Showing posts with label Election results. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Election results. Show all posts

Monday, August 11, 2008

Official election result unveiled

Monday, 11 August 2008
Khoun Leakhana & Touch Yuthea
With additional reporting by Neth Pheaktra
The Mekong Times

It’s official – the Cambodian People’s Party (CPP) are to take the reins of government once again having taken around 58 percent of the vote in the recent general election, according to the preliminary official results released by the National Election Committee (NEC) Saturday.

The CPP received 3,492,374 of the total 6,010,277 votes cast, though, under Cambodia’s parliamentary system, the CPP will control a substantial majority of the Kingdom’s National Assembly (NA), with 90 of the total 123 seats.

The CPP’s percentage of the vote is up this election, from 39.63 percent in 1993, 41.67 percent in 1998 and 47.30 percent in 2003, said the NEC.

Trailing the CPP in this year’s election was the major opposition Sam Rainsy Party (SRP) with 1,316,714 votes, or 21.90 percent of the total.

The opposition Human Rights Party (HRP) and Norodom Ranariddh Party (NRP) took 397,816 and 337,943 votes, or 6.61 percent and 5.62 percent of the total respectively.

Sin Chumbo, deputy director of the NEC, declined to reveal the number of seats for each party, saying this would be included in the final official report in early August.

Sin Chumbo said that political parties may lodge complaints within 72 hours of Saturday’s announcement – by 8 am Tuesday morning.

Keo Phalla, head of the NEC’s legal service department, told The Mekong Times that only the NRP had so far made an official complaint. The NRP apparently complained of “many irregularities,” especially the use of the controversial ‘1018’ forms that allow anonymous voting.

Unsurprisingly, the CPP welcomed the results, calling them “the real will of the people” in an official statement attributed to its chairman, Chea Sim.

“As democrats with a great respect for national interests, all political parties that took part in the election should accept the election outcome,” he wrote.

But the SRP, HRP and NRP have alleged many irregularities took place, including “ghost” voters, deletions from the voter lists and anonymous voting, causing over one million Cambodians to be denied their right to vote.

NEC Vice Chairman Sin Chumbo and NEC Secretary General Tep Nytha denied the accusations, noting that national and international observers appraised the election as fair and free.

But opposition firebrand SRP President Sam Rainsy called newly elected CPP parliamentarians “ghosts, Vietnamese and illegible voters.”

Senior CPP lawmaker Cheam Yeap was unsurprised by Sam Rainsy’s remarks.

“Sam Rainsy and his people cry like this every time after an election, but his cries cannot defeat the law,” he said. “The CPP received 90 seats because the people sincerely supported and voted for the CPP, as they found that only the CPP can lead the country and that the SRP is not reliable.”

Sam Rainsy warned that the result would create “huge instability” in Cambodia, so SRP parliamentarians will boycott the first NA session, scheduled to be held Sep 24. “If we join the meeting, it means that we recognize the election outcome. Thus, we will not join the meeting,” he explained.

The NRP and HRP are also to boycott the first NA session, NRP spokesman Muth Chantha confirmed.

If there is no proper and fair resolution to election fraud, the NRP will boycott the NA session, but the boycott does not mean that we will abandon our parliamentarian seats,” he said.

HRP senior official Keat Sokun said that the HRP “cannot accept the election outcome if our lawsuits are not resolved. And we will not attend the NA session, but we will not abandon our seats in the NA.”

Cheam Yeap said the NA boycott was sour grapes at “wanting more posts in NA commissions.”

“First, the SRP want to join the government, but the CPP does not want [them]. Second, the SRP wants to share the positions of NA [commission] chairmen or vice chairmen with the CPP,” Cheam Yeap claimed.

He cautioned that “if any party does not attend the session after seven days of its first session, it [the boycott] is automatically regarded as an abandonment of the NA seats.”

Cambodia: CPP Wins Almost 60% of Vote

Monday August 11, 2008
VNA (Hanoi)

PHNOM PENH, Aug 11 Asia Pulse - The Cambodian Peoples Party (CPP) won 58.1 per cent of the popular vote in the July 27 general election, according to figures released by the National Election Commission (NEC) on August 9.

NEC also said that with 21.9 per cent of vote, the Sam Rainsy Party is the CPP's nearest rival.

According to a NEC official, turnout was 75.21 per cent or six million of the 8.1 million eligible voters.

But the official declined to say how many parliamentary seats each party had won before a further announcement next month in which full official results will be revealed.

The Sam Rainsy Party on the same day rejected the outcome and demanded a re-run.

Earlier, the CPP claimed it had captured at least 90 of the 123 seats in Parliament.

Saturday, August 09, 2008

Cambodia's ruling party win confirmed

Saturday, August 09, 2008

PHNOM PENH (AFP) — Cambodia's ruling party took nearly 60 percent of the popular vote in last month's election, according to figures released by the election committee on Saturday.

The Cambodian People's Party (CPP) won 58.1 percent of the vote, compared with 21.9 percent for its nearest rival, the main opposition Sam Rainsy party, authorities said.

National Election Committee official Sin Chum Bo said turnout was 75.21 percent -- or six million of the 8.1 million eligible voters.

But she declined to say how many parliamentary seats each party had won ahead of a further announcement next month in which full official results will be revealed.

"This is just a temporary election result... while we allow for political parties to make complaints before we can divide the number of seats," she told reporters.

The CPP earlier claimed it had captured at least 90 of the 123 seats in parliament, with opposition leader Sam Rainsy and three other small parties dividing the rest.

The Sam Rainsy party on Saturday rejected the outcome, saying the election had not been conducted freely and fairly, and demanding a re-run.

International monitors agreed the election was flawed, despite improvements in the electoral process compared to past polls here.

Cambodia releases final count in election

Aug 9, 2008
DPA

Phnom Penh - Cambodia released the final vote count from last month's general election on Saturday, showing the full extent to which the country's two main parties dominated the polls.

Of just over 6 million votes, the ruling Cambodian People's Party (CPP) took almost 3.5 million, and the opposition Sam Rainsy Party (SRP) 1.3 million, according to National Election Committee figures.

The remaining nine parties split the rest. The results were posted as temporary because parties now have 72 hours to lodge final complaints against the tally.

However, lawmakers from SRP plus the Norodom Ranariddh Party and the Human Rights Party, which together hold about 31 seats of 123, held a press conference Friday to say they will boycott the swearing in of new parliamentarians on August 24.

They claim up to 1 million voters were unable to find their names on polling day on July 27, compromising the fairness of the elections.

Prime Minister Hun Sen has said the ceremony will go ahead regardless, even though some constitutional experts have disputed the legality of this move.

The CPP hold 90 seats and its partner, the royalist Funcinpec Party, holds two, but despite its poor showing, Funcinpec is expected to maintain its coalition position as members of the formerly dominant party are intricately woven into the army, police, government and public service.

Analysts say undoing the coalition, which was formed under the UN after it assisted the first democratic multi-party election in 1993, could cause instability and the CPP now has the numbers to overrule any opposition in the parliament, making it a moot issue.

CPP gets less than 60% of the popular vote

CPP wins 58% votes in 4th general election of Cambodia

PHNOM PENH, Aug. 9 (Xinhua) -- The major ruling Cambodian People's Party (CPP) won around 58.11 percent of the votes in the fourth general election on July 27, according to the preliminary official balloting results declared by the National Election Committee (NEC) here Saturday.

Altogether 3,492,374 out of the 6,010,277 actual voters cast their ballots for CPP, who had already translated the victory into 90 out of the 123 seats at the National Assembly (NA) and claimed to be the landslide winner of the nationwide political showdown.

CPP's winning rate during the past three general elections respectively stood at 39.63 percent in 1993, 41.67 percent in 1998 and 47.30 percent in 2003, said NEC.

Trailing CPP in this year's election was the major opposition Sam Rainsy Party (SRP) with 1,316,714 votes, or 21.90 percent of all.

Minor opposition Human Rights Party (HRP) and Norodom Ranariddh Party (NRP) respectively won 397,816 and 337,943 votes, or 6.61 percent and 5.62 percent of all.

The co-ruling Funcinpec Party scored 303,764 votes, or 5.05 percent of all.

Altogether 11 political parties had run for the election this year. A total of 8,125,529 voters were registered to vote at 15,255 polling stations nationwide and 17, 000 local and international observers watched the polling process, according to NEC figures.

The voter turnout rate this year was only 75 percent, lower than 83 percent in 2003, 94 percent in 1998 and 90 percent in 1993, said NEC.

Final official results and allocation of the NA seats can be known at the end of this month and the new government will be established in September.

Friday, August 08, 2008

Cambodian election results to be announced

Aug 8, 2008
DPA

Phnom Penh - Cambodia's National Election Committee said Friday it would announce temporary results from the July 27 national polls within 24 hours.

The committee said the results would be announced at 8 am (0100 GMT) Saturday on state media and a number of other outlets.

It said the 11 participating parties then had 72 hours to appeal.

The ruling Cambodian People's Party had won 90 of 123 seats in early counts and appeared to be unassailable.

But interest still remains in whether the royalist Funcinpec party, once a driving political force, can salvage more than the two seats it held in early polling - down from 26 in the 2003 election.

Cambodia has so far largely avoided the violence associated with previous elections, although security was expected to remain tight.

International observers, including from monitors the US and EU, concluded after polling that improvements to the electoral process still needed to be made, but overall declared them free, if not entirely fair due to the ruling party's dominance of the media.

Thursday, April 05, 2007

SRP: Analysis of Election Results for the CPP and the SRP

April 5, 2007

ANALYSIS OF ELECTION RESULTS FOR THE CPP AND THE SRP
(April 1, 2007 commune council election)

These are the latest available figures. Comparisons are with figures from the 2002 commune council election:

For the CPP
  • Number of popular votes collected by the CPP: 3.11 million versus 2.67 million (+16.5%).
  • Percentage of the CPP votes nationwide: 61.1% versus 61.2%.
  • Number of commune councillor seats gained by the CPP: 7,987, versus 7,703 (+3.7%).
  • Number of communes led by the CPP: 1,591 versus 1,598 (-0.4%).
  • Number of communes with CPP representation (out of 1,621): 1,621 (100.0% coverage), same as in 2002.
For the SRP
  • Number of popular votes collected by the SRP: 1.30 million versus 0.73 million (+77.6%).
  • Percentage of the SRP votes nationwide: 25.5% versus 16.7%.
  • Number of commune councillor seats gained by the SRP: 2,671 versus 1,346 (+98.4%).
  • Number of communes led by SRP: 28 versus 13 (+115.4%).
  • Number of communes with SRP representation (out of 1,621): 1,379 (85.1% coverage) versus 914 (56.4%). The number of communes with SRP representation has increased by 50.9%.
Evolution from the 2002 commune council election to the 2003 national election:
  • Percentage of the CPP votes nationwide: from 61.2% to 47.3%.
  • Percentage of the SRP votes nationwide: 16.7% to 21.9%.
Possible evolution from the 2007 commune council election to the 2008 national election, in a two-party race:
  • Percentage of the CPP votes nationwide: from 61.1% to 49.0 % (change very similar to the evolution from 2002 to 2003 given the different nature of the two elections).
  • Percentage of an SRP-led Democratic Movement votes nationwide: from 25.5% to 51.0% (the democratic forces could win the next election if they are united like in 1993, when they won the UN-organized election).
  • Important remark: At the April 1, 2007 election, some 2 million eligible voters, most of them non-CPP supporters, were prevented from casting their ballot due to administrative harassment and political discrimination. The voter turnout plummeted to an unprecedented low of 65 percent versus 87 percent in 2002. This problem will be properly addressed next year.
National Assembly and Senator seats that each political party would win on the basis of the popular votes they collected at the April 1, 2007 commune council election:

National Assembly members (123 in total):
  • CPP: 90 (against 73 now)
  • SRP: 31 (against 24 now)
  • NRP: 2 (against 0 now)
  • Funcinpec: 0 (against 26 now)
Senators (out of 57 who would be elected by the 11,321 commune councillors nationwide):
  • CPP: 45 (same as now)
  • SRP: 12 (against 2 now)
  • NRP: 0 (same as now)
  • Funcinpec: 0 (against 10 now). Funcinpec won 2,211 commune councillor positions in 2002 but the number was reduced to 289 in 2007.

SRP Cabinet