Elections in Nicaragua: Difference between revisions
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{{Short description|none}} <!-- "none" is preferred when the title is sufficiently descriptive; see [[WP:SDNONE]] --> |
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{{Politics of Nicaragua}} |
{{Politics of Nicaragua}} |
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The [[Republic of Nicaragua]] elects on the national level a [[head of state]]—the [[President (government title)|president]]—and a [[unicameral]] [[legislature]]. The [[president of Nicaragua]] and his or her vice-president are elected on one ballot for a five-year term by the people. |
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'''Elections in Nicaragua''' gives information on [[election]]s and election results in [[politics of Nicaragua|Nicaragua]]. |
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The [[National Assembly of Nicaragua|National Assembly]] (''Asamblea Nacional'') has 92 members: 90 deputies elected for a five-year term by [[proportional representation]] (20 nationally and 70 regionally), the outgoing president, and the runner-up in the last presidential election. Should the president be reelected (not originally planned for in the Nicaraguan constitution), the outgoing vice president takes the seat reserved for him instead. |
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The [[Republic of Nicaragua]] elects on national level a [[head of state]] – the [[president]] – and a [[legislature]]. The [[President of Nicaragua]] and his or her vice-president are elected on one ballot for a five-year term by the people. |
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Nicaragua has a [[multi-party system]]. |
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The [[National Assembly of Nicaragua|National Assembly]] ''(Asamblea Nacional)'' has 92 members: 90 deputies elected for a five-year term by [[proportional representation]], the outgoing president, and the runner-up in the last presidential election. Should the president be reelected (not originally planned for in the Nicaraguan constitution), the outgoing vice president takes the seat reserved for him instead. |
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==Latest elections== |
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Nicaragua has a [[multi-party system]], which means that there are more than two dominant [[political parties]], and in past years, no other parties were able to achieve any electoral success. |
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=== 2021 presidential election === |
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==Schedule== |
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{{Main|2021 Nicaraguan general election}} |
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{{Election results |
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|cand1=[[Daniel Ortega]]|party1=[[Sandinista National Liberation Front]]|votes1=2093834 |
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{|class=wikitable style="text-align:center;" |
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|cand2=Walter Espinoza|party2=[[Constitutionalist Liberal Party]]|votes2=395406 |
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|- |
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|cand3=Guillermo Osorno|party3=[[Nicaraguan Party of the Christian Path]]|votes3=89853 |
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!Position !! 2011 !! 2012 !! 2013 !! 2014 !! 2015 !! 2016 |
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|cand4=Marcelo Montiel|party4=[[Nicaraguan Liberal Alliance]]|votes4=85711 |
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|- |
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|cand5=Gerson Gutiérrez|party5=[[Alliance for the Republic (Nicaragua)|Alliance for the Republic]]|votes5=48429 |
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!Type |
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|cand6=Mauricio Orué|party6=[[Independent Liberal Party (Nicaragua)|Independent Liberal Party]]|votes6=46510 |
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| Presidential (November)<br>National Congress (November)<br>Gubernatorial (November)||colspan=4|None|| Presidential (November)<br>National Congress (November)<br>Gubernatorial (November) |
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|invalid=161687 |
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|- |
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|turnout=65.26 |
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!President and<br>vice president |
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|source=[https://twitter.com/cse_nicaragua/status/1458489115129810948 CSE] |
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|'''President and vice president''' ||colspan=4|None ||'''President and vice president''' |
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}} |
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|- |
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!National Congress |
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|'''All seats''' ||colspan=4|None ||'''All seats''' |
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|- |
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!Provinces, cities and municipalities |
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|'''All positions''' ||colspan=4|None ||'''All positions''' |
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|} |
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===2021 National Assembly election=== |
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===Inauguration=== |
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{{Election results |
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{|class=wikitable style="text-align:center;" |
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|image=[[File:Nicaragua Assemblée nationale 2021.svg]] |
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|- |
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|firstround=National|secondround=Constituency |
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!Position !! 2012 !! 2013 !! 2014 !! 2015 !! 2016 !! 2017 |
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|party1=[[Sandinista National Liberation Front]]|votes1=2039717|seats1=15|votes1_2=2024598|seats1_2=60|totseats1=75|sc1= |
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|- |
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|party2=[[Constitutionalist Liberal Party]]|votes2=259789|seats2=2|votes2_2=411101|seats2_2=7|totseats2=9|sc2= |
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!Type |
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|party3=[[Nicaraguan Liberal Alliance]]|votes3=140199|seats3=1|votes3_2=99335|seats3_2=1|totseats3=2|sc3= |
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| Presidential (January)<br>National Congress (January)<br>Gubernatorial (January)||colspan=4|None|| Presidential (January)<br>National Congress (January)<br>Gubernatorial (January) |
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|party4=[[Independent Liberal Party (Nicaragua)|Independent Liberal Party]]|votes4=128520|seats4=1|votes4_2=69523|seats4_2=0|totseats4=1|sc4= |
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|- |
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|party5=[[Alliance for the Republic (Nicaragua)|Alliance for the Republic]]|votes5=127997|seats5=1|votes5_2=49172|seats5_2=0|totseats5=1|sc5= |
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!President and<br>vice president |
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|party6=[[Nicaraguan Party of the Christian Path]]|votes6=53959|seats6=0|votes6_2=82844|seats6_2=1|totseats6=1|sc6= |
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|'''10 January''' ||colspan=4|None ||'''10 January''' |
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|party7=[[YATAMA]]|votes7_2=25718|seats7_2=1|totseats7=1|sc7= |
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|- |
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|row8=Reserved seat|totseats8=1|sc8= |
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!National Congress |
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|invalid=170550|invalid2=159527 |
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|'''10 January''' ||colspan=4|None ||'''10 January''' |
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|total_sc=0 |
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|- |
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|electorate=|electorate2= |
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!Provinces, cities and municipalities |
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|source=[https://twitter.com/cse_nicaragua/status/1458548900026015749 CSE], [https://twitter.com/cse_nicaragua/status/1458548921433829376 CSE], [https://100noticias.com.ni/politica/111285-cse-incrementa-numero-votantes-urnas-vacias/ 100noticias] |
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|'''10 January''' ||colspan=4|None ||'''10 January''' |
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}} |
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===2021 Central American Parliament election=== |
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{{Election results |
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|party1=[[Sandinista National Liberation Front]]|votes1=|seats1=15|sc1= |
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|party2=[[Constitutionalist Liberal Party]]|votes2=|seats2=2|sc2= |
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|party3=[[Independent Liberal Party (Nicaragua)|Independent Liberal Party]]|votes3=|seats3=1|sc3= |
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|party4=[[Nicaraguan Liberal Alliance]]|votes4=|seats4=1|sc4= |
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|party5=[[Conservative Party (Nicaragua)|Conservative Party]]|votes5=|seats5=0|sc5= |
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|party6=[[Alliance for the Republic (Nicaragua)|Alliance for the Republic]]|votes6=|seats6=1|sc6= |
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|invalid= |
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|total_sc= |
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|electorate= |
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|source=[https://100noticias.com.ni/politica/111285-cse-incrementa-numero-votantes-urnas-vacias/ 100noticias.com.ni] |
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}} |
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=== 2019 autonomous regional elections === |
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The eighth autonomous elections on the Caribbean Coast took place on March 3, 2019. The voters elected 45 members to each Regional Council in the RACCN and the RACCS. |
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(These results are preliminary, as voting is still being counted by the Supreme Electoral Council). |
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* [[Sandinista National Liberation Front]] (FSLN) – 64 seats (RACCN: 30, RACCS: 34) |
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* [[Yapti Tasba Masraka Nanih Aslatakanka]] (YATAMA) – 14 seats (RACCN: 12, RACCS: 2) |
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* [[Constitutionalist Liberal Party]] (PLC) – 12 seats (RACCN: 3, RACCS: 9) |
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Total votes for all participating parties: |
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* [[Sandinista National Liberation Front]] (FSLN) – 81,503 (55.03%) |
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* [[Yapti Tasba Masraka Nanih Aslatakanka]] (YATAMA) – 27,522 (18.63%) |
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* [[Constitutionalist Liberal Party]] (PLC) – 23,907 (16.14%) |
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* [[Conservative Party (Nicaragua)|Conservative Party]] – 364 (0.25%) |
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* [[Multiethnic Indigenist Party]] (PIM) – 1,219 (0.82%) |
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* [[Nicaraguan Liberal Alliance]] (ALN) – 622 (0.45%) |
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* [[Alliance for the Republic (Nicaragua)|Alliance for the Republic]] (APRE) – 334 (0.23%) |
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* [[Independent Liberal Party (Nicaragua)|Independent Liberal Party]] (PLI) – 1,428 (0.96%) |
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* Democratic Restoration Party (PRD) – 278 votes (0.18%) |
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* Citizens for Liberty (CXL) – 8,390 (5.67%) |
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* Myatamaran – 700 votes (0.47%) |
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* Moskitia Pawanka – 614 votes (0.41%) |
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* [[Neoliberal Party]] (PAL) – 1,113 votes (0.75%) |
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Source: [https://www.el19digital.com/articulos/ver/titulo:87964-cse-presenta-segundo-informe-preliminar-de-las-elecciones-regionales-de-la-costa-caribe] |
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==Past elections== |
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===Presidential elections 1984–2011=== |
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====1984==== |
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The 1984 election took place on November 4. Of the 1,551,597 citizens registered in July, 1,170,142 voted (75.41%). The null votes were 6% of the total. The national averages of valid votes for president were: |
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*[[Daniel Ortega]], [[Sandinista National Liberation Front]] (FSLN) – 66.97% |
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*[[Clemente Guido]], [[Democratic Conservative Party]] (PCD) – 14.04% |
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*[[Virgilio Godoy]], [[Independent Liberal Party (Nicaragua)|Independent Liberal Party]] (PLI) – 9.60% |
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*[[Mauricio Diaz]], [[Popular Social Christian Party]] (PPSC) – 5.56% |
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*[[Allan Zambrana]], [[Nicaraguan Communist Party]] (PCdeN) – 1.45% |
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*[[Domingo Sánchez Sancho]], [[Nicaraguan Socialist Party]] (PSN) – 1.31% |
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*[[Isidro Téllez]], [[Marxist-Leninist Popular Action Movement]] (MAP-ML) – 1.03% |
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The pro-Sandinista magazine, ''Envio'' claimed that this election was considered to have the "most freedom of choice" in the nation's history and was approved by international advocates of free elections.[http://www.envio.org.ni/articulo/2578] |
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====1990==== |
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The historical election of 1990 took place on February 25. The total registered voters were 1,752,088 and the abstentions 241,250 or 13.7%. The [[United Nicaraguan Opposition]] coalition of those who opposed the ruling [[Sandinista National Liberation Front]] was victorious, winning 55% of the vote. [[Violeta Chamorro]] became president. The national averages of valid votes for president were: |
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*[[Violeta Barrios de Chamorro]], [[National Opposition Union]] (UNO) – 777,552 votes – 54.73% |
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*[[Daniel Ortega]], [[Sandinista National Liberation Front]] (FSLN) – 579,886 votes – 40.82% |
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*Other – 63,106 – 4.45%[http://www.envio.org.ni/articulo/621] |
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====1996==== |
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In presidential elections, [[Arnoldo Alemán]] of the [[Nicaraguan Liberal Alliance|Liberal Alliance]]-[[Liberal Constitutionalist Party]] defeated [[Daniel Ortega]] of the [[Sandinista National Liberation Front]]. A record number of 24 parties and alliances participated in these elections. |
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*[[Arnoldo Alemán]], [[Nicaraguan Liberal Alliance|Liberal Alliance]] – 51.03% |
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==Latest elections== |
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*[[Daniel Ortega]], [[Sandinista National Liberation Front]] (FSLN) – 37.75% |
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; 2016 presidential election |
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*[[Guillermo Osorno]], [[Nicaraguan Party of the Christian Path]] (CCN) – 4.10% |
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{| class=wikitable style=text-align:right |
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*[[Noel Vidaurre]], [[Nicaraguan Conservative Party]] (PCN) – 2.26% |
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*Other (20 other candidates with less than 1% of the votes) – 4.86%[http://www.envio.org.ni/articulo/1990] |
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====2001==== |
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{{#section-h:2001 Nicaraguan general election|President}} |
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====2006==== |
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{{#section:2006 Nicaraguan general election|presidentialresults}} |
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====2011==== |
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{{#section:2011 Nicaraguan general election|presidentialresults}} |
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====2016==== |
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{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:right" |
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!Candidate |
!Candidate |
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!Party |
!Party |
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Line 54: | Line 131: | ||
!% |
!% |
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|- |
|- |
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|align=left|[[Daniel Ortega]]||align=left|[[Sandinista National Liberation Front]]||1,806,651||72.44 |
| align="left" |[[Daniel Ortega]]|| align="left" |[[Sandinista National Liberation Front]]||1,806,651||72.44 |
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|- |
|- |
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|align=left|[[Maximino Rodríguez]]||align=left|[[Constitutionalist Liberal Party]]||374,898||15.03 |
| align="left" |[[Maximino Rodríguez Martínez|Maximino Rodríguez]]|| align="left" |[[Constitutionalist Liberal Party]]||374,898||15.03 |
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|- |
|- |
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|align=left|[[José Alvarado (Nicaraguan politician)|José Alvarado]]||align=left|[[Independent Liberal Party (Nicaragua)|Independent Liberal Party]]||112,562||4.51 |
| align="left" |[[José Alvarado (Nicaraguan politician)|José Alvarado]]|| align="left" |[[Independent Liberal Party (Nicaragua)|Independent Liberal Party]]||112,562||4.51 |
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|- |
|- |
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|align=left|[[Saturnino Cerrato]]||align=left|[[Nicaraguan Liberal Alliance]]||107,392||4.31 |
| align="left" |[[Saturnino Cerrato]]|| align="left" |[[Nicaraguan Liberal Alliance]]||107,392||4.31 |
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|- |
|- |
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|align=left|[[Erick Cabezas]]||align=left|[[Conservative Party (Nicaragua)|Conservative Party]]||57,437||2.30 |
| align="left" |[[Erick Cabezas]]|| align="left" |[[Conservative Party (Nicaragua)|Conservative Party]]||57,437||2.30 |
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|- |
|- |
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|align=left|[[Carlos Canales]]||align=left|[[Alliance for the Republic (Nicaragua)|Alliance for the Republic]]||35,002||1.40 |
| align="left" |[[Carlos Canales]]|| align="left" |[[Alliance for the Republic (Nicaragua)|Alliance for the Republic]]||35,002||1.40 |
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|- |
|- |
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| colspan="2" align="left" |Invalid/blank votes||–||– |
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|- |
|- |
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| colspan="2" align="left" |'''Total'''||'''2,493,942'''||'''100''' |
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|- |
|- |
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| colspan="2" align="left" |Registered voters/turnout||– ||– |
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|- |
|- |
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| colspan="4" align="left" |Source: [https://web.archive.org/web/20161114025014/http://www.cse.gob.ni/fri3/respres1.php CSE], BBC<ref>{{cite news|title=Nicaragua leader Daniel Ortega wins third consecutive term|publisher=BBC|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-latin-america-37892477|access-date=13 January 2018}}</ref> |
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|align=left colspan=4|Source: [http://www.cse.gob.ni/fri3/respres1.php CSE] |
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|} |
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===Parliamentary election results 1984–2016=== |
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====1984==== |
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The 1984 parliamentary election was held together with the presidential election on November 4. The percentages for National Assembly representatives were very similar to those the parties had received for their presidential candidate. The electoral quotient needed to win one of the 90 National Assembly seats was obtained by dividing the number of valid votes in each region by the number of representatives that had been assigned to each region, proportional to its population. |
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Each party's "left over" votes—those insufficient to earn it a seat in a given region—were then added together and re-tallied nationally. The seats earned in this second count went to the next candidate on the party's slate in the regions where it had come closest to winning on the first round. In addition, any party getting at least 1% of the presidential vote (which all six losing parties did) was allowed a seat for its defeated presidential candidate. The final composition of the National Assembly was thus: |
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*[[Sandinista National Liberation Front]] (FSLN) – 61 seats |
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*[[Democratic Conservative Party]] (PCD) – 14 seats |
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*[[Independent Liberal Party (Nicaragua)|Independent Liberal Party]] (PLI) – 9 seats |
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*[[Popular Social Christian Party]] (PPSC) – 6 seats |
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*[[Nicaraguan Communist Party]] (PCdeN) – 2 seats |
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*[[Nicaraguan Socialist Party]] (PSN) – 2 seats |
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*[[Marxist-Leninist Popular Action Movement]] (MAP-ML) – 2 seats |
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Source: [http://www.envio.org.ni/articulo/2578] |
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====1990==== |
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The 1990 parliamentary election was held together with the presidential election on February 25. The final composition of the National Assembly in 1990 was: |
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*[[National Opposition Union]] (UNO) – 51 seats |
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*[[Sandinista National Liberation Front]] (FSLN) – 39 seats |
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*[[Democratic Conservative Party]] (PCD) – 3 seats |
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*[[Independent Liberal Party (Nicaragua)|Independent Liberal Party]] (PLI) – 3 seats |
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*[[Popular Social Christian Party]] (PPSC) – 3 seats |
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*[[Nicaraguan Communist Party]] (PCdeN) – 3 seats |
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*[[Nicaraguan Socialist Party]] (PSN) – 3 seats |
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*[[Marxist-Leninist Popular Action Movement]] (MAP-ML) – 3 seats |
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*[[Revolutionary Unity Movement]] (MUR) – 1 seat |
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*[[Nicaraguan Social Christian Party|Social Christian Party]] (PSC) – 1 seat |
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Note: The 1990 Assembly members are joined by any presidential candidate who receives over 1% of the vote |
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Sources: [http://www.country-data.com/frd/cs/nicaragua/ni_appen.html#table9] [http://www.envio.org.ni/articulo/2587] |
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====1996==== |
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The 1996 elections for the National Assembly took place together with the presidential election on October 20. The final composition of the National Assembly in 1996 was: |
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*[[Nicaraguan Liberal Alliance|Liberal Alliance]] (AL) – 42 seats |
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*[[Sandinista National Liberation Front]] (FSLN) – 36 seats |
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*[[Nicaraguan Party of the Christian Path]] (CCN) – 4 seats |
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*[[Nicaraguan Conservative Party]] (PCN) – 3 seats |
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*[[National Project]] (PRONAL) – 2 seats |
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*[[Nicaraguan Resistance Party]] (PRN) – 1 seat |
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*[[Sandinista Renovation Movement]] (MRS) – 1 seat |
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*[[Unity Alliance]] (AU) – 1 seat |
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*[[Independent Liberal Party (Nicaragua)|Independent Liberal Party]] (PLI) – 1 seat |
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*[[National Conservative Action]] (ANC) – 1 seat |
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*[[UNO-96 Alliance]] (UNO-96) – 1 seat |
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Source: [http://www.envio.org.ni/articulo/1990] |
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====2001==== |
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{{#section-h:2001 Nicaraguan general election|National Assembly}} |
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====2006==== |
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{{#section:2006 Nicaraguan general election|NationalAssemblyresults}} |
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====2011==== |
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{{#section:2011 Nicaraguan general election|NationalAssemblyresults}} |
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; 2016 legislative election |
; 2016 legislative election |
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{| class=wikitable style=text-align:right |
{| class=wikitable style=text-align:right |
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Line 94: | Line 231: | ||
|align=left|[[Constitutionalist Liberal Party]]||369,342||15.30||3||375,432||15.51||10||13||+11 |
|align=left|[[Constitutionalist Liberal Party]]||369,342||15.30||3||375,432||15.51||10||13||+11 |
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|- |
|- |
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|align=left|[[Independent Liberal Party (Nicaragua)|Independent Liberal Party]]||162,043||6.71||1||117,626||4.86||1||2|| |
|align=left|[[Independent Liberal Party (Nicaragua)|Independent Liberal Party]]||162,043||6.71||1||117,626||4.86||1||2||−25 |
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|- |
|- |
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|align=left|[[Nicaraguan Liberal Alliance]]||137,541||5.70||1||137,078||5.66||1||2||+2 |
|align=left|[[Nicaraguan Liberal Alliance]]||137,541||5.70||1||137,078||5.66||1||2||+2 |
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Line 102: | Line 239: | ||
|align=left|[[Alliance for the Republic (Nicaragua)|Alliance for the Republic]]||49,329||2.04||0||70,939||2.93||1||1||+1 |
|align=left|[[Alliance for the Republic (Nicaragua)|Alliance for the Republic]]||49,329||2.04||0||70,939||2.93||1||1||+1 |
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|- |
|- |
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|align=left|[[YATAMA]]||–||–||–||30,901||1.28||1||1|| |
|align=left|[[YATAMA]]||–||–||–||30,901||1.28||1||1||−1 |
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|- |
|- |
||
|align=left|Special members{{efn|name=fn1}}||–||–||–||–||–||–||2||0 |
|align=left|Special members{{efn|name=fn1}}||–||–||–||–||–||–||2||0 |
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Line 112: | Line 249: | ||
|align=left|Registered voters/turnout|| || ||–|| || ||–||–||– |
|align=left|Registered voters/turnout|| || ||–|| || ||–||–||– |
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|- |
|- |
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|align=left colspan=9|Source: [http://www.cse.gob.ni/fri3/resdipdepa1.php CSE], [https://www.el19digital.com/articulos/ver/titulo:48926-fsln-tendra-71-diputados-ante-la-asamblea-nacional-y-15-ante-el-parlacen El 19 Digital] |
|align=left colspan=9|Source: [https://web.archive.org/web/20161116022333/http://www.cse.gob.ni/fri3/resdipdepa1.php CSE], [https://www.el19digital.com/articulos/ver/titulo:48926-fsln-tendra-71-diputados-ante-la-asamblea-nacional-y-15-ante-el-parlacen El 19 Digital] |
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|} |
|} |
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{{notelist|refs= |
{{notelist|refs= |
||
{{efn|name=fn1|The runner-up in the presidential election ([[Maximino Rodríguez]] of the Constitutionalist Liberal Party) and the outgoing president are special members of the National Assembly; as Ortega was re-elected, outgoing Vice President [[Omar Halleslevens]] of the FSLN, who was not Ortega's running mate in these elections (having been replaced by [[Rosario Murillo]]), will take up his seat.}}}} |
{{efn|name=fn1|The runner-up in the presidential election ([[Maximino Rodríguez]] of the Constitutionalist Liberal Party) and the outgoing president are special members of the National Assembly; as Ortega was re-elected, outgoing Vice President [[Omar Halleslevens]] of the FSLN, who was not Ortega's running mate in these elections (having been replaced by [[Rosario Murillo]]), will take up his seat.}}}} |
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===Municipal election results 1990–2017=== |
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==Past elections== |
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===Presidential elections 1984-2011=== |
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====1984==== |
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The 1984 election took place on November 4. Of the 1,551,597 citizens registered in July, 1,170,142 voted (75.41%). The null votes were 6% of the total. The national averages of valid votes for president were: |
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*[[Daniel Ortega]], [[Sandinista National Liberation Front]] (FSLN) - 66.97% |
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*[[Clemente Guido]], [[Democratic Conservative Party]] (PCD) - 14.04% |
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*[[Virgilio Godoy]], [[Independent Liberal Party (Nicaragua)|Independent Liberal Party]] (PLI) - 9.60% |
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*[[Mauricio Diaz]], [[Popular Social Christian Party]] (PPSC) - 5.56% |
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*[[Allan Zambrana]], [[Nicaraguan Communist Party]] (PCdeN) - 1.45% |
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*[[Domingo Sánchez Sancho]], [[Nicaraguan Socialist Party]] (PSN) - 1.31% |
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*[[Isidro Téllez]], [[Marxist-Leninist Popular Action Movement]] (MAP-ML) - 1.03% |
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The pro-Sandinista magazine, ''Envio'' claimed that this election was considered to have the "most freedom of choice" in the nation's history and was approved by international advocates of free elections.[http://www.envio.org.ni/articulo/2578] |
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====1990==== |
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The historical election of 1990 took place on February 25. The total registered voters were 1,752,088 and the abstentions 241,250 or 13.7%. The [[United Nicaraguan Opposition]] coalition of those who opposed the ruling [[Sandinista National Liberation Front]] was victorious, winning 55% of the vote. [[Violeta Chamorro]] became president.The national averages of valid votes for president were: |
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*[[Violeta Barrios de Chamorro]], [[National Opposition Union]] (UNO) - 777,552 votes - 54.73% |
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*[[Daniel Ortega]], [[Sandinista National Liberation Front]] (FSLN) - 579,886 votes - 40.82% |
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*Other - 63,106 - 4.45%[http://www.envio.org.ni/articulo/621] |
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====1996==== |
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In presidential elections, [[Arnoldo Alemán]] of the [[Nicaraguan Liberal Alliance|Liberal Alliance]]-[[Liberal Constitutionalist Party]] defeated [[Daniel Ortega]] of the [[Sandinista National Liberation Front]]. A record number of 24 parties and alliances participated in these elections. |
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*[[Arnoldo Alemán]], [[Nicaraguan Liberal Alliance|Liberal Alliance]] - 51.03% |
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*[[Daniel Ortega]], [[Sandinista National Liberation Front]] (FSLN) - 37.75% |
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*[[Guillermo Osorno]], [[Nicaraguan Party of the Christian Path]] (CCN) - 4.10% |
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*[[Noel Vidaurre]], [[Nicaraguan Conservative Party]] (PCN) - 2.26% |
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*Other (20 other candidates with less than 1% of the votes) - 4.86%[http://www.envio.org.ni/articulo/1990] |
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====2001==== |
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{{Nicaraguan presidential election, 2001}} |
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====2006==== |
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{{Nicaraguan presidential election, 2006}} |
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====2011==== |
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{{Nicaraguan presidential election, 2011}} |
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===Parliamentary election results 1984-2011=== |
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====1984==== |
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The 1984 parliamentary election was held together with the presidential election on November 4. The percentages for National Assembly representatives were very similar to those the parties had received for their presidential candidate. The electoral quotient needed to win one of the 90 National Assembly seats was obtained by dividing the number of valid votes in each region by the number of representatives that had been assigned to each region, proportional to its population. |
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Each party's "left over" votes—those insufficient to earn it a seat in a given region—were then added together and re-tallied nationally. The seats earned in this second count went to the next candidate on the party's slate in the regions where it had come closest to winning on the first round. In addition, any party getting at least 1% of the presidential vote (which all six losing parties did) was allowed a seat for its defeated presidential candidate. The final composition of the National Assembly was thus: |
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*[[Sandinista National Liberation Front]] (FSLN) - 61 seats |
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*[[Democratic Conservative Party]] (PCD) - 14 seats |
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*[[Independent Liberal Party (Nicaragua)|Independent Liberal Party]] (PLI) - 9 seats |
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*[[Popular Social Christian Party]] (PPSC) - 6 seats |
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*[[Nicaraguan Communist Party]] (PCdeN) - 2 seats |
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*[[Nicaraguan Socialist Party]] (PSN) - 2 seats |
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*[[Marxist-Leninist Popular Action Movement]] (MAP-ML) - 2 seats |
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Source: [http://www.envio.org.ni/articulo/2578] |
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====1990==== |
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The 1990 parliamentary election was held together with the presidential election on February 25. The final composition of the National Assembly in 1990 was: |
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*[[National Opposition Union]] (UNO) - 51 seats |
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*[[Sandinista National Liberation Front]] (FSLN) - 39 seats |
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*[[Democratic Conservative Party]] (PCD) - 3 seats |
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*[[Independent Liberal Party (Nicaragua)|Independent Liberal Party]] (PLI) - 3 seats |
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*[[Popular Social Christian Party]] (PPSC) - 3 seats |
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*[[Nicaraguan Communist Party]] (PCdeN) - 3 seats |
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*[[Nicaraguan Socialist Party]] (PSN) - 3 seats |
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*[[Marxist-Leninist Popular Action Movement]] (MAP-ML) - 3 seats |
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*[[Revolutionary Unity Movement]] (MUR) - 1 seat |
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*[[Nicaraguan Social Christian Party|Social Christian Party]] (PSC) - 1 seat |
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Note: The 1990 Assembly members are joined by any presidential candidate who receives over 1% of the vote |
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Sources: [http://www.country-data.com/frd/cs/nicaragua/ni_appen.html#table9] [http://www.envio.org.ni/articulo/2587] |
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====1996==== |
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The 1996 elections for the National Assembly took place together with the Presidential election on October 20. The final composition of the National Assembly in 1996 was: |
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*[[Nicaraguan Liberal Alliance|Liberal Alliance]] (AL) - 42 seats |
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*[[Sandinista National Liberation Front]] (FSLN) - 36 seats |
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*[[Nicaraguan Party of the Christian Path]] (CCN) - 4 seats |
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*[[Nicaraguan Conservative Party]] (PCN) - 3 seats |
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*[[National Project]] (PRONAL) - 2 seats |
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*[[Nicaraguan Resistance Party]] (PRN) - 1 seat |
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*[[Sandinista Renovation Movement]] (MRS) - 1 seat |
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*[[Unity Alliance]] (AU) - 1 seat |
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*[[Independent Liberal Party (Nicaragua)|Independent Liberal Party]] (PLI) - 1 seat |
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*[[National Conservative Action]] (ANC) - 1 seat |
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*[[UNO-96 Alliance]] (UNO-96) - 1 seat |
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Source: [http://www.envio.org.ni/articulo/1990] |
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====2001==== |
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{{Nicaraguan parliamentary election, 2001}} |
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====2006==== |
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{{Nicaraguan legislative election, 2006}} |
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====2011==== |
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{{Nicaraguan legislative election, 2011}} |
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===Municipal election results 1990-2004=== |
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====1990==== |
====1990==== |
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The 1990 municipal election was held together with the presidential and the parliamentary elections on February 25. Municipal Councils were elected in 131 municipalities nationwide. The final results for the elections were: |
The 1990 municipal election was held together with the presidential and the parliamentary elections on February 25. Municipal Councils were elected in 131 municipalities nationwide. The final results for the elections were: |
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*[[National Opposition Union]] (UNO) |
*[[National Opposition Union]] (UNO) – 98 municipalities controlled |
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*[[Sandinista National Liberation Front]] (FSLN) |
*[[Sandinista National Liberation Front]] (FSLN) – 31 municipalities controlled |
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*[[Central American Unionist Party]] (PUCA) |
*[[Central American Unionist Party]] (PUCA) – 2 municipalities controlled |
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Sources: [http://www.envio.org.ni/articulo/2587] [http://www.envio.org.ni/articulo/2613] |
Sources: [http://www.envio.org.ni/articulo/2587] [http://www.envio.org.ni/articulo/2613] |
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A great expectation in the 1996 municipal elections was the participation for the first (and last) time of what the Electoral Law terms "popular subscription associations". According to the Electoral Law, to be formed, an association needed, among other things, to present to the [[Supreme Electoral Council (Nicaragua)|Supreme Electoral Council]] a "written request signed by a minimum of 5% of the citizens on the electoral rolls corresponding to the respective electoral area". A total of 53 associations participated in the municipal elections. One of them (the [[Civic Association of Potosí]]) won the mayor's post. |
A great expectation in the 1996 municipal elections was the participation for the first (and last) time of what the Electoral Law terms "popular subscription associations". According to the Electoral Law, to be formed, an association needed, among other things, to present to the [[Supreme Electoral Council (Nicaragua)|Supreme Electoral Council]] a "written request signed by a minimum of 5% of the citizens on the electoral rolls corresponding to the respective electoral area". A total of 53 associations participated in the municipal elections. One of them (the [[Civic Association of Potosí]]) won the mayor's post. |
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Despite winning only one municipality, an important number of association candidates finished in second or third place. In the nation's capital, [[Managua]], two independent candidates; [[Pedro Solórzano]] of the [[Viva Managua Movement]] association and [[Herty Lewites]] of the |
Despite winning only one municipality, an important number of association candidates finished in second or third place. In the nation's capital, [[Managua]], two independent candidates; [[Pedro Solórzano]] of the [[Viva Managua Movement]] association and [[Herty Lewites]] of the Sol (sun) association competed against the AL and FSLN official candidates. ALN's [[Roberto Cedeño]] got the 28% of the votes followed closely by Solórzano with 26%, [[Carlos Guadamúz]] from the FSLN with 25.7% and [[Herty Lewites]] who became [[Managua]]'s mayor four years later came in fourth place with 12.3%. |
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The 1996 municipal election took place together with the |
The 1996 municipal election took place together with the presidential election on October 20. Municipal Councils were elected in 145 municipalities nationwide. The final results for the elections were: |
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*[[Nicaraguan Liberal Alliance|Liberal Alliance]] (AL) |
*[[Nicaraguan Liberal Alliance|Liberal Alliance]] (AL) – 92 municipalities controlled |
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*[[Sandinista National Liberation Front]] (FSLN) |
*[[Sandinista National Liberation Front]] (FSLN) – 51 municipalities controlled |
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*[[Sandinista Renovation Movement]] (MRS) |
*[[Sandinista Renovation Movement]] (MRS) – 1 municipality controlled |
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*[[Civic Association of Potosí]] (ACP) |
*[[Civic Association of Potosí]] (ACP) – 1 municipality controlled |
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Source: [http://www.envio.org.ni/articulo/1990] |
Source: [http://www.envio.org.ni/articulo/1990] |
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====2000==== |
====2000==== |
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In the 2000 municipal election 1,532,816 voters elected Municipal Councils in 151 municipalities nationwide. It was the first time that the |
In the 2000 municipal election 1,532,816 voters elected Municipal Councils in 151 municipalities nationwide. It was the first time that the presidential and municipal elections were held separately. The final results for the elections were: |
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*[[Constitutionalist Liberal Party]] (PLC) |
*[[Constitutionalist Liberal Party]] (PLC) – 94 municipalities controlled |
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*[[Sandinista National Liberation Front]] (FSLN) |
*[[Sandinista National Liberation Front]] (FSLN) – 52 municipalities controlled |
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*[[Conservative Party of Nicaragua|Conservative Party]] (PC) |
*[[Conservative Party of Nicaragua|Conservative Party]] (PC) – 5 municipalities controlled |
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The FSLN won for the first time in ten years the municipality of [[Managua]], Nicaragua's capital city with its candidate [[Herty Lewites]] that pulled 44% of the votes. |
The FSLN won for the first time in ten years the municipality of [[Managua]], Nicaragua's capital city with its candidate [[Herty Lewites]] that pulled 44% of the votes. |
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In the 2004 municipal election 1,664,243 voters elected Municipal Councils in 152 municipalities nationwide, with nearly a 56% abstention. The final results for the elections were: |
In the 2004 municipal election 1,664,243 voters elected Municipal Councils in 152 municipalities nationwide, with nearly a 56% abstention. The final results for the elections were: |
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*[[Sandinista National Liberation Front]] (FSLN-Convergence) |
*[[Sandinista National Liberation Front]] (FSLN-Convergence) – 87 municipalities controlled |
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*[[Constitutionalist Liberal Party]] (PLC) |
*[[Constitutionalist Liberal Party]] (PLC) – 57 municipalities controlled |
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*[[Alliance for the Republic (Nicaragua)|Alliance for the Republic]] (APRE) |
*[[Alliance for the Republic (Nicaragua)|Alliance for the Republic]] (APRE) – 4 municipalities controlled |
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*[[Yapti Tasba Masraka Nanih Aslatakanka]] (YATAMA) |
*[[Yapti Tasba Masraka Nanih Aslatakanka]] (YATAMA) – 3 municipalities controlled |
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*[[Nicaraguan Resistance Party]] (PRN) |
*[[Nicaraguan Resistance Party]] (PRN) – 1 municipality controlled |
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Note: Elections took place for the first time in the newly created municipality of [[San José de Bocay]] in the [[Jinotega (department)|Jinotega]] department. |
Note: Elections took place for the first time in the newly created municipality of [[San José de Bocay]] in the [[Jinotega (department)|Jinotega]] department. |
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The 2004 municipal elections represented a huge Sandinista victory. The FSLN-Convergence won 14 of the 17 departmental capitals, 87 of the 152 |
The 2004 municipal elections represented a huge Sandinista victory. The FSLN-Convergence won 14 of the 17 departmental capitals, 87 of the 152 municipalities—including 5 of the 6 that make up [[Managua]]’s greater metropolitan area—and 25 of [[Nicaragua]]’s 42 largest cities. In total it will govern a little over 4 million inhabitants, nearly 71% of the national population. |
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The Sandinista victory was attributed to the success of the FSLN-Convergence alliance. Of the 87 mayors elected on the FSLN ticket, 17 come from these allies: 5 are independents, 3 are from the Resistance, 3 belong to the [[Sandinista Renovation Movement]] (MRS), 2 are Conservatives, 2 are Liberals, 1 is from the [[Christian Unity Movement]] (MUC) and 1 is a Social Christian. Of the deputy mayors who ran with an FSLN mayoral candidate, 28 are Liberals, 16 are independent, 14 are from the MUC, 9 are Conservatives, 9 are from the MRS, 3 are from the Resistance and 1 is a Social Christian. These allied candidates allowed the FSLN to win 12 municipal governments for the first time. |
The Sandinista victory was attributed to the success of the FSLN-Convergence alliance. Of the 87 mayors elected on the FSLN ticket, 17 come from these allies: 5 are independents, 3 are from the Resistance, 3 belong to the [[Sandinista Renovation Movement]] (MRS), 2 are Conservatives, 2 are Liberals, 1 is from the [[Christian Unity Movement]] (MUC) and 1 is a Social Christian. Of the deputy mayors who ran with an FSLN mayoral candidate, 28 are Liberals, 16 are independent, 14 are from the MUC, 9 are Conservatives, 9 are from the MRS, 3 are from the Resistance and 1 is a Social Christian. These allied candidates allowed the FSLN to win 12 municipal governments for the first time. |
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Source: [http://www.envio.org.ni/articulo/2672] |
Source: [http://www.envio.org.ni/articulo/2672] |
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==== 2017 municipal elections ==== |
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===Autonomous elections on the Caribbean Coast results 1990-2014=== |
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In the 2017 municipal election voters elected Municipal Councils in 153 municipalities nationwide, with around 53% turnout. The final results for the elections were: |
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*[[Sandinista National Liberation Front]] – 135 municipalities controlled |
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*[[Independent Liberal Party (Nicaragua)|Independent Liberal Party]] (PLI) – 12 municipalities controlled |
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*[[Yapti Tasba Masraka Nanih Aslatakanka]] (YATAMA) – 3 municipalities controlled |
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*[[Constitutionalist Liberal Party]] (PLC) – 2 municipalities controlled |
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*[[Nicaraguan Liberal Alliance]] – 1 municipality controlled |
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Source: {{cn|date=April 2019}} |
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==== 2022 municipal elections ==== |
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{{Main|2022 Nicaraguan municipal elections}} |
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===Autonomous elections on the Caribbean Coast results 1990–2014=== |
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====1990==== |
====1990==== |
||
The first autonomous elections on the Caribbean Coast took place in 1990 together with the presidential, parliamentary and municipal election on February 25. The voters elected the 45 Regional Council members in what was officially called the [[North Atlantic Autonomous Region]] (RAAN) and the 45 in the [[South Atlantic Autonomous Region]] (RAAS). The abstention was 21%, only 7% higher than the national average: |
The first autonomous elections on the Caribbean Coast took place in 1990 together with the presidential, parliamentary and municipal election on February 25. The voters elected the 45 Regional Council members in what was officially called the [[North Atlantic Autonomous Region]] (RAAN) and the 45 in the [[South Atlantic Autonomous Region]] (RAAS). The abstention was 21%, only 7% higher than the national average: |
||
*[[Sandinista National Liberation Front]] (FSLN) |
*[[Sandinista National Liberation Front]] (FSLN) – 39 seats (RAAN: 21, RAAS: 18) |
||
*[[Yapti Tasba Masraka Nanih Aslatakanka]] (YATAMA) |
*[[Yapti Tasba Masraka Nanih Aslatakanka]] (YATAMA) – 26 seats (RAAN: 22, RAAS: 4) |
||
*[[National Opposition Union]] (UNO) |
*[[National Opposition Union]] (UNO) – 25 seats (RAAN: 2, RAAS: 23) |
||
Note: National Assembly representatives also have a seat. |
Note: National Assembly representatives also have a seat. |
||
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With an abstention of 34%, the inhabitants of the Atlantic Coast elected the 45 Regional Council members in what is officially called the [[North Atlantic Autonomous Region]] (RAAN) and the 45 in the [[South Atlantic Autonomous Region]] (RAAS) on February 27: |
With an abstention of 34%, the inhabitants of the Atlantic Coast elected the 45 Regional Council members in what is officially called the [[North Atlantic Autonomous Region]] (RAAN) and the 45 in the [[South Atlantic Autonomous Region]] (RAAS) on February 27: |
||
*[[Constitutionalist Liberal Party]] (PLC) |
*[[Constitutionalist Liberal Party]] (PLC) – 37 seats (RAAN: 19, RAAS: 18) |
||
*[[Sandinista National Liberation Front]] (FSLN) |
*[[Sandinista National Liberation Front]] (FSLN) – 33 seats (RAAN: 19, RAAS: 14) |
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*[[Yapti Tasba Masraka Nanih Aslatakanka]] (YATAMA) |
*[[Yapti Tasba Masraka Nanih Aslatakanka]] (YATAMA) – 12 seats (RAAN: 7, RAAS: 5) |
||
*[[National Opposition Union]] (UNO) |
*[[National Opposition Union]] (UNO) – 5 seats (RAAN: 0, RAAS: 5) |
||
*[[Authentic Costeño Autonomy Movement]] (MAAC) |
*[[Authentic Costeño Autonomy Movement]] (MAAC) – 2 seats (RAAN: 0, RAAS: 2) |
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*[[Costeño Democratic Alliance]] (ADECO) |
*[[Costeño Democratic Alliance]] (ADECO) – 1 seat (RAAN: 0, RAAS: 1) |
||
Sources: [http://www.envio.org.ni/articulo/3222] [http://www.envio.org.ni/articulo/838] |
Sources: [http://www.envio.org.ni/articulo/3222] [http://www.envio.org.ni/articulo/838] |
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With an abstention of 40%, the inhabitants of the Atlantic Coast elected the 45 Regional Council members in what is officially called the [[North Atlantic Autonomous Region]] (RAAN) and the 45 in the [[South Atlantic Autonomous Region]] (RAAS) on March 1.: |
With an abstention of 40%, the inhabitants of the Atlantic Coast elected the 45 Regional Council members in what is officially called the [[North Atlantic Autonomous Region]] (RAAN) and the 45 in the [[South Atlantic Autonomous Region]] (RAAS) on March 1.: |
||
*[[Constitutionalist Liberal Party]] (PLC) |
*[[Constitutionalist Liberal Party]] (PLC) – 44 seats (RAAN: 24, RAAS: 20) |
||
*[[Sandinista National Liberation Front]] (FSLN) |
*[[Sandinista National Liberation Front]] (FSLN) – 25 seats (RAAN: 13, RAAS: 12) |
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*[[Yapti Tasba Masraka Nanih Aslatakanka]] (YATAMA) |
*[[Yapti Tasba Masraka Nanih Aslatakanka]] (YATAMA) – 12 seats (RAAN: 8, RAAS: 4) |
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*[[Multiethnic Indigenist Party]] (PIM) |
*[[Multiethnic Indigenist Party]] (PIM) – 7 seats (RAAN: 0, RAAS: 7) |
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*[[Coast Alliance]] (Alianza Costeña) |
*[[Coast Alliance]] (Alianza Costeña) – 2 seats (RAAN: 0, RAAS: 2) |
||
Sources: [http://www.envio.org.ni/articulo/3222] [http://www.envio.org.ni/articulo/2389] |
Sources: [http://www.envio.org.ni/articulo/3222] [http://www.envio.org.ni/articulo/2389] |
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====2002==== |
====2002==== |
||
With an overall abstention of |
With an overall abstention of 50–60%, inhabitants of the Atlantic Coast elected 90 Regional Council members on March 3: |
||
*[[Constitutionalist Liberal Party]] (PLC) |
*[[Constitutionalist Liberal Party]] (PLC) – 48 seats (RAAN: 17, RAAS: 31) |
||
*[[Sandinista National Liberation Front]] (FSLN) |
*[[Sandinista National Liberation Front]] (FSLN) – 28 seats (RAAN: 15, RAAS: 13) |
||
*[[Yapti Tasba Masraka Nanih Aslatakanka]] (YATAMA) |
*[[Yapti Tasba Masraka Nanih Aslatakanka]] (YATAMA) – 13 seats (RAAN: 12, RAAS: 1) |
||
*[[Multiethnic Party for Coast Unity]] (PAMUC) |
*[[Multiethnic Party for Coast Unity]] (PAMUC) – 1 seat (RAAN: 1, RAAS: 0) |
||
Sources: [http://www.envio.org.ni/articulo/3222] [http://www.envio.org.ni/articulo/2332] |
Sources: [http://www.envio.org.ni/articulo/3222] [http://www.envio.org.ni/articulo/2332] |
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The fifth autonomous elections on the Caribbean Coast took place on March 5. The abstention was a record-high 55%. The voters elected the 45 Regional Council members in what was officially called the [[North Atlantic Autonomous Region]] (RAAN) and the 45 in the [[South Atlantic Autonomous Region]] (RAAS): |
The fifth autonomous elections on the Caribbean Coast took place on March 5. The abstention was a record-high 55%. The voters elected the 45 Regional Council members in what was officially called the [[North Atlantic Autonomous Region]] (RAAN) and the 45 in the [[South Atlantic Autonomous Region]] (RAAS): |
||
*[[Constitutionalist Liberal Party]] (PLC) |
*[[Constitutionalist Liberal Party]] (PLC) – 40 seats (RAAN: 18, RAAS: 22) |
||
*[[Sandinista National Liberation Front]] (FSLN) |
*[[Sandinista National Liberation Front]] (FSLN) – 27 seats (RAAN: 15, RAAS: 12) |
||
*[[Yapti Tasba Masraka Nanih Aslatakanka]] (YATAMA) |
*[[Yapti Tasba Masraka Nanih Aslatakanka]] (YATAMA) – 18 seats (RAAN: 12, RAAS: 6) |
||
*[[Nicaraguan Liberal Alliance]]-[[Conservative Party of Nicaragua|Conservative Party]] (ALN-PC) |
*[[Nicaraguan Liberal Alliance]]-[[Conservative Party of Nicaragua|Conservative Party]] (ALN-PC) – 5 seats (RAAN: 0, RAAS: 5) |
||
Three other parties |
Three other parties did not pull enough votes to win a seat in the Regional Council; the regional [[Multiethnic Party for Coast Unity]] (PAMUC), the [[Sandinista Renovation Movement]] (MRS) alliance, and [[Alliance for the Republic (Nicaragua)|Alliance for the Republic]] (APRE). |
||
Source: [http://www.envio.org.ni/articulo/3222] |
Source: [http://www.envio.org.ni/articulo/3222] |
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The sixth autonomous elections on the Caribbean Coast took place on March 7. The abstention rate was 60%. The voters elected 45 Regional Council members in the RAAN and 45 in the RAAS: |
The sixth autonomous elections on the Caribbean Coast took place on March 7. The abstention rate was 60%. The voters elected 45 Regional Council members in the RAAN and 45 in the RAAS: |
||
*[[Sandinista National Liberation Front]] (FSLN) |
*[[Sandinista National Liberation Front]] (FSLN) – 41 seats (RAAN: 22, RAAS: 19) |
||
*[[Constitutionalist Liberal Party]] (PLC) |
*[[Constitutionalist Liberal Party]] (PLC) – 30 seats (RAAN: 10, RAAS: 20) |
||
*[[Yapti Tasba Masraka Nanih Aslatakanka]] (YATAMA) |
*[[Yapti Tasba Masraka Nanih Aslatakanka]] (YATAMA) – 16 seats (RAAN: 13, RAAS: 3) |
||
*[[Nicaraguan Liberal Alliance]] (ALN) |
*[[Nicaraguan Liberal Alliance]] (ALN) – 2 seats (RAAN: 0, RAAS: 2) |
||
*[[Alliance for the Republic (Nicaragua)|Alliance for the Republic]] (APRE) |
*[[Alliance for the Republic (Nicaragua)|Alliance for the Republic]] (APRE) – 1 seat (RAAN: 0, RAAS: 1) |
||
Source: [http://eeas.europa.eu/eueom/pdf/missions/eueoem_finalreport.pdf] |
Source: [http://eeas.europa.eu/eueom/pdf/missions/eueoem_finalreport.pdf] |
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The seventh autonomous elections on the Caribbean Coast took place on March 2. The abstention rate was 59%. The voters elected 45 members to each Regional Council in the newly renamed [[North Caribbean Coast Autonomous Region]] (RACCN) and [[South Caribbean Coast Autonomous Region]] (RACCS): |
The seventh autonomous elections on the Caribbean Coast took place on March 2. The abstention rate was 59%. The voters elected 45 members to each Regional Council in the newly renamed [[North Caribbean Coast Autonomous Region]] (RACCN) and [[South Caribbean Coast Autonomous Region]] (RACCS): |
||
*[[Sandinista National Liberation Front]] (FSLN) |
*[[Sandinista National Liberation Front]] (FSLN) – 58 seats (RACCN: 28, RACCS: 30) |
||
*[[Yapti Tasba Masraka Nanih Aslatakanka]] (YATAMA) |
*[[Yapti Tasba Masraka Nanih Aslatakanka]] (YATAMA) – 15 seats (RACCN: 11, RACCS: 4) |
||
*[[Independent Liberal Party (Nicaragua)|Independent Liberal Party]] (PLI) |
*[[Independent Liberal Party (Nicaragua)|Independent Liberal Party]] (PLI) – 8 seats (RACCN: 5, RACCS: 3) |
||
*[[Constitutionalist Liberal Party]] (PLC) |
*[[Constitutionalist Liberal Party]] (PLC) – 7 seats (RACCN: 1, RACCS: 6) |
||
*[[Multiethnic Indigenist Party]] (PIM) |
*[[Multiethnic Indigenist Party]] (PIM) – 2 seats (RACCN: 0, RACCS: 2) |
||
Source: [http://www.envio.org.ni/articulo/4843] |
Source: [http://www.envio.org.ni/articulo/4843] |
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==See also== |
==See also== |
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* [[Politics of Nicaragua]] |
* [[Politics of Nicaragua]] |
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==References== |
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<references /> |
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==External links== |
==External links== |
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*[http://www.imow.org/wpp/stories/viewStory?storyId=1506 International Museum of Women Feature on Women and the 2006 Elections in Nicaragua] |
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20080830054352/http://www.imow.org/wpp/stories/viewStory?storyId=1506 International Museum of Women Feature on Women and the 2006 Elections in Nicaragua] |
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*[http://psephos.adam-carr.net/countries/n/nicaragua/ Nicaragua on Adam Carr's Election Archive] |
*[http://psephos.adam-carr.net/countries/n/nicaragua/ Nicaragua on Adam Carr's Election Archive] |
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*[http://aceproject.org/regions-en/countries-and-territories/NI Nicaragua page] of the [http://www.aceproject.org ACE Project] |
*[http://aceproject.org/regions-en/countries-and-territories/NI Nicaragua page] of the [http://www.aceproject.org ACE Project] |
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{{Nicaraguan elections}} |
{{Nicaraguan elections|state=expanded}} |
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{{Nicaragua topics}} |
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{{North America topic|Elections in}} |
{{North America topic|Elections in}} |
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{{Nicaragua topics}} |
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[[Category:Elections in Nicaragua| ]] |
[[Category:Elections in Nicaragua| ]] |
Latest revision as of 19:03, 2 October 2024
Nicaragua portal |
The Republic of Nicaragua elects on the national level a head of state—the president—and a unicameral legislature. The president of Nicaragua and his or her vice-president are elected on one ballot for a five-year term by the people.
The National Assembly (Asamblea Nacional) has 92 members: 90 deputies elected for a five-year term by proportional representation (20 nationally and 70 regionally), the outgoing president, and the runner-up in the last presidential election. Should the president be reelected (not originally planned for in the Nicaraguan constitution), the outgoing vice president takes the seat reserved for him instead.
Nicaragua has a multi-party system.
Latest elections
[edit]2021 presidential election
[edit]Candidate | Party | Votes | % | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Daniel Ortega | Sandinista National Liberation Front | 2,093,834 | 75.87 | |
Walter Espinoza | Constitutionalist Liberal Party | 395,406 | 14.33 | |
Guillermo Osorno | Nicaraguan Party of the Christian Path | 89,853 | 3.26 | |
Marcelo Montiel | Nicaraguan Liberal Alliance | 85,711 | 3.11 | |
Gerson Gutiérrez | Alliance for the Republic | 48,429 | 1.75 | |
Mauricio Orué | Independent Liberal Party | 46,510 | 1.69 | |
Total | 2,759,743 | 100.00 | ||
Valid votes | 2,759,743 | 94.47 | ||
Invalid/blank votes | 161,687 | 5.53 | ||
Total votes | 2,921,430 | 100.00 | ||
Registered voters/turnout | 65.26 | |||
Source: CSE |
2021 National Assembly election
[edit]Party | National | Constituency | Total seats | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Votes | % | Seats | Votes | % | Seats | |||
Sandinista National Liberation Front | 2,039,717 | 74.17 | 15 | 2,024,598 | 73.29 | 60 | 75 | |
Constitutionalist Liberal Party | 259,789 | 9.45 | 2 | 411,101 | 14.88 | 7 | 9 | |
Nicaraguan Liberal Alliance | 140,199 | 5.10 | 1 | 99,335 | 3.60 | 1 | 2 | |
Independent Liberal Party | 128,520 | 4.67 | 1 | 69,523 | 2.52 | 0 | 1 | |
Alliance for the Republic | 127,997 | 4.65 | 1 | 49,172 | 1.78 | 0 | 1 | |
Nicaraguan Party of the Christian Path | 53,959 | 1.96 | 0 | 82,844 | 3.00 | 1 | 1 | |
YATAMA | 25,718 | 0.93 | 1 | 1 | ||||
Reserved seat | 1 | |||||||
Total | 2,750,181 | 100.00 | 20 | 2,762,291 | 100.00 | 70 | 91 | |
Valid votes | 2,750,181 | 94.16 | 2,762,291 | 94.54 | ||||
Invalid/blank votes | 170,550 | 5.84 | 159,527 | 5.46 | ||||
Total votes | 2,920,731 | 100.00 | 2,921,818 | 100.00 | ||||
Source: CSE, CSE, 100noticias |
2021 Central American Parliament election
[edit]2019 autonomous regional elections
[edit]The eighth autonomous elections on the Caribbean Coast took place on March 3, 2019. The voters elected 45 members to each Regional Council in the RACCN and the RACCS.
(These results are preliminary, as voting is still being counted by the Supreme Electoral Council).
- Sandinista National Liberation Front (FSLN) – 64 seats (RACCN: 30, RACCS: 34)
- Yapti Tasba Masraka Nanih Aslatakanka (YATAMA) – 14 seats (RACCN: 12, RACCS: 2)
- Constitutionalist Liberal Party (PLC) – 12 seats (RACCN: 3, RACCS: 9)
Total votes for all participating parties:
- Sandinista National Liberation Front (FSLN) – 81,503 (55.03%)
- Yapti Tasba Masraka Nanih Aslatakanka (YATAMA) – 27,522 (18.63%)
- Constitutionalist Liberal Party (PLC) – 23,907 (16.14%)
- Conservative Party – 364 (0.25%)
- Multiethnic Indigenist Party (PIM) – 1,219 (0.82%)
- Nicaraguan Liberal Alliance (ALN) – 622 (0.45%)
- Alliance for the Republic (APRE) – 334 (0.23%)
- Independent Liberal Party (PLI) – 1,428 (0.96%)
- Democratic Restoration Party (PRD) – 278 votes (0.18%)
- Citizens for Liberty (CXL) – 8,390 (5.67%)
- Myatamaran – 700 votes (0.47%)
- Moskitia Pawanka – 614 votes (0.41%)
- Neoliberal Party (PAL) – 1,113 votes (0.75%)
Source: [1]
Past elections
[edit]Presidential elections 1984–2011
[edit]1984
[edit]The 1984 election took place on November 4. Of the 1,551,597 citizens registered in July, 1,170,142 voted (75.41%). The null votes were 6% of the total. The national averages of valid votes for president were:
- Daniel Ortega, Sandinista National Liberation Front (FSLN) – 66.97%
- Clemente Guido, Democratic Conservative Party (PCD) – 14.04%
- Virgilio Godoy, Independent Liberal Party (PLI) – 9.60%
- Mauricio Diaz, Popular Social Christian Party (PPSC) – 5.56%
- Allan Zambrana, Nicaraguan Communist Party (PCdeN) – 1.45%
- Domingo Sánchez Sancho, Nicaraguan Socialist Party (PSN) – 1.31%
- Isidro Téllez, Marxist-Leninist Popular Action Movement (MAP-ML) – 1.03%
The pro-Sandinista magazine, Envio claimed that this election was considered to have the "most freedom of choice" in the nation's history and was approved by international advocates of free elections.[2]
1990
[edit]The historical election of 1990 took place on February 25. The total registered voters were 1,752,088 and the abstentions 241,250 or 13.7%. The United Nicaraguan Opposition coalition of those who opposed the ruling Sandinista National Liberation Front was victorious, winning 55% of the vote. Violeta Chamorro became president. The national averages of valid votes for president were:
- Violeta Barrios de Chamorro, National Opposition Union (UNO) – 777,552 votes – 54.73%
- Daniel Ortega, Sandinista National Liberation Front (FSLN) – 579,886 votes – 40.82%
- Other – 63,106 – 4.45%[3]
1996
[edit]In presidential elections, Arnoldo Alemán of the Liberal Alliance-Liberal Constitutionalist Party defeated Daniel Ortega of the Sandinista National Liberation Front. A record number of 24 parties and alliances participated in these elections.
- Arnoldo Alemán, Liberal Alliance – 51.03%
- Daniel Ortega, Sandinista National Liberation Front (FSLN) – 37.75%
- Guillermo Osorno, Nicaraguan Party of the Christian Path (CCN) – 4.10%
- Noel Vidaurre, Nicaraguan Conservative Party (PCN) – 2.26%
- Other (20 other candidates with less than 1% of the votes) – 4.86%[4]
2001
[edit]Candidate | Running mate | Party | Votes | % | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Enrique Bolaños | José Rizo | Constitutionalist Liberal Party | 1,228,412 | 56.31 | |
Daniel Ortega | Agustín Jarquín | Sandinista National Liberation Front | 922,436 | 42.28 | |
Alberto Saborío | Conservative Party | 30,670 | 1.41 | ||
Total | 2,181,518 | 100.00 | |||
Registered voters/turnout | 2,980,641 | – | |||
Source: IPADE, La Nacion |
2006
[edit]Candidate | Party | Votes | % | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Daniel Ortega | Sandinista National Liberation Front | 854,316 | 38.07 | |
Eduardo Montealegre | Nicaraguan Liberal Alliance | 650,879 | 29.00 | |
José Rizo Castellón | Constitutionalist Liberal Party | 588,304 | 26.21 | |
Edmundo Jarquín | Sandinista Renovation Movement | 144,596 | 6.44 | |
Edén Pastora | Alternative for Change | 6,120 | 0.27 | |
Total | 2,244,215 | 100.00 | ||
Registered voters/turnout | 3,665,141 | – | ||
Source: IFES |
2011
[edit]Candidate | Party | Votes | % | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Daniel Ortega | Sandinista National Liberation Front | 1,569,287 | 62.46 | |
Fabio Gadea Mantilla | Independent Liberal Party | 778,889 | 31.00 | |
Arnoldo Alemán | Constitutionalist Liberal Party | 148,507 | 5.91 | |
Édgar Enrique Quiñónez Tuckler | Nicaraguan Liberal Alliance | 10,003 | 0.40 | |
Róger Antonio Guevara Mena | Alliance for the Republic | 5,898 | 0.23 | |
Total | 2,512,584 | 100.00 | ||
Source: CSE |
2016
[edit]Candidate | Party | Votes | % |
---|---|---|---|
Daniel Ortega | Sandinista National Liberation Front | 1,806,651 | 72.44 |
Maximino Rodríguez | Constitutionalist Liberal Party | 374,898 | 15.03 |
José Alvarado | Independent Liberal Party | 112,562 | 4.51 |
Saturnino Cerrato | Nicaraguan Liberal Alliance | 107,392 | 4.31 |
Erick Cabezas | Conservative Party | 57,437 | 2.30 |
Carlos Canales | Alliance for the Republic | 35,002 | 1.40 |
Invalid/blank votes | – | – | |
Total | 2,493,942 | 100 | |
Registered voters/turnout | – | – | |
Source: CSE, BBC[1] |
Parliamentary election results 1984–2016
[edit]1984
[edit]The 1984 parliamentary election was held together with the presidential election on November 4. The percentages for National Assembly representatives were very similar to those the parties had received for their presidential candidate. The electoral quotient needed to win one of the 90 National Assembly seats was obtained by dividing the number of valid votes in each region by the number of representatives that had been assigned to each region, proportional to its population.
Each party's "left over" votes—those insufficient to earn it a seat in a given region—were then added together and re-tallied nationally. The seats earned in this second count went to the next candidate on the party's slate in the regions where it had come closest to winning on the first round. In addition, any party getting at least 1% of the presidential vote (which all six losing parties did) was allowed a seat for its defeated presidential candidate. The final composition of the National Assembly was thus:
- Sandinista National Liberation Front (FSLN) – 61 seats
- Democratic Conservative Party (PCD) – 14 seats
- Independent Liberal Party (PLI) – 9 seats
- Popular Social Christian Party (PPSC) – 6 seats
- Nicaraguan Communist Party (PCdeN) – 2 seats
- Nicaraguan Socialist Party (PSN) – 2 seats
- Marxist-Leninist Popular Action Movement (MAP-ML) – 2 seats
Source: [5]
1990
[edit]The 1990 parliamentary election was held together with the presidential election on February 25. The final composition of the National Assembly in 1990 was:
- National Opposition Union (UNO) – 51 seats
- Sandinista National Liberation Front (FSLN) – 39 seats
- Democratic Conservative Party (PCD) – 3 seats
- Independent Liberal Party (PLI) – 3 seats
- Popular Social Christian Party (PPSC) – 3 seats
- Nicaraguan Communist Party (PCdeN) – 3 seats
- Nicaraguan Socialist Party (PSN) – 3 seats
- Marxist-Leninist Popular Action Movement (MAP-ML) – 3 seats
- Revolutionary Unity Movement (MUR) – 1 seat
- Social Christian Party (PSC) – 1 seat
Note: The 1990 Assembly members are joined by any presidential candidate who receives over 1% of the vote
1996
[edit]The 1996 elections for the National Assembly took place together with the presidential election on October 20. The final composition of the National Assembly in 1996 was:
- Liberal Alliance (AL) – 42 seats
- Sandinista National Liberation Front (FSLN) – 36 seats
- Nicaraguan Party of the Christian Path (CCN) – 4 seats
- Nicaraguan Conservative Party (PCN) – 3 seats
- National Project (PRONAL) – 2 seats
- Nicaraguan Resistance Party (PRN) – 1 seat
- Sandinista Renovation Movement (MRS) – 1 seat
- Unity Alliance (AU) – 1 seat
- Independent Liberal Party (PLI) – 1 seat
- National Conservative Action (ANC) – 1 seat
- UNO-96 Alliance (UNO-96) – 1 seat
Source: [8]
2001
[edit]Party | National | Departmental | Total seats | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Votes | % | Seats | Votes | % | Seats | |||
Constitutionalist Liberal Party | 1,144,182 | 53.23 | 11 | 1,132,876 | 52.60 | 41 | 52 | |
Sandinista National Liberation Front | 905,589 | 42.13 | 9 | 901,254 | 41.84 | 28 | 37 | |
Conservative Party | 99,673 | 4.64 | 0 | 105,130 | 4.88 | 1 | 1 | |
YATAMA | 11,139 | 0.52 | 0 | 0 | ||||
Multiethnic Party for Coast Unity | 3,520 | 0.16 | 0 | 0 | ||||
Special members[a] | 2 | |||||||
Total | 2,149,444 | 100.00 | 20 | 2,153,919 | 100.00 | 70 | 92 | |
Source: IRI |
- ^ The runner-up in the presidential election and the outgoing president are special members of the National Assembly.
By region
[edit]Region | FSLN | PLC | PCN | Other |
---|---|---|---|---|
Boaco | 27.98% | 68.43% | 3.60% | 0.00% |
Carazo | 46.44% | 48.61% | 4.95% | 0.00% |
Chinandega | 50.54% | 43.98% | 5.48% | 0.00% |
Chontales | 27.65% | 65.39% | 6.96% | 0.00% |
Esteli | 50.57% | 45.84% | 3.59% | 0.00% |
Granada | 38.29% | 47.72% | 13.98% | 0.00% |
Jinotega | 38.08% | 59.67% | 2.25% | 0.00% |
Leon | 51.08% | 45.35% | 3.56% | 0.00% |
Madriz | 46.13% | 50.22% | 3.66% | 0.00% |
Managua | 44.22% | 49.32% | 6.47% | 0.00% |
Masaya | 41.77% | 53.64% | 4.59% | 0.00% |
Matagalpa | 39.24% | 57.50% | 3.26% | 0.00% |
Nueva Segovia | 45.97% | 52.61% | 1.42% | 0.00% |
RAAN | 37.42% | 43.87% | 1.96% | 16.75% |
RAAS | 21.34% | 73.11% | 1.84% | 3.71% |
Rio San Juan | 34.96% | 59.40% | 5.64% | 0.00% |
Rivas | 41.06% | 51.56% | 7.38% | 0.00% |
Source: Constituency Level Elections Archive[2] |
2006
[edit]Party | First round | Second round | Total seats | +/– | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Votes | % | Seats | Votes | % | Seats | ||||
Sandinista National Liberation Front | 840,851 | 37.59 | 8 | 847,565 | 37.90 | 30 | 38 | +1 | |
Nicaraguan Liberal Alliance | 597,709 | 26.72 | 4 | 596,281 | 26.66 | 18 | 22 | New | |
Constitutionalist Liberal Party | 592,118 | 26.47 | 8 | 591,805 | 26.46 | 17 | 25 | –27 | |
Sandinista Renovation Movement | 194,416 | 8.69 | 0 | 188,335 | 8.42 | 5 | 5 | New | |
Alternative for Change | 12,053 | 0.54 | 0 | 12,354 | 0.55 | 0 | 0 | New | |
Special members[a] | 2 | 0 | |||||||
Total | 2,237,147 | 100.00 | 20 | 2,236,340 | 100.00 | 70 | 92 | 0 | |
Registered voters/turnout | 3,665,141 | – | |||||||
Source: IFES, Election Passport, Psephos |
- ^ The runner-up in the presidential election (Eduardo Montealegre of the ALN) and the outgoing president Enrique Bolaños Geyer (independent) are special members of the National Assembly.
2011
[edit]Party | National | Departmental | Total seats | +/– | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Votes | % | Seats | Votes | % | Seats | ||||
Sandinista National Liberation Front | 1,583,199 | 60.85 | 13 | 1,595,470 | 60.64 | 49 | 62 | +11 | |
Independent Liberal Party | 822,023 | 31.59 | 6 | 824,180 | 31.33 | 20 | 26 | New | |
Constitutionalist Liberal Party | 167,639 | 6.44 | 1 | 173,306 | 6.59 | 1 | 2 | –23 | |
Nicaraguan Liberal Alliance | 19,658 | 0.76 | 0 | 24,870 | 0.95 | 0 | 0 | –22 | |
Alliance for the Republic | 9,317 | 0.36 | 0 | 13,063 | 0.50 | 0 | 0 | New | |
Special members[a] | 2 | 0 | |||||||
Total | 2,601,836 | 100.00 | 20 | 2,630,889 | 100.00 | 70 | 92 | 0 | |
Registered voters/turnout | 3,303,831 | – | |||||||
Source: EODS |
- ^ The runner-up in the presidential election (Fabio Gadea Mantilla of the PLI) and the outgoing president are special members of the National Assembly; as Ortega was re-elected, the outgoing Vice President (Jaime Morales Carazo of the FSLN), who was not Ortega's running mate in this election (having been replaced by Omar Halleslevens, took his seat.
- 2016 legislative election
Party | National | Constituency | Total seats |
+/– | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Votes | % | Seats | Votes | % | Seats | |||
Sandinista National Liberation Front | 1,590,316 | 65.86 | 14 | 1,608,395 | 66.46 | 56 | 70 | +7 |
Constitutionalist Liberal Party | 369,342 | 15.30 | 3 | 375,432 | 15.51 | 10 | 13 | +11 |
Independent Liberal Party | 162,043 | 6.71 | 1 | 117,626 | 4.86 | 1 | 2 | −25 |
Nicaraguan Liberal Alliance | 137,541 | 5.70 | 1 | 137,078 | 5.66 | 1 | 2 | +2 |
Conservative Party | 106,027 | 4.39 | 1 | 110,568 | 4.57 | 0 | 1 | +1 |
Alliance for the Republic | 49,329 | 2.04 | 0 | 70,939 | 2.93 | 1 | 1 | +1 |
YATAMA | – | – | – | 30,901 | 1.28 | 1 | 1 | −1 |
Special members[a] | – | – | – | – | – | – | 2 | 0 |
Invalid/blank votes | – | – | – | – | – | – | ||
Total | 2,414,598 | 100 | 20 | 2,450,939 | 100 | 70 | 92 | 0 |
Registered voters/turnout | – | – | – | – | ||||
Source: CSE, El 19 Digital |
- ^ The runner-up in the presidential election (Maximino Rodríguez of the Constitutionalist Liberal Party) and the outgoing president are special members of the National Assembly; as Ortega was re-elected, outgoing Vice President Omar Halleslevens of the FSLN, who was not Ortega's running mate in these elections (having been replaced by Rosario Murillo), will take up his seat.
Municipal election results 1990–2017
[edit]1990
[edit]The 1990 municipal election was held together with the presidential and the parliamentary elections on February 25. Municipal Councils were elected in 131 municipalities nationwide. The final results for the elections were:
- National Opposition Union (UNO) – 98 municipalities controlled
- Sandinista National Liberation Front (FSLN) – 31 municipalities controlled
- Central American Unionist Party (PUCA) – 2 municipalities controlled
1996
[edit]A great expectation in the 1996 municipal elections was the participation for the first (and last) time of what the Electoral Law terms "popular subscription associations". According to the Electoral Law, to be formed, an association needed, among other things, to present to the Supreme Electoral Council a "written request signed by a minimum of 5% of the citizens on the electoral rolls corresponding to the respective electoral area". A total of 53 associations participated in the municipal elections. One of them (the Civic Association of Potosí) won the mayor's post.
Despite winning only one municipality, an important number of association candidates finished in second or third place. In the nation's capital, Managua, two independent candidates; Pedro Solórzano of the Viva Managua Movement association and Herty Lewites of the Sol (sun) association competed against the AL and FSLN official candidates. ALN's Roberto Cedeño got the 28% of the votes followed closely by Solórzano with 26%, Carlos Guadamúz from the FSLN with 25.7% and Herty Lewites who became Managua's mayor four years later came in fourth place with 12.3%.
The 1996 municipal election took place together with the presidential election on October 20. Municipal Councils were elected in 145 municipalities nationwide. The final results for the elections were:
- Liberal Alliance (AL) – 92 municipalities controlled
- Sandinista National Liberation Front (FSLN) – 51 municipalities controlled
- Sandinista Renovation Movement (MRS) – 1 municipality controlled
- Civic Association of Potosí (ACP) – 1 municipality controlled
Source: [11]
2000
[edit]In the 2000 municipal election 1,532,816 voters elected Municipal Councils in 151 municipalities nationwide. It was the first time that the presidential and municipal elections were held separately. The final results for the elections were:
- Constitutionalist Liberal Party (PLC) – 94 municipalities controlled
- Sandinista National Liberation Front (FSLN) – 52 municipalities controlled
- Conservative Party (PC) – 5 municipalities controlled
The FSLN won for the first time in ten years the municipality of Managua, Nicaragua's capital city with its candidate Herty Lewites that pulled 44% of the votes.
Source: [12]
2004
[edit]In the 2004 municipal election 1,664,243 voters elected Municipal Councils in 152 municipalities nationwide, with nearly a 56% abstention. The final results for the elections were:
- Sandinista National Liberation Front (FSLN-Convergence) – 87 municipalities controlled
- Constitutionalist Liberal Party (PLC) – 57 municipalities controlled
- Alliance for the Republic (APRE) – 4 municipalities controlled
- Yapti Tasba Masraka Nanih Aslatakanka (YATAMA) – 3 municipalities controlled
- Nicaraguan Resistance Party (PRN) – 1 municipality controlled
Note: Elections took place for the first time in the newly created municipality of San José de Bocay in the Jinotega department.
The 2004 municipal elections represented a huge Sandinista victory. The FSLN-Convergence won 14 of the 17 departmental capitals, 87 of the 152 municipalities—including 5 of the 6 that make up Managua’s greater metropolitan area—and 25 of Nicaragua’s 42 largest cities. In total it will govern a little over 4 million inhabitants, nearly 71% of the national population.
The Sandinista victory was attributed to the success of the FSLN-Convergence alliance. Of the 87 mayors elected on the FSLN ticket, 17 come from these allies: 5 are independents, 3 are from the Resistance, 3 belong to the Sandinista Renovation Movement (MRS), 2 are Conservatives, 2 are Liberals, 1 is from the Christian Unity Movement (MUC) and 1 is a Social Christian. Of the deputy mayors who ran with an FSLN mayoral candidate, 28 are Liberals, 16 are independent, 14 are from the MUC, 9 are Conservatives, 9 are from the MRS, 3 are from the Resistance and 1 is a Social Christian. These allied candidates allowed the FSLN to win 12 municipal governments for the first time.
Source: [13]
2017 municipal elections
[edit]In the 2017 municipal election voters elected Municipal Councils in 153 municipalities nationwide, with around 53% turnout. The final results for the elections were:
- Sandinista National Liberation Front – 135 municipalities controlled
- Independent Liberal Party (PLI) – 12 municipalities controlled
- Yapti Tasba Masraka Nanih Aslatakanka (YATAMA) – 3 municipalities controlled
- Constitutionalist Liberal Party (PLC) – 2 municipalities controlled
- Nicaraguan Liberal Alliance – 1 municipality controlled
Source: [citation needed]
2022 municipal elections
[edit]Autonomous elections on the Caribbean Coast results 1990–2014
[edit]1990
[edit]The first autonomous elections on the Caribbean Coast took place in 1990 together with the presidential, parliamentary and municipal election on February 25. The voters elected the 45 Regional Council members in what was officially called the North Atlantic Autonomous Region (RAAN) and the 45 in the South Atlantic Autonomous Region (RAAS). The abstention was 21%, only 7% higher than the national average:
- Sandinista National Liberation Front (FSLN) – 39 seats (RAAN: 21, RAAS: 18)
- Yapti Tasba Masraka Nanih Aslatakanka (YATAMA) – 26 seats (RAAN: 22, RAAS: 4)
- National Opposition Union (UNO) – 25 seats (RAAN: 2, RAAS: 23)
Note: National Assembly representatives also have a seat.
1994
[edit]With an abstention of 34%, the inhabitants of the Atlantic Coast elected the 45 Regional Council members in what is officially called the North Atlantic Autonomous Region (RAAN) and the 45 in the South Atlantic Autonomous Region (RAAS) on February 27:
- Constitutionalist Liberal Party (PLC) – 37 seats (RAAN: 19, RAAS: 18)
- Sandinista National Liberation Front (FSLN) – 33 seats (RAAN: 19, RAAS: 14)
- Yapti Tasba Masraka Nanih Aslatakanka (YATAMA) – 12 seats (RAAN: 7, RAAS: 5)
- National Opposition Union (UNO) – 5 seats (RAAN: 0, RAAS: 5)
- Authentic Costeño Autonomy Movement (MAAC) – 2 seats (RAAN: 0, RAAS: 2)
- Costeño Democratic Alliance (ADECO) – 1 seat (RAAN: 0, RAAS: 1)
1998
[edit]With an abstention of 40%, the inhabitants of the Atlantic Coast elected the 45 Regional Council members in what is officially called the North Atlantic Autonomous Region (RAAN) and the 45 in the South Atlantic Autonomous Region (RAAS) on March 1.:
- Constitutionalist Liberal Party (PLC) – 44 seats (RAAN: 24, RAAS: 20)
- Sandinista National Liberation Front (FSLN) – 25 seats (RAAN: 13, RAAS: 12)
- Yapti Tasba Masraka Nanih Aslatakanka (YATAMA) – 12 seats (RAAN: 8, RAAS: 4)
- Multiethnic Indigenist Party (PIM) – 7 seats (RAAN: 0, RAAS: 7)
- Coast Alliance (Alianza Costeña) – 2 seats (RAAN: 0, RAAS: 2)
2002
[edit]With an overall abstention of 50–60%, inhabitants of the Atlantic Coast elected 90 Regional Council members on March 3:
- Constitutionalist Liberal Party (PLC) – 48 seats (RAAN: 17, RAAS: 31)
- Sandinista National Liberation Front (FSLN) – 28 seats (RAAN: 15, RAAS: 13)
- Yapti Tasba Masraka Nanih Aslatakanka (YATAMA) – 13 seats (RAAN: 12, RAAS: 1)
- Multiethnic Party for Coast Unity (PAMUC) – 1 seat (RAAN: 1, RAAS: 0)
2006
[edit]The fifth autonomous elections on the Caribbean Coast took place on March 5. The abstention was a record-high 55%. The voters elected the 45 Regional Council members in what was officially called the North Atlantic Autonomous Region (RAAN) and the 45 in the South Atlantic Autonomous Region (RAAS):
- Constitutionalist Liberal Party (PLC) – 40 seats (RAAN: 18, RAAS: 22)
- Sandinista National Liberation Front (FSLN) – 27 seats (RAAN: 15, RAAS: 12)
- Yapti Tasba Masraka Nanih Aslatakanka (YATAMA) – 18 seats (RAAN: 12, RAAS: 6)
- Nicaraguan Liberal Alliance-Conservative Party (ALN-PC) – 5 seats (RAAN: 0, RAAS: 5)
Three other parties did not pull enough votes to win a seat in the Regional Council; the regional Multiethnic Party for Coast Unity (PAMUC), the Sandinista Renovation Movement (MRS) alliance, and Alliance for the Republic (APRE).
Source: [22]
2010
[edit]The sixth autonomous elections on the Caribbean Coast took place on March 7. The abstention rate was 60%. The voters elected 45 Regional Council members in the RAAN and 45 in the RAAS:
- Sandinista National Liberation Front (FSLN) – 41 seats (RAAN: 22, RAAS: 19)
- Constitutionalist Liberal Party (PLC) – 30 seats (RAAN: 10, RAAS: 20)
- Yapti Tasba Masraka Nanih Aslatakanka (YATAMA) – 16 seats (RAAN: 13, RAAS: 3)
- Nicaraguan Liberal Alliance (ALN) – 2 seats (RAAN: 0, RAAS: 2)
- Alliance for the Republic (APRE) – 1 seat (RAAN: 0, RAAS: 1)
Source: [23]
2014
[edit]The seventh autonomous elections on the Caribbean Coast took place on March 2. The abstention rate was 59%. The voters elected 45 members to each Regional Council in the newly renamed North Caribbean Coast Autonomous Region (RACCN) and South Caribbean Coast Autonomous Region (RACCS):
- Sandinista National Liberation Front (FSLN) – 58 seats (RACCN: 28, RACCS: 30)
- Yapti Tasba Masraka Nanih Aslatakanka (YATAMA) – 15 seats (RACCN: 11, RACCS: 4)
- Independent Liberal Party (PLI) – 8 seats (RACCN: 5, RACCS: 3)
- Constitutionalist Liberal Party (PLC) – 7 seats (RACCN: 1, RACCS: 6)
- Multiethnic Indigenist Party (PIM) – 2 seats (RACCN: 0, RACCS: 2)
Source: [24]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "Nicaragua leader Daniel Ortega wins third consecutive term". BBC. Retrieved 13 January 2018.
- ^ "Nicaragua". Constituency-Level Elections Archive. Retrieved 2019-03-09.