2012 Belarusian parliamentary election

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2012 Belarusian parliamentary election
Belarus
← 2008 23 September 2012 2016 →

All 110 seats in the
House of Representatives
56 seats needed for a majority
Turnout74.61% (Decrease 2.13pp)
Party Leader % Seats +/–
CPB Tatsyana Holubeva [be] 2.74 3 −3
RPTS Vasil Zadnyaprany [be] 1.53 1 +1
BAP Mikhail Rusy [be] 0.79 1 0
Independents 75.49 105 +2
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.
Speaker of the House of Representatives before Speaker of the House of Representatives after
Vladimir Andreichenko
CPB
Vladimir Andreichenko
CPB
Map with constituency boundaries
Invitation to vote.

Parliamentary elections were held in

National Assembly of Belarus
.

Electoral system

According to the 1994 electoral law,

House of Representatives were elected in single-member districts.[1] Winning candidates had to achieve an absolute majority of the vote in their constituency and turnout was required to be 50% or more.[1] If neither were achieved, a second round would have been held, contested by the two candidates from the first round with the most votes.[2] For the second round the turnout threshold was reduced to 25%, except in cases in which there is only one candidate contesting the second round, in which case it was abolished.[1] If only one candidate ran in the second round, they still had to achieve a majority of the vote.[1]

The voting age was set at 18, whilst candidates had to be at least 21.[2] Members of the Council of the Republic and members of a local councils were ineligible for election to the House of Representatives.[2] Candidates had to collect at least 1,000 signatures from voters in the constituency they intended to run in.[2]

Voting centres were open from 08:00 to around 20:00. Four previous days of early voting for students, armed service staff and police resulted in at a voter turnout of at least 19%, according to the election commission.[3]

Campaign

The elections were contested by the

Agrarian Party.[4] The BPF Party and the United Civic Party both pulled out of the election a week before polling day.[5] Sixteen seats were uncontested.[5]

Following the

tried to register as a candidate for the elections but was disqualified for "technical reasons."

The two main opposition parties, including the

borshch instead, while several of them were arrested along with media photographers. Some of photographers were later released after about two hours. Independent political analyst Alexander Klaskovsky was quoted as saying: "The opposition is virtually broken. It has few resources and there is no real programme."[3]

Results

109 of 110 MPs were elected receiving an absolute majority with the necessary turnout, with only the constituency of Novobelitsky failing to elect a candidate in the first round.[6] Of the independent candidates, 63 were members of Belaya Rus.[7]

The Central Election Commission declared voter turnout had been at least 65.9%, thus validating the result. However, other independent monitors suggested a turnout of 30%. Vitaly Rymashevsky, the co-chairman of the Belarus Christian Democracy party, said: "The election commission is unscrupulously lying as these figures are so radically different from those of observers." On 23 September, Lidya Yermoshina, the head of the CEC, said that with a final tally for 109 seats it was "doubtful" that the opposition won any seats.[3]

The vacant seat was later taken by an independent.[8]

PartyVotes%Seats+/–
Liberal Democratic Party249,4554.8400
Communist Party of Belarus141,0952.743–3
Belarusian Left Party "A Just World"98,2881.9100
Republican Party of Labour and Justice79,0781.531+1
Belarusian Agrarian Party40,4880.7910
Belarusian Social Democratic Party (Assembly)38,4710.7500
Belarusian Social Sporting Party6,9210.1300
BPF Party2,7890.0500
Independents3,892,32475.49104+1
Vacant1
Against all606,88711.77
Total5,155,796100.001100
Valid votes5,155,79698.29
Invalid/blank votes89,6631.71
Total votes5,245,459100.00
Registered voters/turnout7,030,43074.61
Source: CEC, Parties and Elections in Europe

References

  1. ^ a b c d e Country Profile IFES
  2. ^ a b c d e Belarus: Palata Predstaviteley (House of Representatives) IPU
  3. ^ a b c "Polls close in Belarus election amid boycott".
  4. ^ Кандидаты | Сайт парламентских выборов 2012 года в Республике Беларусь[permanent dead link]
  5. ^ a b Belarus opposition shut out of parliament in election BBC News, 24 September 2012
  6. ^ Legitimate parliament elected in Belarus Belarusian Telegraph Agency, 24 September 2012
  7. ^ Elections to the House of Representatives of the National Assembly of the Republic of Belarus of the fifth convocation Archived 2016-03-04 at the Wayback Machine CEC
  8. ^ Belarus Archived 2016-11-21 at the Wayback Machine Parties and Elections