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2015 Emirati parliamentary election: Difference between revisions

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==Results==
==Results==
Of the twenty elected members, 19 were men and one a woman,<ref>[http://www.ipu.org/parline-e/reports/2333_E.htm Last elections] IPU</ref> [[Naama Al Sharhan]], who was elected in Ras al-Khaimah. Voter turnout was 35%, up from 26% in the [[Emirati parliamentary election, 2011|2011 elections]], and ranged from 70% in Umm al-Quwain to 22.1% in Dubai.<ref>[http://www.thenational.ae/uae/national-elections-committee-voter-turnout-reasonable-considering-lack-of-pressure-in-uae National Elections Committee: voter turnout reasonable considering ‘lack of pressure’ in UAE] The National, 4 October 2015</ref>
Of the twenty elected members, 19 were men and one a woman,<ref>[http://www.ipu.org/parline-e/reports/2333_E.htm Last elections] IPU</ref> [[Naama Al Sharhan]], who was elected in Ras al-Khaimah. Voter turnout was 35%, up from 26% in the [[2011 Emirati parliamentary election|2011 elections]], and ranged from 70% in Umm al-Quwain to 22.1% in Dubai.<ref>[http://www.thenational.ae/uae/national-elections-committee-voter-turnout-reasonable-considering-lack-of-pressure-in-uae National Elections Committee: voter turnout reasonable considering ‘lack of pressure’ in UAE] The National, 4 October 2015</ref>


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Revision as of 02:12, 20 June 2019

Parliamentary elections were held in the United Arab Emirates on 3 October 2015 to elect the half of the members of the 15th Chapter of the Federal National Council, and appoint the other half of the members.[1]

Electoral system

At the time of the elections the 40-member Federal National Council had 20 indirectly-elected members and 20 appointed members. The 20 elected members were elected by seven electoral colleges; the colleges of Abu Dhabi and Dubai elected four members, the colleges of Sharjah and Ras al-Khaimah elected three, and the colleges of Ajman, Fujairah and Umm al-Quwain elected two.[2] Only around a third of Emirati citizens (who themselves are around 12% of the country's population) were members of the electoral colleges.[3]

Following changes to the electoral system, the elections were held using single non-transferable vote, meaning voters could only vote for one candidate in their emirate, irrespective of the number of seats.[2] Overseas voting was allowed for the first time.[4]

Campaign

A total of 330 candidates contested the elections, of which 252 were men and 78 women.[5] Campaigning was allowed between 6 and 30 September.[6]

Results

Of the twenty elected members, 19 were men and one a woman,[7] Naama Al Sharhan, who was elected in Ras al-Khaimah. Voter turnout was 35%, up from 26% in the 2011 elections, and ranged from 70% in Umm al-Quwain to 22.1% in Dubai.[8]

Party Votes % Seats
Independents 20
Invalid/blank votes
Total 79,157 20
Registered voters/turnout 224,279 35.29
Source: IPU

Elected members

Emirate Elected members Votes received
Abu Dhabi Khalifa al-Mazrouei 2,167
Mattar al-Shamsi 1,634
Saeed al-Remeithi 1,597
Saleh al-Ameri 1,382
Ajman Hamad al-Ghafli 723
Salem Abdullah al-Shamsi 458
Dubai Hamad al-Rahoomi 2,076
Marwan bin Ghalita 961
Khalid al-Falasi 722
Jamal al-Hai 672
Fujairah Mohammed al-Yammahi 912
Ahmed al-Hamoudi 546
Ras al-Khaimah Salem al-Shehhi 2,037
Ahmed al-Nuaimi 1,358
Naama al-Sharhan 1,004
Sharjah Jasim al-Naqbi 787
Salem al-Shamsi 644
Mohammed al-Katbi 519
Umm al-Quwain Khalfan al-Ali 381
Obaid al-Ali 372
Source: The National

References