2017 Lesotho general election

Early general elections were held in Lesotho on 3 June 2017 to elect all 120 seats of the National Assembly, the lower house of the Parliament. The elections were called more than three years ahead of schedule due to a successful vote of no confidence against the incumbent Prime Minister Pakalitha Mosisili.[1]

2017 Lesotho general election
Lesotho
3 June 2017

All 120 seats in the National Assembly
61 seats needed for a majority
PartyLeader % Seats +/–
ABC Tom Thabane 40.52 48 +2
DC Pakalitha Mosisili 25.82 30 -17
LCD Mothetjoa Metsing 8.95 11 -1
AD Monyane Moleleki 7.34 9 New
MEC Selibe Mochoboroane 5.06 6 New
BNP Thesele Maseribane 4.05 5 -2
PFD Lekhetho Rakuoane 2.27 3 +1
NIP 1.10 1 0
RCL 0.69 1 -1
BCP 0.59 1 0
DPL 0.48 1 New
MFP 0.47 1 0
Constituency winners and regional winners
Prime Minister before Prime Minister after election
Pakalitha Mosisili
DC
Tom Thabane
ABC

Background

After three years out of power, Pakalitha Mosisili returned to office as Prime Minister in the February 2015 general election as leader of the Democratic Congress, defeating Prime Minister Tom Thabane of the All Basotho Convention. However, in November 2016 an agreement was announced between the deputy leader of the Democratic Congress, Monyane Moleleki, and Tom Thabane to remove Mosisili and install Moleleki as Prime Minister.[2] Moleleki was suspended from the Democratic Congress in December 2016 and launched a new party, the Alliance of Democrats, in January 2017.[3]

On 12 February 2017 Thabane returned to Lesotho from self-imposed exile, declaring that Prime Minister Mosisili no longer commanded a parliamentary majority and vowing to oust him in a vote of no confidence. He claimed that he was risking his life by returning.[4]

The new opposition alliance defeated Mosisili in a vote of no confidence on 1 March 2017 and proposed Moleleki as the new Prime Minister;[5] Mosisili, faced with the choice of stepping aside in favor of Moleleki or calling an early election, chose the latter. He advised King Letsie III to dissolve Parliament, and the King did so on 7 March, despite an opposition effort to obstruct the move.[6] It was announced on 13 March that an early election would be held on 3 June 2017.[1]

Electoral system

The 120 members of the National Assembly are elected using the mixed-member proportional representation system, with voters casting a single vote. Eighty members are elected from single-member constituencies by first-past-the-post voting, with the remaining 40 elected from a single nationwide constituency in a closed list as leveling seats. The votes from every constituency are totalled (with votes cast for independent candidates ignored) to give a nationwide total for each party. A quota of the 120 total seats in the National Assembly is then calculated using each party's vote share and the number of seats won in constituencies is deducted in order to give the number of the 40 leveling -seats that a party is due. If the total number of seats due to be awarded is less than 120, the highest remainder method is used to distribute the remaining leveling seats.[7]

Results

Partial results available by 5 June, with counting for 57 constituencies completed, showed Thabane's opposition party, the ABC, winning 45 constituencies against only eight for Mosisili's party, the Democratic Congress.[8]

Full results were released on 6 June, confirming a victory for Thabane and the ABC, which won 48 seats against 30 for Mosisili's Democratic Congress.[9]

PartyVotes%Seats
ConstituencyPRTotal+/–
All Basotho Convention[lower-alpha 1]235,72940.5247148+2
Democratic Congress150,17225.8226430–17
Lesotho Congress for Democracy52,0528.9511011–1
Alliance of Democrats42,6867.34189New
Movement for Economic Change29,4205.06156New
Basotho National Party23,5414.05055–2
Popular Front for Democracy13,2002.27123+1
National Independent Party6,3751.100110
Reformed Congress of Lesotho4,0370.69011–1
Basutoland Congress Party3,4580.590110
Democratic Party of Lesotho2,8010.48011New
Marematlou Freedom Party2,7610.470110
Lesotho People's Congress2,3640.41000–1
Basotho Democratic National Party1,8180.310000
Lesotho Workers' Party1,7110.290000
Baena1,3930.240000
Hamore Democratic Party1,3110.230000
Lekhotla la Mekhoa le Meetlo1,0240.180000
Majalefa Development Movement1,0240.18000New
True Reconciliation Unity8170.14000New
Basutoland African National Congress6840.120000
Tsebe Social Democrats4020.070000
Community Freedom Movement3220.060000
Basotho Thabeng ea Sinai2790.05000New
Sankatana Social Democracy2460.04000New
All Democratic Cooperation1700.030000
White Horse Party1390.020000
African Unity Movement780.010000
IND PR370.01000
Independent1,6410.280000
Vacant[lower-alpha 1]303
Total581,692100.0080401200
Valid votes581,69299.04
Invalid/blank votes5,6170.96
Total votes587,309100.00
Registered voters/turnout1,253,54046.85
Source: IEC
  1. An additional three seats were won by ABC candidates, but the results in those constituencies was declared null, because candidates had died before the election.[10]

By district

DistrictABCDCLCDADMECBNPPFDNIPOthers
Butha-Buthe District43.3814.7410.917.973.791.719.461.646.40
Leribe District43.308.7522.382.252.573.7210.231.685.12
Berea District50.9010.6317.056.343.293.621.501.195.48
Maseru District51.2319.967.329.802.453.620.770.534.32
Mafeteng District33.0135.111.832.5618.271.451.290.745.74
Mohale's Hoek District30.1148.82-5.137.532.291.270.854.00
Quthing District14.3952.33-7.223.2619.271.331.191.01
Qacha's Nek District6.6476.25-3.674.535.660.590.332.33
Thaba-Tseka District29.5939.01-5.955.254.348.301.625.94
Mokhotlong District37.5939.55-3.966.143.281.841.875.67

Government formation

The ABC said on 6 June that it planned to form a government in coalition with the Alliance of Democrats, the Basotho National Party, and the Reformed Congress of Lesotho.[9] A government statement on 8 June said that Mosisili had submitted his resignation to King Letsie but would continue in a caretaker capacity.[11] However, on 9 June, Deputy Prime Minister Mothetjoa Metsing, leader of the Lesotho Congress for Democracy, said that "there is no need for the removal of the existing government in office" and argued for the formation of "a government of national unity" for the sake of national stability.[12]

Thabane's estranged wife Dipolelo was shot and killed on 14 June.[13] Thabane was sworn in as Prime Minister on 16 June,[14] and his cabinet was sworn in on 23 June, including Monyane Moleleki as Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Parliamentary Affairs.[15]

References

  1. "Lesotho to hold general election on June 3", Africanews, 13 March 2017.
  2. Nthakoana Ngatane, "Lesotho parties to form coalition govt" Archived 2017-03-03 at the Wayback Machine, SABC News, 24 November 2016.
  3. Nthakoana Ngatane, "Thousands attend inaugural rally in Maseru" Archived 2017-03-03 at the Wayback Machine, SABC News, 29 January 2017.
  4. "Ex-PM returns to restive Lesotho vowing to win power" Archived 26 March 2017 at the Wayback Machine, Agence France-Presse, 12 February 2017.
  5. "Lesotho set for elections following no-confidence vote against PM Mosisili", Africanews, 2 March 2017.
  6. Nthakoana Ngatane, "Lesotho prepares for general elections" Archived 2017-03-10 at the Wayback Machine, SABC News, 7 March 2017.
  7. National Assembly Elections 2015 Fact Sheets IEC
  8. Mathabiso Ralengau, "Lesotho opposition leads as vote count passes two-thirds mark", Bloomberg, 5 June 2017.
  9. "Lesotho: Incumbent Mosisili loses election to former Prime Minister Thabane", Africanews, 6 June 2017.
  10. Final elections tally announced Lesotho Times, 6 June 2017
  11. "Easing fears, Lesotho's PM Mosisili resigns after election loss" Archived 2017-10-21 at the Wayback Machine, Associated Press, 9 June 2017.
  12. "Former Lesotho deputy PM calls for government of national unity", Reuters, 10 June 2017.
  13. "'Killing' of Lesotho PM Thabane's wife raises instability fears", News24, 15 June 2017.
  14. Ismail Akwei, "'Devastated' Lesotho PM inaugurated after fatal shooting of wife", Africanews, 16 June 2017.
  15. "New cabinet sworn in" Archived 2017-06-30 at the Wayback Machine, LENA, 23 June 2017.
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