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2011 São Toméan presidential election
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| country | São Tomé and Príncipe |
| type | presidential |
| previous_election | 2006 São Toméan presidential election |
| previous_year | 2006 |
| next_election | 2016 São Toméan presidential election |
| next_year | 2016 |
| election_date | 17 July 2011 (first round) |
| 7 August 2011 (second round) | |
| registered | 92,689 |
| turnout | 68.36% (first round), 74.09% (second round) |
| image2 | Evaristo Carvalho 2016.jpg |
| nominee2 | Evaristo Carvalho |
| party2 | Independent Democratic Action |
| popular_vote2 | 31,287 |
| percentage2 | 47.12% |
| image1 | Manuel Pinto da Costa 2014 (cropped).jpg |
| nominee1 | Manuel Pinto da Costa |
| party1 | Independent politician |
| popular_vote1 | 35,112 |
| percentage1 | 52.88% |
| title | President |
| before_election | Fradique de Menezes |
| before_party | Force for Change Democratic Movement – Liberal Party |
| after_election | Manuel Pinto da Costa |
| after_party | Independent politician |
7 August 2011 (second round)
Presidential elections were held in São Tomé and Príncipe in 2011, the first round beginning on 17 July 2011 with a run-off held on 7 August 2011. Incumbent President Fradique de Menezes has served the maximum two terms and could not constitutionally seek a third term. The final result saw former president Manuel Pinto da Costa, aged 74, elected in a narrow victory against Speaker of Parliament Evaristo Carvalho.
The first round was contested by approximately 120 candidates. The candidate from President de Menezes' party, Force for Change Democratic Movement–Liberal Party (, MDFM–PL), was Delfim Neves, who jointly represented the MDFM–PL and his own Democratic Convergence Party (, PCD–GR). Pinto da Costa, who ran independently, won the most votes but failed to receive the majority required to claim an outright victory. Carvalho, of the ruling party Independent Democratic Action (, ADI), a former prime minister and the incumbent Speaker of the National Assembly, placed second. A run-off to be contested between Pinto da Costa and Carvalho was announced on the same day. Pinto da Costa received the backing of the majority of eliminated candidates, and he was expected to win comfortably.
Pinto da Costa won the runoff, held 7 August, by five percentage points.
Background
Main article: Politics of São Tomé and Príncipe
Manuel Pinto da Costa previously served as São Tomé and Príncipe's first president from independence in 1975. He governed the islands as a one-party socialist state under the Movement for the Liberation of São Tomé and Príncipe (, MLSTP). In 1991, the legalisation of opposition political parties led to the country's first election under a democratic system. Pinto da Costa was not a candidate in that election and instead announced he would retire from politics. The MLSTP did not present an alternative candidate and Miguel Trovoada was elected unopposed. Despite his previous declaration, Pinto da Costa returned to participate in the presidential elections of 1996, but was narrowly defeated by Trovoada. In 2001, he ran against incumbent president Fradique de Menezes, and was again unsuccessful.
Pinto da Costa resigned from the MLSTP in 2005. The party is currently led by Aurélio Martins, who placed sixth in the first round vote count. Other major candidates included former prime minister Maria das Neves and former defence minister Elsa Pinto, both independents. Pinto da Costa's main rival, Carvalho, represented the ADI, which won the parliamentary elections in August 2010 and is the ruling party of incumbent Prime Minister Patrice Trovoada.
Conduct
Missions from the African Union, Community of Portuguese Language Countries and the Economic Community of Central African States sent observers to monitor the election, which was declared free and fair. The only major controversy observed was a boycott by around 30,000 from five small villages on São Tomé's northern shore, in protest over grievances with living conditions that had not been addressed. The polls were re-opened in these villages on 20 July, but the results did not affect the outcome.
Results
A total of 92,639 citizens were registered to vote. In the first round, the national electoral commission, headed by Victor Correia, recorded a turnout of 68%. Of the 120 candidates, Da Costa and Carvalho won the most votes (35.6% and 21.8% respectively), but neither candidate received enough support to claim a majority. Delfim Neves and Maria das Neves both won substantial vote counts (over 14% each), but only the first two placeholders went through to the run-off. After the results were confirmed, most of the eliminated candidates, including Delfim Neves, Maria das Neves and Aurélio Martins, endorsed da Costa's bid for the run-off.
Reactions
Several analysts have raised concerns that Pinto da Costa's victory may trigger a return to the authoritarian rule seen during his previous period in power.
References
References
- Staff writers. (6 August 2011). "Sao Tome Prepares for Presidential Run-Off". Voice of America.
- Veiga, Abel. "Sao Tome presidential vote set for run-off". Google News.
- Agence France-Presse. (8 August 2011). "Manuel Pinto da Costa eleito Presidente de São Tomé". Público.
- Pinto da Costa, Manuel. "Homepage".
- Veiga, Abel. "Former Sao Tome leader poised to retake power". Google News.
- Staff writers. (7 August 2011). "Sao Tome picks new president". Google News.
- "Sao Tome votes in presidential poll".
- "Elections in São Tomé and Príncipe". African Elections Database.
- "African elections held in the past year". African Elections Database.
- "São Tomé and Príncipe 2011". World Elections.
- Felix, Bate. (8 August 2011). "Sao Tome's Pinto da Costa wins presidential runoff".
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
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