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Elections in Bolivia

Bolivia elects on national level a head of state – the president – and a legislature. The president and the vice-president are elected for a five-year term by the people. The National Congress (Congreso Nacional) has two chambers. The Chamber of Deputies (Cámara de Diputados) has 130 members, elected for a five-year term using the Additional Member System, and in the case of seven indigenous seats by usos y costumbres. The Chamber of Senators (Cámara de Senadores) has 36 members: each of the country's nine departments returns four senators allocated proportionally.[1]

Bolivia has a multi-party system, with numerous parties. During the first 23 years of renewed democracy beginning 1982, no one party succeeded in gaining power alone, and parties had to work with each other to form coalition governments. Since 2005, a single party has achieved a parliamentary majority.

Ahead of any national election a period of prohibition takes effect. This is with the intention of preventing inebriated nationals voting in error. Nationals are also forbidden from travelling around during the same period. This is to prevent voters from voting in more than one district. On polling day it is difficult to obtain a taxi or bus, due to the limitations placed upon travel and transport.

Schedule edit

Election edit

Position 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015
Type Presidential and National Congress (December 6) Regional (April) Judicial (October 16) only special elections Presidential and National Congress (October 12) Regional (April)
President and
vice president
President and vice president None President and vice president None
National Congress All seats None All seats None
Departments, provinces, and municipalities None All positions None All positions

Inauguration edit

Position 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014
Type Presidential (November)
National Congress (November)
Gubernatorial (November)
None Presidential (November)
National Congress (November)
Gubernatorial (November)
President and
vice president
6 November None 6 November
National Congress 6 November None 6 November
Provinces, cities and municipalities 6 November None 6 November

Electoral system edit

The president is directly elected by the people, by majority. A candidate has to receive at least 50% of the vote, or 40% of the vote, and 10% more than the second candidate to be elected, otherwise a second round is held with the top two finishers to determine the winner.

The 130 members in the Chamber of Deputies (Cámara de Diputados) (excluding the seven special seats) are elected using the additional member system. 63 seats are elected in single-member districts using first-past-the-post voting. 60 additional seats are elected using closed list party-list proportional representation in districts of varying sizes corresponding to Bolivia's nine departments. For parties receiving at least 3% of the national vote, the seats are distributed using the D'Hondt method, subtracting the number of seats the respective party gained from the single-member districts in the respective department. If one party has more seats from the single-member districts alone than the proportion of list vote it received, the extra seats are taken from the last allocated list seats.

The remaining seven seats are reserved indigenous seats elected by the usos y costumbres, using first-past-the-post voting. A voter can only vote in one of either the normal constituencies or special constituencies.

The Chamber of Senators (Cámara de Senadores) has 36 members, four from each the country's nine departments, which are also elected using closed party-lists, using the D'Hondt method.[1]

Both the senate, and the proportional part of the Chamber of Deputies is elected based on the vote for the presidential candidates, while the deputies from the single-member districts are elected using separate votes. Party lists are required to alternate between men and women, while candidates in single-member districts are required to have an alternate, of the opposite sex. At least 50% of the single-member deputies are required to be women [1]

History of elections in Bolivia edit

Indirect elections, 1825-50 edit

Elections were conducted in the early Republican period using multiple levels of electors, each of which would elect members of the next higher level, culminating in the president.[2]

Direct elections with restricted suffrage, 1839 and 1850-1938 edit

In the elections of 1839, however, the president was elected by a majority of all voters. This system became the norm beginning in 1850. Voting requirements included a minimum property or income or service in one of the professions, and forbid all those "in domestic service" from voting. Indigenous peoples were effectively excluded from the franchise.

Expanding electorate, 1938-1951 edit

Under the Constitution of 1938, property restrictions on voting were removed however the vote was still restricted to those who were male, literate, and of age. Elections were held in 1940 and 1951, and saw a dramatic expansion of the electorate.

Universal suffrage and interruptions in democracy, 1952-79 edit

Shortly after coming to power through the Bolivian Revolution of 1952 [es], the National Revolutionary Movement instituted universal suffrage, ending literacy requirements and racial restrictions which had massively reduced the Bolivian electorate up to that time. General elections were held in 1956, 1960, and 1964; and purely legislative elections were held in 1958 and 1962. Democracy was interrupted in 1964 by René Barrientos Ortuño, who proceeded to hold and win an election in 1966 and to convoke the Constituent Assembly of 1966-67 to rewrite the Constitution of Bolivia.[3] Following Barrientos' death in 1969, democracy was further interrupted by military rule until 1979, including the eight-year dictatorship of Hugo Bánzer Suarez.

Democratic transition and final dictatorship, 1979-82 edit

In a chaotic period of transition marked by numerous coups d'état, three elections were held in 1978, 1979, 1980. Parliamentary majorities were not obtained in 1978 and 1979 and alliance building was interrupted by coups. Lydia Gueiler, an elected member of the National Congress assumed power constitutionally from November 1979 to mid-1980. The results of the 1980 elections were the basis for the post-1982 parliament and the 1982–85 government of Hernán Siles Zuazo.

Multiparty democracy, 1982-present edit

Elections have been held regularly in the democratic period that began in 1982. General elections were held in 1985, 1989, 1993, 1997, 2002, 2005, and 2009.[3] A Constituent Assembly was elected in 2006. The 1985 Organic Law of Municipalities restored local elections for mayor and created a legislative body, the municipal council, in each municipality.[4] The first local elections were held in 1987, followed by further elections in 1989, 1991, 1993, 1995, 1999, 2004, and 2010. Similarly, departmental elections for Prefect began in 2006 and elections for Departmental Legislative Assemblies began in 2010. Following the passage of the 2009 Constitution, the National Electoral Court was replaced in late 2010 by a fourth branch of government, the Plurinational Electoral Organ, whose highest body is the Supreme Electoral Court.

Latest elections edit

2020 Bolivian general election edit

On 18 October 2020, Bolivian voters elected Luis Arce, leader of Evo Morales' MAS-IPSP, as Bolivia's president with 55% of the vote in the first round. Arce's main opponents, Carlos Mesa and Luis Fernando Camacho, received 29% and 14% of the vote, respectively. Arce took the office of president on 8 November 2020.

2017 Bolivian judicial election edit

2021 Bolivian regional elections edit

Other elections and referendum edit

2015 Autonomy referendum edit

On September 20, 2015, five western and central departments—Cochabamba, Chuquisaca, La Paz, Oruro, and Potosí—voted on whether to approve "organic charters" (constitutions of autonomous governance), as did three municipalities and two indigenous territories.[5] Voters in all five departments rejected their charters of autonomy, which were drafted by MAS-IPSP–led legislatures.

Department Yes votes % No votes % Blank Null Total ballots cast Eligible voters Turnout as % of electorate
Cochabamba 335,464 38.42% 537,706 61.58% 17,910 57,930 949,010 1,137,872 83.4%
Chuquisaca 99,819 42.57% 134,652 57.43% 5,917 18,057 267,445 324,587
La Paz 425,605 31.94% 906,759 68.06% 30,159 88,885 1,026,228
Oruro 59,119 25.98% 168,443 74.02% 5,800 14,064 297,217
Potosí 93,705 31.92% 199,823 68.08% 8,278 21,546 323,352 408,131 79.2%
Sources: "Referendo autonómico: A cómputo final ganó el No en cinco departamentos". Agencia de Noticias Fides. 2015-09-25. Retrieved 2016-03-13.

2011 Special municipal election edit

A special election is due be held for the mayor of five cities where mayors have stepped down or been indicted. In July 2011, the Supreme Electoral Tribunal formally convoked the elections for mayor in three cities: Sucre, Quillacollo, and Pazña for December 18, 2011.[6]

City Outgoing Mayor (Party) Notes
Sucre, Chuquisaca Jaime Barrón (PAÍS) Resigned in July 2010 under indictment for May 24, 2008 violence
Quillacollo, Cochabamba Héctor Cartagena (UNE)
Punata, Cochabamba Víctor Balderrama (Insurgente Martín Uchu) Suspended under indictment for aggravated rape of a minor on August 10, 2010 (convicted September 2011[7]); pledged to resign to allow new elections
Pazña, Oruro Víctor Centeno (MAS-IPSP) Resigned on 15 June 2010 under "psychological pressure and regional divisions"[8]
Catacora, La Paz

See also edit

Notes edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c "Bolivia: Ley del Régimen Electoral, 30 de junio de 2010". Lexivox. Retrieved 10 February 2015.
  2. ^ Barragán R., Rossana (2005). "Ciudadanía y elecciones, convenciones y debates". Regiones y poder constituyente en Bolivia: Una historia de pactos y disputas. Cuaderno de futuro. PNUD. pp. 287–294.
  3. ^ a b Cordero Carraffa, Carlos Hugo (February 2007). Historia Electoral de Bolivia: 1952-2007 (PDF). Cuadernos de trabajo. Corte Nacional Electoral. p. 27.
  4. ^ Córdova, Eduardo (2009). "Cochabamba es el centro es la ausencia: Impulsos estatales y sociales de la descentralización en Cochabamba (1994–2008)". Decursos: Revista de Ciencias Sociales. XI (20): 61–95 [68].
  5. ^ . Tribunal Supremo Electoral. Archived from the original on 2016-03-14.
  6. ^ . Página Siete. 2011-07-22. Archived from the original on 2012-03-17. Retrieved 2011-07-22.
  7. ^ "Condenan con 25 años de prisión al Alcalde suspendido de Punata". La Razón. 2011-08-08. Retrieved 2011-08-08.[permanent dead link]
  8. ^ "En Quillacollo y Pazña habrán nuevas elecciones para alcalde 2011-09-11 at the Wayback Machine," Bolivianpress.com, 16 June 2011.

External links edit

  • Adam Carr's Election Archive

elections, bolivia, bolivia, elects, national, level, head, state, president, legislature, president, vice, president, elected, five, year, term, people, national, congress, congreso, nacional, chambers, chamber, deputies, cámara, diputados, members, elected, . Bolivia elects on national level a head of state the president and a legislature The president and the vice president are elected for a five year term by the people The National Congress Congreso Nacional has two chambers The Chamber of Deputies Camara de Diputados has 130 members elected for a five year term using the Additional Member System and in the case of seven indigenous seats by usos y costumbres The Chamber of Senators Camara de Senadores has 36 members each of the country s nine departments returns four senators allocated proportionally 1 Bolivia has a multi party system with numerous parties During the first 23 years of renewed democracy beginning 1982 no one party succeeded in gaining power alone and parties had to work with each other to form coalition governments Since 2005 a single party has achieved a parliamentary majority Ahead of any national election a period of prohibition takes effect This is with the intention of preventing inebriated nationals voting in error Nationals are also forbidden from travelling around during the same period This is to prevent voters from voting in more than one district On polling day it is difficult to obtain a taxi or bus due to the limitations placed upon travel and transport Contents 1 Schedule 1 1 Election 1 2 Inauguration 2 Electoral system 3 History of elections in Bolivia 3 1 Indirect elections 1825 50 3 2 Direct elections with restricted suffrage 1839 and 1850 1938 3 3 Expanding electorate 1938 1951 3 4 Universal suffrage and interruptions in democracy 1952 79 3 5 Democratic transition and final dictatorship 1979 82 3 6 Multiparty democracy 1982 present 4 Latest elections 4 1 2020 Bolivian general election 4 2 2017 Bolivian judicial election 4 3 2021 Bolivian regional elections 5 Other elections and referendum 5 1 2015 Autonomy referendum 5 2 2011 Special municipal election 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 External linksSchedule editThis section needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information February 2015 Election edit Position 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 Type Presidential and National Congress December 6 Regional April Judicial October 16 only special elections Presidential and National Congress October 12 Regional April President andvice president President and vice president None President and vice president None National Congress All seats None All seats None Departments provinces and municipalities None All positions None All positions Inauguration edit Position 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 Type Presidential November National Congress November Gubernatorial November None Presidential November National Congress November Gubernatorial November President andvice president 6 November None 6 November National Congress 6 November None 6 November Provinces cities and municipalities 6 November None 6 NovemberElectoral system editThe president is directly elected by the people by majority A candidate has to receive at least 50 of the vote or 40 of the vote and 10 more than the second candidate to be elected otherwise a second round is held with the top two finishers to determine the winner The 130 members in the Chamber of Deputies Camara de Diputados excluding the seven special seats are elected using the additional member system 63 seats are elected in single member districts using first past the post voting 60 additional seats are elected using closed list party list proportional representation in districts of varying sizes corresponding to Bolivia s nine departments For parties receiving at least 3 of the national vote the seats are distributed using the D Hondt method subtracting the number of seats the respective party gained from the single member districts in the respective department If one party has more seats from the single member districts alone than the proportion of list vote it received the extra seats are taken from the last allocated list seats The remaining seven seats are reserved indigenous seats elected by the usos y costumbres using first past the post voting A voter can only vote in one of either the normal constituencies or special constituencies The Chamber of Senators Camara de Senadores has 36 members four from each the country s nine departments which are also elected using closed party lists using the D Hondt method 1 Both the senate and the proportional part of the Chamber of Deputies is elected based on the vote for the presidential candidates while the deputies from the single member districts are elected using separate votes Party lists are required to alternate between men and women while candidates in single member districts are required to have an alternate of the opposite sex At least 50 of the single member deputies are required to be women 1 History of elections in Bolivia editIndirect elections 1825 50 edit Elections were conducted in the early Republican period using multiple levels of electors each of which would elect members of the next higher level culminating in the president 2 Direct elections with restricted suffrage 1839 and 1850 1938 edit In the elections of 1839 however the president was elected by a majority of all voters This system became the norm beginning in 1850 Voting requirements included a minimum property or income or service in one of the professions and forbid all those in domestic service from voting Indigenous peoples were effectively excluded from the franchise Expanding electorate 1938 1951 edit Under the Constitution of 1938 property restrictions on voting were removed however the vote was still restricted to those who were male literate and of age Elections were held in 1940 and 1951 and saw a dramatic expansion of the electorate Universal suffrage and interruptions in democracy 1952 79 edit Shortly after coming to power through the Bolivian Revolution of 1952 es the National Revolutionary Movement instituted universal suffrage ending literacy requirements and racial restrictions which had massively reduced the Bolivian electorate up to that time General elections were held in 1956 1960 and 1964 and purely legislative elections were held in 1958 and 1962 Democracy was interrupted in 1964 by Rene Barrientos Ortuno who proceeded to hold and win an election in 1966 and to convoke the Constituent Assembly of 1966 67 to rewrite the Constitution of Bolivia 3 Following Barrientos death in 1969 democracy was further interrupted by military rule until 1979 including the eight year dictatorship of Hugo Banzer Suarez Democratic transition and final dictatorship 1979 82 edit In a chaotic period of transition marked by numerous coups d etat three elections were held in 1978 1979 1980 Parliamentary majorities were not obtained in 1978 and 1979 and alliance building was interrupted by coups Lydia Gueiler an elected member of the National Congress assumed power constitutionally from November 1979 to mid 1980 The results of the 1980 elections were the basis for the post 1982 parliament and the 1982 85 government of Hernan Siles Zuazo Multiparty democracy 1982 present edit Elections have been held regularly in the democratic period that began in 1982 General elections were held in 1985 1989 1993 1997 2002 2005 and 2009 3 A Constituent Assembly was elected in 2006 The 1985 Organic Law of Municipalities restored local elections for mayor and created a legislative body the municipal council in each municipality 4 The first local elections were held in 1987 followed by further elections in 1989 1991 1993 1995 1999 2004 and 2010 Similarly departmental elections for Prefect began in 2006 and elections for Departmental Legislative Assemblies began in 2010 Following the passage of the 2009 Constitution the National Electoral Court was replaced in late 2010 by a fourth branch of government the Plurinational Electoral Organ whose highest body is the Supreme Electoral Court Latest elections edit2020 Bolivian general election edit Main article 2020 Bolivian general election On 18 October 2020 Bolivian voters elected Luis Arce leader of Evo Morales MAS IPSP as Bolivia s president with 55 of the vote in the first round Arce s main opponents Carlos Mesa and Luis Fernando Camacho received 29 and 14 of the vote respectively Arce took the office of president on 8 November 2020 2017 Bolivian judicial election edit Main article 2017 Bolivian judicial election 2021 Bolivian regional elections edit Main article 2021 Bolivian regional electionsOther elections and referendum edit2015 Autonomy referendum edit On September 20 2015 five western and central departments Cochabamba Chuquisaca La Paz Oruro and Potosi voted on whether to approve organic charters constitutions of autonomous governance as did three municipalities and two indigenous territories 5 Voters in all five departments rejected their charters of autonomy which were drafted by MAS IPSP led legislatures Department Yes votes No votes Blank Null Total ballots cast Eligible voters Turnout as of electorate Cochabamba 335 464 38 42 537 706 61 58 17 910 57 930 949 010 1 137 872 83 4 Chuquisaca 99 819 42 57 134 652 57 43 5 917 18 057 267 445 324 587 La Paz 425 605 31 94 906 759 68 06 30 159 88 885 1 026 228 Oruro 59 119 25 98 168 443 74 02 5 800 14 064 297 217 Potosi 93 705 31 92 199 823 68 08 8 278 21 546 323 352 408 131 79 2 Sources Referendo autonomico A computo final gano el No en cinco departamentos Agencia de Noticias Fides 2015 09 25 Retrieved 2016 03 13 2011 Special municipal election edit Main article 2011 Bolivian special municipal election A special election is due be held for the mayor of five cities where mayors have stepped down or been indicted In July 2011 the Supreme Electoral Tribunal formally convoked the elections for mayor in three cities Sucre Quillacollo and Pazna for December 18 2011 6 City Outgoing Mayor Party Notes Sucre Chuquisaca Jaime Barron PAIS Resigned in July 2010 under indictment for May 24 2008 violence Quillacollo Cochabamba Hector Cartagena UNE Punata Cochabamba Victor Balderrama Insurgente Martin Uchu Suspended under indictment for aggravated rape of a minor on August 10 2010 convicted September 2011 7 pledged to resign to allow new elections Pazna Oruro Victor Centeno MAS IPSP Resigned on 15 June 2010 under psychological pressure and regional divisions 8 Catacora La PazSee also editElectoral calendar Electoral systemNotes editReferences edit a b c Bolivia Ley del Regimen Electoral 30 de junio de 2010 Lexivox Retrieved 10 February 2015 Barragan R Rossana 2005 Ciudadania y elecciones convenciones y debates Regiones y poder constituyente en Bolivia Una historia de pactos y disputas Cuaderno de futuro PNUD pp 287 294 a b Cordero Carraffa Carlos Hugo February 2007 Historia Electoral de Bolivia 1952 2007 PDF Cuadernos de trabajo Corte Nacional Electoral p 27 Cordova Eduardo 2009 Cochabamba es el centro es la ausencia Impulsos estatales y sociales de la descentralizacion en Cochabamba 1994 2008 Decursos Revista de Ciencias Sociales XI 20 61 95 68 Referendo para Aprobacion de Estatutos Autonomicos y Cartas Organicas 2015 Tribunal Supremo Electoral Archived from the original on 2016 03 14 Convocan a comicios electorales en 3 municipios Pagina Siete 2011 07 22 Archived from the original on 2012 03 17 Retrieved 2011 07 22 Condenan con 25 anos de prision al Alcalde suspendido de Punata La Razon 2011 08 08 Retrieved 2011 08 08 permanent dead link En Quillacollo y Pazna habran nuevas elecciones para alcalde Archived 2011 09 11 at the Wayback Machine Bolivianpress com 16 June 2011 External links editAdam Carr s Election Archive Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Elections in Bolivia amp oldid 1142352411, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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