2013 Monegasque general election

General elections were held in Monaco on 10 February 2013.[1] The result was a victory for the Horizon Monaco alliance, which won 20 of the 24 seats in the National Council.[2]

2013 Monegasque general election
Monaco
10 February 2013

24 seats in the National Council
13 seats needed for a majority
PartyLeader % Seats +/–
Horizon Monaco Laurent Nouvion 50.34 20 New
UM Jean-François Robillon 38.99 3 -18
Renaissance Jean-Michel Rapaire 10.67 1 New
President of the National Council before President of the National Council after
Jean-François Robillon
UP
Laurent Nouvion
Rally & Issues

Electoral system

Voters can either choose a party list or choose candidates from various lists ("panachage") for the 24 seats. The 16 candidates with the most votes are elected (with the older candidate breaking possible ties in votes). The eight other seats are chosen from lists in accordance with the proportional representation system for parties that have at least five percent of votes.[3]

Parties

The election was contested by two alliances, Horizon Monaco and Union Monégasque, as well as Renaissance, a party whose candidates were all employees of SBM. Horizon Monaco was an alliance of Rassemblement et Enjeux, the Union for the Principality and Synergie Monegasque, whilst Union Monégasque consisted of the Union de Monégasques and the National Union for the Future of Monaco.[3] A total of 72 candidates contested the election.[4]

Campaign

An unnamed official of the administration team said: "We have had three lists before, as in 2008, but they were never full. We must therefore revise certain aspects, such as the voting cards, where the 72 names must be listed." Renaissance said that it seeks achievable goals instead of new policies. The party said that is sought representation in parliament "to defend the interests of the SBM workers in Monaco." Horizon Monaco's leader Laurent Nouvion told Monaco Matin: "I am very calm. I am more determined than ever to secure the future of Monaco and its compatriots. I believe that our campaign has been clean and honest. We tried as hard as possible to connect to the Monegasque people and to respond to their concerns. This is the heart of our commitment. For me and my fellow candidates, this campaign has brought us even closer together and given us the sense of being a real team, just like a sports team....Adversity has strengethened our relationship." Union Monégasque's leader Jean-François Robillon said: "We have worked hard at this long campaign. We are here to make plans for the future, not to abuse our adversaries, frighten the population and create an atmosphere of hatred... This has been our goal throughout the campaign: we have sought to promote our programme while avoiding aggressive confrontation."[4]

Conduct

The Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe was invited by Monaco's ambassador to OSCE and sent a team of four observers from four countries led by Poland's Konrad Olszewski. They arrived on 30 January and will depart on 13 February.[5]

Buses and car parks were free of charge in order to encourage voter turnout.

Results

An 18-metre screen broadcast the result at the only voting centre at Salle du Canto from 08:00 to 19:00, with the result expected between 4:00–4:30 the following day.[4][6]

PartyVotes%Seats+/–
Horizon Monaco56,47250.3420+15
Union Monégasque43,74338.993–11
Renaissance11,96410.671New
Total112,179100.00240
Valid votes4,86695.64
Invalid/blank votes2224.36
Total votes5,088100.00
Registered voters/turnout6,82574.55
Source: Mairie de Monaco

By party

Party Candidates Votes Total party votes % Seats
Horizon Monaco Jacques Rit 2,514 56,472 50.34 20
Christophe Steiner 2,484
Laurent Nouvion 2,475
Marc Burini 2,467
Cristophe Robino 2,396
Thierry Poyet 2,391
Caroline Rougaignon-Vernin 2,370
Pierre Svara 2,362
Philippe Clerissi 2,361
Thierry Crovetto 2,357
Jean-Charles Allavena 2,348
Nathalie Amoratti-Blanc 2,347
Valérie Rossi 2,347
Béatrice Fresko-Rolfo 2,346
Sophie Lavagna 2,346
Claude Boisson 2,345
Jean-Michel Cucchi 2,341
Christian Barilaro 2,320
Daniel Boeri 2,296
Alain Ficini 2,293
Cristophe Spiliotis-Saquet 2,257
Dylian Antonioli-Peyronel 2,240
Anne Poyard-Vatrican 2,236
Yves Chaki 2,233
Union Monégasque Jean-Louis Grinda 1,971 43,743 38.99 3
Jean-François Robillon 1,968
Bernard Pasquier 1,941
Michèle Dittlot 1,935
Fabrice Notari 1,918
Gérard Bertrand 1,912
Gilles Pages 1,911
Pascale Olivie-Dastakian 1,867
Valérie Bernard 1,859
Arnaud Giusti 1,840
Pierre Lorenzi 1,836
Jean-Charles Gardetto 1,826
Guillaume Rose 1,815
Alberte Escande 1,795
Raphaël Rigoli 1,795
Philippe Orecchia 1,773
Claude Cottalorda 1,772
Maurice De L'Arbre 1,768
Claude Cellario 1,763
Danielle Daumerie 1,750
Jocelyne Beraudo 1,745
Nicole Manzone-Saquet 1,708
Bernard Marquet 1,644
Roland Marquet 1,631
Renaissance Eric Elena 566 11,964 57.7 1
Jean-Michel Rapaire 548
Rudy Tarditi 533
Thierry Raymond 528
Stéphane Lorenzi 516
Gilles Doria 513
Etienne Ruzic 507
Baise Devissi 502
Claude Savoca 502
Joël Soriano 494
Frédéric Almondo 492
Michaël Tubino 492
Cédric Capra 491
Jean-François Carpinelli 489
Philippe Barriera 488
Martial Socci 486
Pierre Rivetta 485
Jean-Christophe Caisson 479
Roland Caisson 477
Marc Carpinelli 477
Yann Lorenzi 476
Françoise Raimbert 476
Frédéric Basile 474
Georges Testa 473

References

  1. "Elections nationales le 10 février 2013" (in French). Nice-Matin. Archived from the original on 13 April 2012. Retrieved 10 February 2013.
  2. Landslide victory for Horizon Monaco Archived 9 November 2014 at the Wayback Machine Riviera Times, 11 February 2013
  3. "Election Profile". IFES. Retrieved 11 February 2013.
  4. "Monaco elections this weekend". The Riviera Times Online. Archived from the original on 13 February 2013. Retrieved 10 February 2013.
  5. "Observation of the Parliamentary Elections in Monaco, 10 February 2013". Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights. Retrieved 10 February 2013.
  6. "Voting in Monaco". Angloinfo. Archived from the original on 7 August 2016. Retrieved 14 June 2016.
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