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2009 Bolivian general election

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

2009 Bolivian general election

← 20056 December 20092014 →
Registered5,139,554
Turnout94.54% (Increase 10.05pp)
Presidential election
 
NomineeEvo MoralesManfred Reyes VillaSamuel Doria Medina
PartyMAS-IPSPPPB-CNUN
Running mateÁlvaro García LineraLeopoldo FernándezGabriel Helbing
Popular vote2,943,2091,212,795258,971
Percentage64.22%24.46%5.65%

Results by department
Results by province

President before election

Evo Morales
MAS-IPSP

Elected President

Evo Morales
MAS-IPSP

Legislative election

All 36 seats in the Chamber of Senators
All 130 seats in the Chamber of Deputies
PartySeats+/–
Chamber of Senators
MAS-IPSP

26+14
PPB-CN

10New
Chamber of Deputies
MAS-IPSP

88+16
PPB-CN

37New
UN

3−5
Social Alliance

2New
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.
flagBolivia portal

General elections were held inBolivia on December 6, 2009,[1] following aconstitutional referendum held on 25 January 2009.[2][3] The election was initially expected to be held in 2010.[4] Voters elected:

The five departments which had not already done so all voted to have departmental autonomy. Eleven municipalities voted to have indigenous autonomy, out of twelve holding such referendums.[5] One province voted to have regional autonomy.

Presidential candidates

[edit]

Under the new constitution, all previous terms will not be considered for term limits. If any candidate fails to win over 50% of the vote and another candidate is within 10%, a second round will be held. It was the first time that an incumbent president ran for reelection. The presidential candidates were:

Opinion polls

[edit]

Polling prior to the election indicated that incumbentEvo Morales enjoyed a 55% approval rating, as well as an 18-point lead over his closest challengerManfred Reyes Villa.[6] As Morales was expected to cruise to reelection, the local press reported that Villa has already purchased an airplane ticket to the United States for the 7th (the day after the election).[6]

Results

[edit]

Incumbent PresidentEvo Morales won a convincing victory, with 64% of the vote. His party,Movement for Socialism, won a two-thirds majority in both theChamber of Deputies and theSenate.

President

[edit]
CandidateRunning matePartyVotes%
Evo MoralesÁlvaro García LineraMovement for Socialism2,943,20964.22
Manfred Reyes VillaLeopoldo FernándezPlan Progress for Bolivia – National Convergence1,212,79526.46
Samuel Doria MedinaGabriel HelbingNational Unity Front258,9715.65
René Joaquino CarlosCarlos Suárez GonzalesSocial Alliance106,0272.31
Ana María FloresGuillermo NúñezSocial Patriotic Unity Movement23,2570.51
Román LoayzaPorfirio MamaniGente15,6270.34
Alejo VélizPablo ValdezPeoples for Liberty and Sovereignty12,9950.28
Rime ChoquehuancaNora CastroSocial Democratic Bolivia9,9050.22
Total4,582,786100.00
Valid votes4,582,78694.31
Invalid votes120,3642.48
Blank votes156,2903.22
Total votes4,859,440100.00
Registered voters/turnout5,139,55494.55
Source:CNE

Chamber of Deputies

[edit]
PartyProportionalConstituencyIndigenousTotal
seats
+/–
Votes%SeatsVotes%SeatsVotes%Seats
Movement for Socialism2,851,99663.91332,050,54757.304925,09577.53688+16
Plan Progress for Bolivia – National Convergence1,190,60326.6817962,64826.90194,90215.14137+30
National Unity Front255,2995.723260,9947.2901,0493.2403–5
Social Alliance104,9522.350140,2623.9224211.3002New
Social Patriotic Unity Movement21,8290.49063,0071.7602680.8300New
Gente15,3880.34033,1590.9301840.5700New
Peoples for Liberty and Sovereignty12,6350.28037,6971.0501900.5900New
Social Democratic Bolivia9,7090.22030,0540.8402600.8000New
Total4,462,411100.00533,578,368100.007032,369100.0071300
Valid votes4,462,41194.263,578,36876.5032,36971.82
Invalid/blank votes271,9285.741,099,50223.5012,70028.18
Total votes4,734,339100.004,677,870100.0045,069100.00
Registered voters/turnout4,970,45895.254,948,82394.5290,95249.55
Source:CNE,Election Passport,Psephos

Chamber of Senators

[edit]
PartyVotes%Seats+/–
Movement for Socialism2,851,99663.9126+14
Plan Progress for Bolivia – National Convergence1,190,60326.6810+9
National Unity Front255,2995.720–1
Social Alliance104,9522.350New
Social Patriotic Unity Movement21,8290.490New
Gente15,3880.340New
Peoples for Liberty and Sovereignty12,6350.280New
Social Democratic Bolivia9,7090.220New
Total4,462,411100.0036+9
Valid votes4,462,41194.26
Invalid votes116,8392.47
Blank votes155,0893.28
Total votes4,734,339100.00
Registered voters/turnout4,970,45895.25
Source:CNE

Autonomy referendums

[edit]

Departments

[edit]

The five departments which had not already done so all voted to become autonomous departments. Each will have to produce a statute of autonomy. They were:

Regional autonomy

[edit]

TheGran Chaco Province in Tarija held a referendum on regional autonomy, which was approved by 80.4% of voters.[8]

Municipalities

[edit]

The followingmunicipalities voted on whether to become autonomous municipalities according to theIndigenous Originary Campesino Autonomy provisions of the 2009Constitution. Eleven voted yes:

One municipality voted no:

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Bolivien: Einigung über Verfassungsreferendum".Die Presse (in German). APA. 21 October 2008. Archived fromthe original on 15 February 2009. Retrieved22 March 2009.
  2. ^"Bolivia set for constitution vote".BBC News. 22 October 2008. Retrieved22 March 2009.
  3. ^http://www.plenglish.com/article.asp?ID={770AB960-1BD0-4417-8B3F-364526BF6886})&language=ENArchived March 15, 2009, at theWayback Machine
  4. ^"General Elections in Bolivia, December 2009 (ARI)".Elcano Royal Institute.
  5. ^abDiego Andrés Chávez Rodríguez, "La Autonomía Indígena Originario Campesina: Entre la formalidad y la autodeterminación,"Diálogos en Democracia, 21 March 2010 (Supplement toPulso Bolivia).
  6. ^ab"Morales keeps faith with populism ahead of Bolivia poll".FT. 5 Dec 2009. Archived fromthe original on 15 November 2011. Retrieved6 December 2009.
  7. ^La Bolivia autonómica,Los Tiempos (Cochabamba), edición especial, 6 August 2010
  8. ^Ministerio de Autonomías, "Región Autónoma Chaco TarijeñoArchived 2011-04-28 at theWayback Machine."
  9. ^"Las autonomías indígenas avanzan a paso lento per seguro, entre consensos e interrogantes"Diálogos en Democracia, 21 March 2010 (Supplement toPulso Bolivia).
Presidential elections
Legislative elections
Local elections
Judicial elections
Ombudsman elections
Referendums
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