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2017 Kenyan general election

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2017 Kenyan general election

8 August 2017
Presidential election (annulled)
← 2013October 2017 →

19,611,423 registered voters
50% + 1 vote (nationally) and 25% in at least 24 counties votes needed to win
Turnout79.51% (Decrease6.40pp)
 
Nominee Uhuru Kenyatta Raila Odinga
Party Jubilee ODM
Alliance NASA
Running mate William Ruto Kalonzo Musyoka
Popular vote 8,223,369 6,822,812
Percentage 54.17% 44.94%

County-level results

President before election

Uhuru Kenyatta
Jubilee

President after election

Election results annulled
Uhuru Kenyatta remains president

General elections were held in Kenya on 8 August 2017 to elect the President, members of the National Assembly and Senate. They coincided with the 2017 Kenyan local elections which elected Governors and representatives in the devolved governments.

The published results showed that incumbent President Uhuru Kenyatta of the Jubilee Party had been re-elected with 54% of the vote. However, his main opponent, Raila Odinga of the Orange Democratic Movement, refused to accept the results and contested them in the Supreme Court. The results of the presidential election were subsequently annulled by the court and fresh presidential elections was ordered to be held within 60 days. It was later announced that the elections would be held in October.

The results of the parliamentary and local elections remained valid. The Jubilee Party retained its majority in the Senate, winning 34 of the 67 seats, and remained the largest party in the National Assembly with 171 of the 341 seats. The Orange Democratic Movement won 20 seats in the Senate and 76 in the National Assembly.

Background

The Kenyan Constitution requires a general election on the second Tuesday in August in every fifth year. There have been public discussions to move the date from August to December with proponents pointing to the fiscal timeline (1 July – 30 June) clashing with an August date, because most ministries that support critical election processes will not have been fully funded and that a possible presidential runoff vote may interfere with the national examinations calendar of October and December.

Opponents of the proposed date change have argued for protecting the constitutional provision and that any change would be mired by legal challenges and might drag on to the next elections and still require a referendum to decide, putting the country's stability at risk.

On 7 August 2017, one day before the election, Barack Obama, who served as the 44th President of the United States from 2009 to 2017 and whose father, Barack Obama Sr., was Kenyan, called for calm and acceptance of the election results.

Electoral system

The President of Kenya is elected using a modified version of the two-round system: to win in the first round, a candidate must receive over 50% of the vote and at least 25% of the vote in a minimum of 24 of the 47 counties.

The 337 members of the National Assembly are elected by two methods; 290 are elected in single-member constituencies by first-past-the-post voting. The remaining 47 are reserved for women and are elected from single-member constituencies based on the 47 counties, also using the first-past-the-post system. The 67 members of the Senate are elected by four methods; 47 are elected in single-member constituencies based on the counties by first-past-the-post voting. Parties are then assigned a share of 16 seats for women, two for youth and two for disabled people based on their seat share.

Party primaries

The Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission set the duration for political parties to conduct their primaries in April 2017 following the review of Kenya's Election Laws. Parties would have 14 days between 20 April and 2 May to conduct their primaries and submit their candidates to the electoral commission.

Conduct

William Ruto home siege

On 29 July 2017, Deputy President William Ruto's house was attacked by a local man armed with a machete. During the siege, the deputy president and his family were not present. The assailant first injured the guard on duty, held him hostage and then killed him. The siege lasted 18 hours before special forces of the Kenyan Police shot the attacker dead. The motives of the attacker were unknown and members of the public were unaware how a man armed with a machete held the elite police forces at bay for 18 hours.

Msando murder

On 27 July 2017, two bodies were found on the outskirts of Nairobi. One of the dead, Christopher Msando, was the head of information, communication, and technology at the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission. He played a major role in developing the new voting system for the election. His body showed apparent marks of torture before he was murdered for unclear reasons. Alongside it was the body of a 21-year-old woman, Maryanne Ngumbu. The FBI and Scotland Yard offered to help in the investigation.

The murder of Msando raised suspicion among the opposition that it was part of a plot by the ruling party to rig the election, as it appeared Msando was standing in the way.

Andrew Kipkoech Rono, 58, who was arrested over allegations he sent a threatening message to Msando before he was killed, appeared before High Court judge, James Wakiaga.

Results

President

Kenyatta had maintained 10+% lead over Odinga in most polls for many weeks, but the two most recent polls before the election suggested a much closer race. The outcome was reported as a 9.5% victory for Kenyatta. On 10 August, provisional results released by the Kenyan electoral commission put Kenyatta ahead by 54.2% to Odinga's 44.92%. The head of the EU delegation Marietje Schaake said there had been no sign of manipulation of the result at central or local level and urged all sides to accept the result.

The Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission (IEBC) declared incumbents Uhuru Kenyatta and William Ruto as president-elect and deputy president-elect respectively on the evening of 11 August 2017. The National Super Alliance disputed the results.

CandidateRunning matePartyVotes%
Uhuru KenyattaWilliam RutoJubilee Party8,223,36954.17
Raila OdingaKalonzo MusyokaNational Super Alliance6,822,81244.94
Joseph NyagahMoses MarangoIndependent38,0290.25
Abduba DidaTitus NgetunyAlliance for Real Change38,0040.25
Ekuru AukotEmmanuel NzaiThirdway Alliance Kenya27,4000.18
Japheth KaluyuMuthiora KariaraIndependent11,7740.08
Cyrus JirongoJoseph MomanyiUnited Democratic Party11,2820.07
Michael WainainaMiriam MutuaIndependent8,8700.06
Total15,181,540100.00
Valid votes15,181,54097.36
Invalid/blank votes411,5102.64
Total votes15,593,050100.00
Registered voters/turnout19,611,42379.51
Source: IEBC

By county

# County Uhuru Kenyata Raila Odinga Others Total Registered
voters
Turnout
Votes Votes Votes
1 Mombasa 99,508 29.10 238,943 69.90 3,575 1.00 342,026 580,223 58.95
2 Kwale 43,812 23.70 138,664 75.00 2,307 1.20 184,783 281,041 65.75
3 Kilifi 49,693 15.20 273,852 83.60 4,196 1.30 327,741 508,068 64.51
4 Tana River 40,317 46.10 45,641 52.20 1,490 1.70 87,448 118,327 73.90
5 Lamu 24,225 48.90 24,423 49.30 868 1.80 49,516 69,776 70.96
6 Taita Taveta 31,158 27.70 79,832 70.90 1,542 1.40 112,532 155,716 72.27
7 Garissa 54,825 48.30 54,784 48.30 3,905 3.40 113,514 163,350 69.49
8 Wajir 61,199 51.20 52,840 44.20 5,482 4.60 119,521 162,902 73.37
9 Mandera 113,469 83.00 18,122 13.30 5,054 3.70 136,645 175,642 77.80
10 Marsabit 92,681 83.60 16,114 14.50 2,026 1.80 110,821 141,708 78.20
11 Isiolo 26,732 49.30 19,029 35.10 8,440 15.60 54,201 75,338 71.94
12 Meru 483,033 88.90 55,951 10.30 4,596 0.80 543,580 702,480 77.38
13 Tharaka–Nithi 162,923 93.30 10,334 5.90 1,458 0.80 174,715 213,154 81.97
14 Embu 232,409 92.20 17,623 7.00 2,108 0.80 252,140 309,468 81.48
15 Kitui 64,726 18.00 287,198 79.90 7,434 2.10 359,358 474,512 75.73
16 Machakos 83,039 17.60 381,220 80.90 6,853 1.50 471,112 620,254 75.95
17 Makueni 27,424 8.20 301,155 90.60 3,903 1.20 332,482 423,310 78.54
18 Nyandarua 286,555 99.00 2,305 0.80 624 0.20 289,484 335,634 86.25
19 Nyeri 388,362 98.40 4,719 1.20 1,428 0.40 394,509 456,949 86.34
20 Kirinyaga 297,086 98.60 3,117 1.00 1,058 0.40 301,261 349,836 86.11
21 Murang'a 498,051 97.90 9,133 1.80 1,624 0.30 508,808 587,126 86.66
22 Kiambu 913,607 92.70 69,157 7.00 2,653 0.30 985,417 1,180,920 83.44
23 Turkana 59,239 44.90 71,326 54.10 1,249 0.90 131,814 191,435 68.86
24 West Pokot 97,677 64.80 51,930 34.40 1,174 0.80 150,781 180,232 83.66
25 Samburu 31,786 49.70 31,661 49.50 541 0.80 63,988 82,787 77.29
26 Trans Nzoia 110,338 44.60 134,462 54.30 2,840 1.10 247,640 339,622 72.92
27 Uasin Gishu 267,392 78.20 72,574 21.20 1,934 0.60 341,900 450,055 75.97
28 Elgeyo Marakwet 138,755 94.70 7,046 4.80 784 0.50 146,585 180,664 81.14
29 Nandi 235,739 86.80 34,148 12.60 1,686 0.60 271,573 346,007 78.49
30 Baringo 161,634 84.90 27,725 14.60 1,085 0.60 190,444 232,258 82.00
31 Laikipia 177,747 89.10 20,872 10.50 927 0.50 199,546 246,487 80.96
32 Nakuru 639,528 84.80 111,789 14.80 3,220 0.40 754,537 949,618 79.46
33 Narok 149,989 53.10 130,056 46.10 2,166 0.80 282,211 341,730 82.58
34 Kajiado 186,326 57.10 138,585 42.50 1,386 0.40 326,297 411,193 79.35
35 Kericho 281,773 92.90 19,562 6.40 2,135 0.70 303,470 375,668 80.78
36 Bomet 229,581 87.00 32,002 12.10 2,279 0.90 263,862 322,012 81.94
37 Kakamega 63,910 11.50 485,373 87.40 6,298 1.10 555,581 743,736 74.70
38 Vihiga 18,562 9.10 181,889 89.60 2,451 1.20 202,902 272,409 74.48
39 Bungoma 127,415 30.20 287,316 68.10 7,185 1.70 421,916 559,850 75.36
40 Busia 34,496 12.50 240,416 86.80 2,022 0.70 276,934 351,048 78.89
41 Siaya 2,533 0.70 376,647 99.10 840 0.20 380,020 457,953 82.98
42 Kisumu 7,743 1.80 430,229 97.90 1,451 0.30 439,423 539,210 81.49
43 Homa Bay 1,952 0.50 400,218 99.40 666 0.20 402,836 476,875 84.47
44 Migori 45,655 14.20 274,938 85.40 1,534 0.50 322,127 388,633 82.89
45 Kisii 175,415 43.20 224,855 55.40 5,602 1.40 405,872 546,580 74.26
46 Nyamira 106,894 52.10 95,470 46.50 2,912 1.40 205,276 278,853 73.61
47 Nairobi City 793,065 48.50 834,032 51.00 8,319 0.50 1,635,416 2,250,853 72.66
48 Diaspora 1,504 52.90 1,321 46.40 19 0.70 2,844 4,393 64.74
49 Prisons 1,887 45.70 2,214 53.60 30 0.70 4,131 5,528 74.73
Total 8,223,369 54.17 6,822,812 44.94 135,359 0.89 15,181,540 19,611,423 77.41

Senate

Three women, Uasin Gishu's Margaret Kamar, Susan Kihika of Nakuru and Fatuma Dullo of Isiolo became the first women in Kenya's history to be elected to the Senate rather than appointed. Kihika was also elected Senate Majority Whip on 31 August.

PartyVotes%Seats+/–
CountyWomenYouthDisabledTotal
Jubilee Party6,265,11241.462481134–2
Orange Democratic Movement3,603,16723.841351120+3
Wiper Democratic Movement – Kenya940,2186.2221003–2
Amani National Congress493,2223.2621003New
Kenya African National Union502,0873.32210030
FORD–Kenya556,6383.6810001–3
Chama Cha Uzalendo199,0311.3210001+1
Party of Development and Reforms15,5470.1010001New
Other parties1,188,4767.8600000
Independents1,347,8058.9210001+1
Total15,111,303100.00471622670
Source: IPU, Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission

National Assembly

PartyConstituencyCounty (women)Seats
Votes%SeatsVotes%SeatsAppointedTotal+/–
Jubilee Party6,029,27340.201406,337,95741.79256171–33
Orange Democratic Movement2,884,26719.23623,649,50924.0611376–20
Wiper Democratic Movement – Kenya770,8755.1419882,1745.823123–3
Amani National Congress569,0223.7912357,1462.361114New
FORD–Kenya495,0433.3010458,7703.031112+2
Kenya African National Union366,8082.458357,1462.362010+4
Economic Freedom Party66,7110.44465,6980.43105New
Maendeleo Chap Chap Party251,8761.683191,3451.26104New
Party of Development and Reforms67,5150.453225,5571.49104New
Chama Cha Mashinani90,9230.612151,0621.00002New
Kenya National Congress44,2220.2928,5160.060020
Kenya People's Party23,7850.1629,0190.06002New
Peoples Democratic Party53,3580.36202+1
Chama Cha Uzalendo30,9260.21138,0470.25001–1
Muungano Party63,3200.421010
New Democrats24,3430.16122,1270.15001+1
Party of National Unity179,1301.19167,5390.45001New
Democratic Party70,3880.4713,0570.02001+1
Frontier Alliance Party39,4620.26135,3360.23001New
National Agenda Party17,4210.12101+1
Other parties514,2033.430411,7202.71000
Independents2,347,06115.65131,893,66612.491014+10
Total14,999,932100.0028915,165,391100.004712348–1
Registered voters/turnout19,611,42319,611,423
Source: IPU, Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission

Governors

Three women were elected as governors for the first time for their respective counties – Joyce Laboso of Bomet County, Charity Ngilu of Kitui County, and Anne Waiguru of Kirinyaga County. 25 out of 47 governors lost their seats. 29 of the 47 governors are members of the ruling Jubilee Party.

Reactions

Domestic

Opposition leader Raila Odinga, alleged that the results had been tampered with by hackers. At that time, he offered no evidence to justify his claim, which the head of Kenya's electoral commission dismissed. Following the election, there were protests in Kisumu, Kibera and Mathare where Odinga enjoys major political support, some of which turned violent and deadly. Odinga published his own results, which put him ahead, and claimed that the commission's IT system had been hacked and that Kenya had seen the worst "voter theft" in its history. The chairman of the electoral commission, Wafula Chebukati, responded that his organisation was the only body allowed to count votes and that while there had been an attempt to hack the commission, it had failed. A week after the vote, Odinga announced he would challenge the results in Kenya's Supreme Court.

The Economist did its own count of a small sample of paper ballots, which tallied with the electronic results.

Kenyatta's reaction incorporated invitations of several world leaders to his inauguration, including: former US President Barack Obama; German Chancellor Angela Merkel; British Prime Minister Theresa May; Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi; Chinese President Xi Jinping; Liberian President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf; Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari; Rwandan President Paul Kagame; Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni; Tanzanian President John Magufuli; South African President Jacob Zuma; His Royal Highness Aga Khan IV; and Nigerian billionaire tycoon Aliko Dangote.

International

  • African Union African Union: The AU mission led by Thabo Mbeki commended the Kenyan people on conducting the election in a peaceful environment. The AU acknowledged the dispute by the opposition, however, Mbeki refused to get involved in the investigation, citing the lack of mandate.
  • United States Carter Center: The mission headed by John Kerry commended the Kenyan people in conducting the election peacefully. The Carter Center also commended the role of the judiciary throughout the entire electoral process. Kerry, who initially said he was "confident in the integrity of the Kenyan elections and praised the country's election commission for its transparency and diligence", later urged that all disputes with the election be handled within the law.
  • Commonwealth of Nations Commonwealth of Nations: The Chair of the Commonwealth Observer Group, former President of Ghana John Mahama, declared in the group's interim statement that the Kenyan elections across all six levels of government has been "credible, fair and inclusive". He appealed for continued patience as the results continue to be finalised. On allegations of fraud by the opposition leader, Mahama called for political leaders to show "restraint and magnanimity".
  • East African Community East African Community: The EAC mission led by Edward Rugumayo also said that the election conducted was free and fair and that the observer team was also satisfied with the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission's response to the hacking claims. The commission also appealed for patience towards journalists until the final results are published.
  • European Union European Union: The EU observer team deemed the election free and fair, and commended the role of the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission. It expressed concern, however, about the high number of spoilt ballots.

Aftermath

On 13 August, police said a total of 16 people have been killed in protests. The post-election violence ultimately resulted in the deaths of up to fifty people and over 100 injuries.

Inaugurations

It was announced on 13 August that the new Parliament would be sworn in on 22 August, with Kenyatta's second inauguration to follow a week later. However, Kenyatta's inauguration was pushed back to at least 12 September after Odinga agreed to challenge the results in court. It was later announced that the reconvening of the Kenyan parliament was delayed to no later than 7 September due to a petition which was filed by groups affiliated with the Federation of Women Lawyers in Kenya (FIDA- Kenya) over the new parliament's lack of women needed to meet the two-thirds gender rule criteria. Despite the FIDA- Kenya lawsuit, the IEBC announced on 22 August that it will publish the full list of elected Members of the National Assembly and Members of County Assembly later that day and that the gender-rule lawsuit will not be heard in court until 20 September; the IEBC had already published the final results and names of the 47 Governors, Woman Representatives and Senators on 14 August.

The Standard later reported on 22 August that the Kenyan Parliament will reconvene in the next week. On 23 August, Kenyatta issued a decree stating that the Parliament will reconvene on 31 August when they assemble to swear in new members and elect respective Speakers and Deputy Speakers. On 29 August, members-elect of the new Parliament officially underwent the process of registering their political orientation and held their first unofficial meetings in Parliament before being sworn-in. They then met with respective party leaders on 30 August. The 12th Kenyan Parliament was then sworn in on 31 August and various leaders were elected by members of the Kenyan National Assembly and Kenyan Senate to serve their respective houses as well.

Supreme Court decision

Main article: Raila v IEBC (2017)

On 28 August, the Kenyan Supreme Court heard Odinga's arguments for the first time. Permission was granted to allow two agents of both the ruling party and Odinga's NASA party to audit the IEBC results. Odinga's lawyer, James Orengo, alleged afterwards that the IEBC was denying his team full access to the servers and other equipment that transmitted results from polling stations to the tallying centre despite the court allowing "read-only" access.

Closing arguments then concluded on 29 August and it was announced that the court would make a decision regarding the results of the presidential election on 1 September. It was later announced on 30 August that the IEBC had submitted all result forms for scrutiny in order to give the Supreme Court a clear picture on how Kenyans voted during the elections.

On 1 September, the Supreme Court nullified Kenyatta's election victory and ordered a new presidential election to take place within 60 days.

On 5 September, the IEBC set the next presidential election to be held on 17 October. Odinga announced that he would not participate in a new presidential election without "legal and constitutional guarantees" against alleged electoral fraud. However, it was later announced on 21 September that the election would be delayed until 26 October after the IEBC sought more time to reform the voting processes. The same day, IEBC Legal Affairs officer, Praxedes Tororey, succumbed to sustained pressure from NASA and resigned from her post.

Evidence

Evidence was based on examining the forms that represented the stages of vote collection (41,451 of form 34A, 291 of form 34B and one form 34C). The court requested to inspect the originals of all forms.

  • Form 34A: 10,438 of the forms, out of a total of 41,451, were missing when the results were declared. Some of the forms, presented by IEBC, were carbon copies while others did not bear the IEBC stamp, and some had the IEBC stamp on a photocopy of the original.
  • Form 34B: 10 of the forms were illegible, 56 of them had no watermark, 10 were not signed by the returning officer, and 66 bore no stamp. 31 of the forms had no serial number, and 32 were not signed by party agents.
  • Form 34C: had no security features or serial number. "The form looked like a photocopy."

The NASA opposition claimed this jeopardised 7 million votes when the margin of the result was 1.5 million votes.

On 20 September, Justice Philomena Mwilu issued a court statement saying that the IEBC's refusal to provide access and failure to provide information on the IT system's firewall configuration left the court "no choice but to accept the petitioner's claims that the IEBC's IT system was infiltrated and compromised, and the data therein interfered with, or IEBC's officials themselves interfered with the data." A day before the court delivered its statement, Chief Justice David Maraga said judges on the bench had faced death threats since declaring the election results void and criticized the police for "ignoring calls to act."

On 21 September, Kenyatta decried the ruling as a "coup."

Calls to prosecute IEBC officials

On 22 September, Mathare MP Anthony Olouch, a member of NASA who runs a firm called AT Olouch and Company Advocates, issued a statement to the Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) Keriako Tobik calling for the prosecution of the following IEBC officials: CEO Ezra Chiloba, Chairman Wafula Chebukati, Betty Nyabuto, Immaculate Kassait, James Muhati, Praxedes Tororey (who has since retired), Moses Kipkogei, Abdi Guliye, Molu Boya and Marjan Hussein Marjan. The letter also stated, "unless investigation leading into criminal charges and prosecution is commenced within 72 hours this office, our instructions are to institute private prosecutions according to Section 28 of the Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions ."

Odinga Withdrawal from Second Election

On 10 October, Odinga quit the second election, citing problems with the IEBC and withdrawals from his coalition. Odinga strongly believes he cannot go into another election with no reforms in the IEBC.

Doubts of Fair Second Presidential Election

This article is missing information about whether the second round took place, who cancelled it, what the results were. Please expand the article to include this information. Further details may exist on the talk page. (February 2019)

On 18 October recently resigned IEBC Commissioner, who fled to the United States, issued a statement declaring that the second Kenyan Presidential election would not be a fair election. The same day, IEBC Chairman Wafula Chebukati expressed skepticism about a fair election as well, claiming the IEBC commissioners were partisan-minded and that he resign unless certain conditions are met to reform the IEBC. On 20 October, the IEBC's chief executive officer Ezra Chiloba announced that he will not be monitoring the election and that starting 23 October, he will take a three-week vacation. Chiloba's departure has created more uncertainty over who will monitor the election.

On 24 October, the IEBC announced that it would now count back-up paper ballots and not rush to announce the official results based only on numbers sent from the polling stations like in the first Presidential election as well. The same day, Chebukati appointed IEBC Vice Chair Consolata N.B. Maina as the IEBC Deputy National Returning Officer.

Second Petition Filing

Honorable Mwau, Njonjo Mue and Khalef Khalifa filed petitions challenging the declaration at Supreme Court on 8 November.This act triggered political deadlock and uncertainty. President Uhuru Kenyatta launched his 24- page response stating his legally elected and accuses the petitioners for being used as NASA 'agents'. He also stated his acceptance on the verdict made to repeat the elections, and further accused the opposition of frustrating IEBC'S capability of handling the elections and attaching the Jubilee administration of interference in the electoral decisions putting it as propaganda.

He further denied claims of sing state resources for campaigning and involvement of cabinet ministers in his campaign, voter influence, intimidation and corruption during the repeat polls.

NASA defended its withdrawal in the second polls through its Chief Principal Raila Odinga. NASA Co- Principal maintained that the election was a 'sham' and IEBC was at all not independent as its decisions were solemnly made by foreign organs acting as relations officers to the public and the Jubilee Administration.

Kenyatta Inauguration

Despite challenges to his second victory, Kenyatta was officially sworn in for a second and final term on 28 November.

Aftermath

In 2022, the head of the 2017 Kenya European Union Election Observation Mission Hannah Roberts, explaining the situation at Oxford University, said: “"The court was under a lot of pressure because of the political tensions that there were between the two sides and also they had a huge amount of evidence that they had to wade through in two weeks so they had an enormous political and practical load on their shoulders. As the days were progressing we could see more of the rationale that they were following and could start to see that possibly they were going to annull this election. For us that was a very key thing that any decision by a court should be something that has a logic is a logical consequence of the legal framework in a country and the evidence of what's actually happened but still when the decision came it was a huge shock for us because it never happened before." ”

For the court to "demonstrate its ability to operate independently by making a decision against the ruling party it was very difficult on a practical level but of course much better than going to the streets and they're being violent on the streets the other aspect that was very apparent to us was the amount of pressure that was being put on the judiciary throughout the election process in 2017 so before during and after the election when they were subject to extremely harsh criticism extensive complaints and intimidation," she said.

Ugochukwu Ezeh, researcher at Oxford University, called the ruling an "absolutely radical intervention ... but also justifiable based on a plausible reading of the applicable constitutional and statutory frameworks." He also said that the decision did "reverberate beyond Kenya's borders" and that what he "most admired about the decision was the court's emphasis on the need to conceptualize elections as a process not just as a one day event but to assess, evaluate the quality of an electoral contest we need to look at the process leading up to our voting day."

References

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  10. Electoral system Inter-Parliamentary Union
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