41 new candidates for the People's National Movement. The screening began in Manning's San Fernando East constituency, with the other 40 electoral districts following. April 13, 2010, was the start of screening for the United National Congress. Screening for the UNC-A was held at the party's headquarters at the Rienzi Complex in Couva. Screening for the Congress of the People began on 1 April 2010. Nomination day for the election was 3 May 2010.

Campaigning

Do So! was the name of a political campaign orchestrated by Cambridge Analytica for the United National Congress during the election in order to convince youth members of the Afro–Trinidadians and Tobagonians to not vote.

Conduct

In 2015 former minister and football executive Austin "Jack" Warner said that he had documents linking the outcome of the general election with himself and the finances of football's world governing body, FIFA.

Warner made the claims in a paid national television political broadcast, saying that his life was in danger, that he had given the documents to lawyers, and, "I will no longer keep secrets for them who actively seek to destroy the country."

Results

The election was won by the People's Partnership coalition, causing Kamla Persad-Bissessar of the UNC to be the country's first female prime minister. Persad-Bissessar's coalition won 29 of 41 seats, causing incumbent Prime Minister Patrick Manning to concede defeat. Manning's PNM was reduced to 12 seats. In her victory speech, Persad-Bissessar stated: "The honor you've given me is without parallel ... I accept it with deep honor and gratitude."

By constituency

Winning candidates are in bold.

ConstituencyPeople's PartnershipPNMOther parties
ArimaRodger Samuel (COP)Laurel Lezama-Lee SingJustin Gibbs (NNV)
Arouca/MaloneyAnna Maria Mora (COP)Alicia HospedalesJohn Enoch (Independent)
Barataria/San JuanFuad Khan (UNC)Joseph Ross
Caroni CentralGlenn Ramadharsingh (UNC)Sheila Madoo-Kurban
Caroni EastTim Gopeesingh (UNC)Harold Ramoutar
Chaguanas EastStephen Cadiz (UNC)Mustapha Abdul-HamidPrakash Persad (NNV)
Chaguanas WestAustin "Jack" Warner (UNC)Ronald Heera
Couva NorthRamona Ramdial (UNC)Nal Ramsingh
Couva SouthRudy Indarsingh (UNC)Anthony Khan
Cumuto/ManzanillaCollin Partap (UNC)Darryl MahabirKrish Jurai (Independent)
D'Abadie/O'MearaAnil Roberts (COP)Karen Nunez-Tesheira
Diego Martin CentralNicole Dyer-Griffith (COP)Amery BrowneNigel Telesford (NNV)
Diego Martin North/EastGarvin Nicholas (UNC)Colm ImbertMelissa Ochoa (NNV)
Diego Martin WestRocky Garcia (COP)Keith RowleySaaleha Zawadi Abu Bakr (NNV)
FyzabadChandresh Sharma (UNC)Joel Primus
La BreaErnesto Kesar (UNC)Fitzgerald JeffreyLorris Ballack (NNV)
La Horquetta/TalparoJairam Seemungal (UNC)Nadra Nathai-GyanRamesh Maharaj (TTNCP)
Sookram Ali (Independent)
Laventille East/MorvantKwasi Mutema (COP)Donna CoxUmar Khan
Laventille WestMakandal Daaga (COP)NiLeung Hypolite
Lopinot/Bon Air WestLincoln Douglas (COP)Neil Parsanlal
MayaroWinston "Gypsy" Peters (UNC)Clifford Campbell
Moruga/TablelandClifton De Coteau (UNC)Augustus Thomas
NaparimaNizam Baksh (UNC)Faiz Ramjohn
Oropouche EastRoodal Moonilal (UNC)Christin Ramdial
Oropouche WestStacy Roopnarine (UNC)Heather Sedeno-Walker
Point FortinNyahuma Obika (COP)Paula Gopee-Scoon
Pointe-a-PierreErrol McLeod (UNC)Christine Kangaloo
Port of Spain North/St. Anns WestAnnabelle Davis (UNC)Patricia McIntoshFuad Abu Bakr (NNV)
Port of Spain SouthGizelle Russel (COP)Marlene McDonaldTravis Mulraine (NNV)
Princes TownNela Khan (UNC)Anwarie Ramkissoon
San Fernando EastCarol Cuffy-Dowlat (COP)Patrick Manning
San Fernado WestCarolyn Seepersad-Bachan (COP)Junia RegrelloIndrani Maharaj-Abu Bakr
SipariaKamla Persad-Bissessar (UNC)Vidya Deokiesingh
St. Anns EastVerna St. Rose Greaves (UNC)Joanne ThomasChristian Dookie (NNV)
St. AugustinePrakash Ramadhar (COP)Balchandra Sharma
St. JosephHerbert Volney (UNC)Kennedy SwaratsinghMarcus Ramkissoon (Independent)
TabaquiteSuruj Rambachan (UNC)Farouk Mohammed
Tobago EastVernella Alleyne-Toppin (TOP)Gizel Thomas-Roberts
Tobago WestDelmon Baker (TOP)Terrence Williams
Toco/Sangre GrandeRupert Griffith (UNC)Eric "Pink Panther" TaylorNeil De Silva (NNV)
TunapunaWinston Dookeran (COP)Esther Le Gendre

References

References

  1. (16 April 2010). "Trinidad and Tobago sets early election May 24". Reuters.
  2. (2010-05-19). "Coalition Win Predicted in Trinidad and Tobago: Angus Reid Global Monitor". Angus-reid.com.
  3. "Trinidad And Tobago PM Patrick Manning Concedes Defeat In Snap Vote – WSJ.com". Wall Street Journal.
  4. Rampersad, Indira. (October 2010). "Comparison of the 2002 and 2007 elections". Trinidad Guardian.
  5. "UNC's 'Do So' drive uncovered".
  6. (2019-08-06). "Netflix's 'The Great Hack' highlights Cambridge Analytica's role in Trinidad & Tobago elections".
  7. "Social Media, Emergent Manipulation, and Political Legitimacy".
  8. (2020-09-03). "After Cambridge Analytica".
  9. (28 January 2019). "'They were planning on stealing the election': Explosive new tapes reveal Cambridge Analytica CEO's boasts of voter suppression, manipulation and bribery".
  10. (2022-12-23). "Ex-FIFA Executive Jack Warner Financed "Election Engineering" Campaign in Trinidad".
  11. (4 June 2015). "Fifa crisis: Jack Warner 'to reveal all despite fears'". [[BBC Online]].
  12. "Former FIFA VP Warner makes televised address in Trinidad". Washington Post.
  13. Gray, Madison. (25 May 2010). "Trinidad Elects Its First Female Prime Minister". TIME Magazine.
  14. Yearwood, John. (25 May 2010). "Coalition deals strong blow to Trinidad's traditional leadership". Miami Herald.
  15. (25 May 2010). "Incumbent ousted in Trinidad election". Reuters.
  16. (25 May 2010). "Woman prepares to take over in first for Trinidad and Tobago". Vancouver Sun.
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