Burkinabé parliamentary election, 2002

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Parliamentary elections were held in Burkina Faso on 5 May 2002. The result was a victory for the ruling Congress for Democracy and Progress (CDP), which won and 57 of the 111 seats in the National Assembly.

Electoral system

Following electoral reforms introduced since the 1997 elections, the 111 members of the National Assembly were elected in two sections; 90 seats were elected using regional lists in 13 constituencies, whilst the remaining 21 were elected on a national list.[1]

Campaign

A total of 3,540 candidates registered to contest the elections, with 30 political parties participating.[1]

Results

Party Votes % Seats
National Regional Total +/–
Congress for Democracy and Progress 862,119 49.52 11 46 57 –44
Alliance for Democracy and Federation – African Democratic Rally 219,543 12.61 3 14 17 +13
Party for Democracy and Progress / Socialist Party 122,100 7.02 2 8 10 +4
African Independence Party (Touré) 63,031 3.62 1 4 5 New
Coalition of Democratic Forces 61,936 3.56 1 4 5 0
National Rebirth Party 47,477 2.73 1 3 4 New
Sankarist Pan-African Convention 45,745 2.63 1 2 3 0
Union for Rebirth / Sankarist Movement 42,599 2.45 1 2 3 New
Party for Democracy and Socialism 37,836 2.17 0 2 2 0
National Convention of Progressive Democrats 34,379 1.97 0 2 2 New
Patriotic Front for Change 16,852 0.97 0 1 1 New
Union of Democrats and Independent Progressives 14,438 0.83 0 1 1 New
Alliance for Progress and Freedom 6,637 0.38 0 1 1 New
Other parties 166,345 9.55 0 0 0
Invalid/blank votes 142,243
Total 1,883,280 100 21 90 111 0
Registered voters/turnout 2,673,185 70.4
Source: IDEA

Aftermath

Following the elections, Roch Marc Christian Kaboré of the CDP was elected President of the National Assembly, defeating Marlène Zebango of the Alliance for Democracy and Federation – African Democratic Rally by a vote of 77–22.[1]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Augustin Loada & Carlos Santiso Landmark elections in Burkina Faso: Towards democratic maturity? International IDEA