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Elections in South Africa

Elections in South Africa are held for the National Assembly, provincial legislatures and municipal councils. Elections follow a five-year cycle, with national and provincial elections held simultaneously and municipal elections held two years later. The electoral system is based on party-list proportional representation, which means that parties are represented in proportion to their electoral support. For municipal councils there is a mixed-member system in which wards elect individual councillors alongside those named from party lists.

In elections of the National Assembly, every South African citizen who is 18 or older may vote, including (since the 2014 election) those resident outside South Africa. In elections of a provincial legislature or municipal council, only those resident within the province or municipality may vote. All elections are conducted by the Electoral Commission of South Africa, which is an independent body established by the Constitution.

History edit

 
Coloured gathering in South Africa, with large banners demanding votes for all, 1954

Before Union edit

When the British took over the Cape, first in 1795 and then more permanently in 1806, they inherited a sprawling, thinly populated pastoral settlement that depended on the labour of slaves and a rural workforce of indigenous Khoikhoi whose condition was akin to serfdom. In 1806 the entire population of the colony consisted of fewer than 80,000 people: 26,768 whites, 1,200 free blacks (manumitted slaves), 29,861 slaves and 20,426 Khoikhoi.[1] From early on the British made a determined effort to remodel this society by introducing principles of freedom and equality before the law. In 1807 the British government ended the slave trade and, finally, in 1833 outlawed the practice of slavery throughout the Empire. [citation needed]

Under pressure from the humanitarian lobby in the UK, acting in concert with a local missionary campaign, the government abolished the Khoikhoi's serf-like status by the promulgation of Ordinance 50 of 1828.[2] According to the government's instructions, 'all Hottentots and other free persons of colour, lawfully residing within the said Colony, are and shall be, in the most full and ample manner, entitled to all and every the rights, privileges and benefits of the law, to which any other His Majesty's subjects, lawfully residing within the said Colony, are or can be entitled.'[3] This became known as the 'Hottentots' Magna Carta'. The equality of all people – black or white – appeared to be assured. As a result, when municipal boards were set up in the colony's towns and villages from 1836, any male resident who lived in a property with a yearly rent of not less than £10 could vote for his town board. From the very beginning, therefore, people of colour were able to participate in local elections.[4]

This principle of a non-racial franchise was to be entrenched when the Cape was granted representative government in 1853. Part of the reason, no doubt, lay in the desire to give propertied Khoikhoi a greater stake in the political system. In 1850 the Khoikhoi of the Kat River Settlement had risen in rebellion and, though the uprising was defeated, it did concentrate the minds of those colonial officials and politicians who were responsible for drawing up the constitution of 1853. As the Cape's Attorney General, William Porter, famously said: 'I would rather meet the Hottentot at the hustings voting for his representative than meet the Hottentot in the wilds with a gun on his shoulder.'[5] In terms of the constitution of 1853, any man who owned property worth at least £25 was entitled to vote for or stand in the Cape's Parliament. By 1886 Africans made up 43 per cent of the vote in six constituencies of the Eastern Cape, and were a real political force.[6] It was not long before white politicians began challenging the rights of Coloureds and Africans to vote. The passage of the Franchise and Ballot Act, which raised the property qualification from £25 to £75 in 1892, met with an angry response from African and Coloured voters.[7]

These developments were not without criticism or opposition. Indeed, the abolition of slavery and the promulgation of Ordinance 50, and the accompanying extension of rights to the black population, were deeply resented by the white Dutch farmers of the Cape as undermining their way of life. Starting in 1834, thousands of these Boers set out on one of the most defining events of white South African history – the Great Trek. The Dutch who moved away from the Cape did so in the hope of leaving British control and British ways of ordering society behind them. In the interior of southern Africa they would carve out independent states for themselves, the South African (or Transvaal) Republic and the Orange Free State, whose constitutions enshrined the principle of no equality between white and black in either church or state.

After the Second Anglo-Boer War, whites made peace with each other and in October 1909 came together at the National Convention. Held in Durban it brought together politicians from the Cape, Transvaal, Natal and the Orange River Colony, as well as Rhodesia. They aimed to draw up a constitution for the Union of South Africa, uniting the British possessions. The result was the South Africa Act.

Only white men were invited to consider the future of their country; women and all other racial groups were excluded. This was in some ways anomalous. After all, qualified black men had enjoyed the vote in the Cape since the 1850s and – as long as they had sufficient property, income and education – continued to do so. By 1909 there were 14,388 Coloured and 6,633 African voters in the Cape.[8] Between them they made up 14.8 per cent of the electorate. In Natal, too, African men had the right to vote, but it was so constrained by hurdles that it was almost theoretical. Not only did they have to prove they had property, but they also had to prove that they were 'civilised' and had been so for seven years. The Governor might then grant them the vote. Indians also had to overcome obstacles designed to prevent them from being enfranchised.[9] In the Transvaal and Orange Free State, only white men could vote.

The Cape argued that their non-racial franchise should be extended across the proposed Union. This was rejected by the Transvaal and Orange Free State. Finally, a compromise of sorts was arrived at, maintaining the Cape's existing voting system, without extending it to the rest of the country, but insisting that this compromise was entrenched in the constitution.[10] Africans and Coloured people would retain most of their voting rights in the Cape rights, but would not receive them in any other part of the Union.

African and Coloured politicians came together to resist these plans, and called on a former Cape Prime Minister, William Philip Schreiner, to lead a delegation to the UK to call for the Cape franchise to be implemented in the whole of South Africa. This he did, but the delegation was unsuccessful in its appeal, despite receiving considerable support from the infant Labour Party and other liberal British organisations.[11]

At the Union edit

The Union of South Africa was created on 31 May 1910 by the South Africa Act 1909, an act of the British Parliament. The House of Assembly (the lower house of the newly created Parliament of South Africa) and the provincial councils were elected by first-past-the-post voting in single-member electoral divisions. The franchise in these elections was initially the same as the franchise for the lower houses in the four colonies that had formed the Union, so there were different qualifications in different provinces.

In the Transvaal and the Orange Free State, the vote was limited by law to white men over the age of 21. In Natal the vote was limited to men over 21 who met property and literacy qualifications; in theory, this could include non-white men but in practice only very small numbers managed to qualify: in 1910 over 99% of the electorate was white. In the Cape Province the franchise was also limited to men over 21 who met property and literacy qualifications, and non-white men did qualify in significant numbers, making up approximately 15% of the electorate in 1910. The qualifications in the Cape and Natal also excluded a substantial number of poorer white men. Only white men could stand for election to the House of Assembly, even from the Cape constituencies. The franchise rights of non-white voters in the Cape (but not in Natal) were entrenched in the South Africa Act by a provision that they could only be reduced by an act of Parliament passed by a two-thirds majority of both houses of Parliament sitting in a joint session.

Enfranchisement of white women and poor whites edit

In 1930 the National Party government of J. B. M. Hertzog passed the Women's Enfranchisement Act, which extended the right to vote and the right to stand for election to all white women over the age of 21. In the following year the Franchise Laws Amendment Act lifted the property and literacy requirements for white male voters in the Cape and Natal, with the result that all white citizens over 21 were enfranchised. As the exclusion of women and the literacy and property qualifications continued to apply to non-white voters, these acts had the effect of diluting their electoral power by more than doubling the size of the white electorate.

At the next following general election in 1933, Leila Reitz was elected as the first female MP, representing Parktown for the South African Party.

Segregation of black voters edit

In 1936 the Hertzog government enacted the Representation of Natives Act, which removed black voters from the common voters' rolls and placed them on separate "native voters' rolls". The act was passed by the required two-thirds majority in a joint session. Black voters could no longer vote in ordinary elections for the House of Assembly or the Cape Provincial Council; instead they would separately elect three members of the assembly and two members of the council. Four senators would also be indirectly elected by chiefs, tribal councils and local councils for "native areas". The Representation of Natives Act was repealed in 1959 and consequently the seats of the "native representative members" were abolished in 1960. From this point, the only political representation of black South Africans was in the Bantustan legislatures.

Segregation of coloured voters edit

After coming to power in 1948 the National Party engaged in a policy of removing coloured voters similarly to black voters. In 1951 Parliament passed the Separate Representation of Voters Act, which removed coloured voters from the common voters roll and instead allowed them to separately elect four MPs. The act was challenged on the basis that it had not been passed with a two-thirds majority in a joint sitting, as required by the South Africa Act, and in 1952 the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court declared it to be invalid.

A subsequent attempt by the government to circumvent the Supreme Court by creating a High Court of Parliament failed. In the election of 1953, coloured voters in the Cape cast their ballots in the same constituencies as white voters. In 1955 the government introduced a new act which reconstituted the Senate, providing the two-thirds majority necessary to validate the Separate Representation of Voters Act.

This separate representation of coloured voters in the House of Assembly was ended in 1970. Instead, all coloured adults were given the right to vote for the Coloured Persons' Representative Council, which had limited legislative powers and was permanently dissolved in 1980.

Republic referendum edit

In 1960 a whites-only referendum was held to decide whether South Africa should become a republic. No changes were made to the franchise with the Republic's emergence in 1961. However, with the policy of establishing Bantustans, the remaining black representation in the Senate was completely removed.

Tricameral Parliament edit

In 1983 a referendum on constitutional reform was held, as a result of which the Tricameral Parliament was formed, consisting of three separate houses to represent white, coloured and Indian South Africans. The existing House of Assembly was retained with its white electorate, while two new houses were created: the House of Representatives elected by coloured voters, and the House of Delegates elected by Indian voters. Many Indians and Coloureds rejected this powerless government as it was a strategy by the government to divide and rule over the nonwhite vote. Elections to these houses were conducted on the basis of first-past-the-post voting in single-member electoral divisions.

End of Apartheid edit

During the negotiations to end apartheid the Interim Constitution was enacted. It introduced universal suffrage on a non-racial basis, and replaced first-past-the-post voting with party-list proportional representation. South Africans of all races took part in the first fully democratic elections in 1994. "Universal adult suffrage, a national common voters roll, regular elections and a multi-party system of democratic government" are founding principles of the 1996 Constitution of South Africa, and the right of all citizens to vote is included in the Bill of Rights.

In the post-apartheid era, the Constitutional Court has struck down two attempts by the government to deny the vote to convicted criminals in prison. The court has also ruled that South Africans living outside the country must be allowed to vote. In 2020 in the New Nation Movement case the court ruled that the pure party-list electoral system is unconstitutional because it prevents individuals from standing as candidates without joining a political party; Parliament was given two years to adopt a new electoral system.

Voting districts edit

Each voter in South Africa is assigned to a voting district based on the voter's residence at the time that they registered to vote.[12] Each voting district is uniquely associated with a single voting station.[12] Voters who are outside their registered district on election day may vote at another polling station, but additional paperwork is required.[13] Voting districts have no significance outside of the election process, and district boundaries are drawn for purposes of efficiently planning and administering elections. Urban voting districts are drawn to have a population of around 3,000 within a radius of 7.5 kilometres (4.7 mi), and rural voting districts are drawn to have a population of around 1,200 within a radius of 10 kilometres (6.2 mi).

As of 2019, there were 22,933 voting districts nationwide.[14] The district boundaries are set by the Electoral Commission's Delimitation Directorate, and are reviewed and adjusted before each election.[12]

List of elections edit

Since 1910, parliamentary general elections have been held on the following dates.

Last election results edit

2019 general election edit

 
PartyVotes%+/–Seats+/–
African National Congress10,026,47557.50–4.65230–19
Democratic Alliance3,622,53120.77–1.3684–5
Economic Freedom Fighters1,882,48010.80+4.4544+19
Inkatha Freedom Party588,8393.38+0.9814+4
Freedom Front Plus414,8642.38+1.4810+6
African Christian Democratic Party146,2620.84+0.274+1
United Democratic Movement78,0300.45–0.552–2
African Transformation Movement76,8300.44New2New
Good70,4080.40New2New
National Freedom Party61,2200.35–1.222–4
African Independent Congress48,1070.28–0.252–1
Congress of the People47,4610.27–0.402–1
Pan Africanist Congress32,6770.19–0.0210
Al Jama-ah31,4680.18+0.041+1
African Security Congress26,2620.15New0New
Socialist Revolutionary Workers Party24,4390.14New0New
Black First Land First19,7960.11New0New
African People's Convention19,5930.11–0.060–1
Afrikan Alliance of Social Democrats18,8340.11New0New
Capitalist Party of South Africa15,9150.09New0New
Alliance for Transformation for All14,2660.08New0New
Agang South Africa13,8560.08–0.200–2
Azanian People's Organisation12,8230.07–0.0400
Independent Civic Organisation12,3860.07–0.0100
Minority Front11,9610.07–0.0500
Democratic Liberal Congress10,6600.06New0New
Better Residents Association9,1790.05–0.0300
Forum for Service Delivery7,5640.04New0New
Front National7,1440.04+0.0100
Land Party7,0740.04New0New
African Covenant7,0190.04New0New
Patriotic Alliance6,6600.04–0.0300
African Democratic Change6,4990.04New0New
Economic Emancipation Forum6,3210.04New0New
Women Forward6,1080.04New0New
Christian Political Movement4,9800.03New0New
African Content Movement4,8410.03New0New
International Revelation Congress4,2470.02New0New
National People's Front4,0190.02New0New
African Renaissance Unity Party3,8600.02New0New
African Congress of Democrats3,7680.02New0New
South African National Congress of Traditional Authorities3,7140.02New0New
Compatriots of South Africa3,4060.02New0New
People's Revolutionary Movement2,8440.02New0New
Power of Africans Unity2,6850.02New0New
Free Democrats2,5800.01New0New
South African Maintenance and Estate Beneficiaries Association2,4450.01New0New
National People's Ambassadors1,9790.01New0New
Total17,437,379100.004000
Valid votes17,437,37998.67
Invalid/blank votes235,4721.33
Total votes17,672,851100.00
Registered voters/turnout26,756,64966.05
Source: Electoral Commission of South Africa

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Martin Legassick, The struggle for the Eastern Cape, 1800 – 1854, KMM Review Publishing Company, Johannesburg, 2010, p. 5
  2. ^ Report of Commission of Inquiry regarding Cape Coloured Population of the Union, U.G. 54 – 1937, Government Printer, Pretoria, 1937, p. 212, para. 1034
  3. ^ MacAulay, Zachary (July 1829). "Natives of South Africa". Anti-Slavery Monthly Reporter. No. 50. Retrieved 11 May 2021.
  4. ^ Report of Commission of Inquiry regarding Cape Coloured Population of the Union, U.G. 54 – 1937, Government Printer, Pretoria, 1937, p.213, para 1037
  5. ^ Stanley Trapido, The friends of the natives: merchants, peasants and the political and ideological structure of liberalism in the Cape, 1854-1910, in Shula Marks and Anthony Atmore (eds.), Economy and society in pre-industrial South Africa, Longman, London, 1980, p. 262
  6. ^ Andre Odendaal, The Founders: The Origins of the ANC and the Struggle for Democracy in South Africa, Jacana, Auckland Park, 2012, p.96
  7. ^ Richard van der Ross, A Political and Social History of the Cape Coloured People, 1880 – 1970, Thesis submitted to the University of Cape Town, 1973, UCT Special Collections, p. 11
  8. ^ L. M. Thompson, The Unification of South Africa, 1902 – 1910, Oxford at the Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1960, p. 110
  9. ^ L. M. Thompson, The Unification of South Africa, 1902 – 1910, Oxford at the Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1960, p. 111
  10. ^ National Archive, Secret Despatch from Selborne to Crewe, 24 October 1908, PRO CO 879/106/8
  11. ^ Martin Plaut, Promise and Despair, the First Struggle for a Non-Racial South Africa, Jacana Press, 2016
  12. ^ a b c Electoral Commission of South Africa. "About voting districts and stations". Retrieved 24 February 2020. Each voting district is serviced by one voting station only.
  13. ^ "Can you vote at any voting station? Yes, you can, but…". 7 May 2019. Retrieved 24 February 2020.
  14. ^ "Publication of the Voting District including mobile stations". SABC News. 7 March 2019. Retrieved 24 February 2020.

External links edit

  • . Archived from the original on 5 March 2006. Retrieved 4 March 2006.
  • Adam Carr's Election Archive
  • African Elections Database
  • Democratic Development in South Africa 3 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine from the Dean Peter Krogh Foreign Affairs Digital Archives 12 January 2012 at the Wayback Machine

elections, south, africa, held, national, assembly, provincial, legislatures, municipal, councils, elections, follow, five, year, cycle, with, national, provincial, elections, held, simultaneously, municipal, elections, held, years, later, electoral, system, b. Elections in South Africa are held for the National Assembly provincial legislatures and municipal councils Elections follow a five year cycle with national and provincial elections held simultaneously and municipal elections held two years later The electoral system is based on party list proportional representation which means that parties are represented in proportion to their electoral support For municipal councils there is a mixed member system in which wards elect individual councillors alongside those named from party lists In elections of the National Assembly every South African citizen who is 18 or older may vote including since the 2014 election those resident outside South Africa In elections of a provincial legislature or municipal council only those resident within the province or municipality may vote All elections are conducted by the Electoral Commission of South Africa which is an independent body established by the Constitution Contents 1 History 1 1 Before Union 1 2 At the Union 1 3 Enfranchisement of white women and poor whites 1 4 Segregation of black voters 1 5 Segregation of coloured voters 1 6 Republic referendum 1 7 Tricameral Parliament 1 8 End of Apartheid 2 Voting districts 3 List of elections 4 Last election results 4 1 2019 general election 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksHistory edit nbsp Coloured gathering in South Africa with large banners demanding votes for all 1954 Before Union edit When the British took over the Cape first in 1795 and then more permanently in 1806 they inherited a sprawling thinly populated pastoral settlement that depended on the labour of slaves and a rural workforce of indigenous Khoikhoi whose condition was akin to serfdom In 1806 the entire population of the colony consisted of fewer than 80 000 people 26 768 whites 1 200 free blacks manumitted slaves 29 861 slaves and 20 426 Khoikhoi 1 From early on the British made a determined effort to remodel this society by introducing principles of freedom and equality before the law In 1807 the British government ended the slave trade and finally in 1833 outlawed the practice of slavery throughout the Empire citation needed Under pressure from the humanitarian lobby in the UK acting in concert with a local missionary campaign the government abolished the Khoikhoi s serf like status by the promulgation of Ordinance 50 of 1828 2 According to the government s instructions all Hottentots and other free persons of colour lawfully residing within the said Colony are and shall be in the most full and ample manner entitled to all and every the rights privileges and benefits of the law to which any other His Majesty s subjects lawfully residing within the said Colony are or can be entitled 3 This became known as the Hottentots Magna Carta The equality of all people black or white appeared to be assured As a result when municipal boards were set up in the colony s towns and villages from 1836 any male resident who lived in a property with a yearly rent of not less than 10 could vote for his town board From the very beginning therefore people of colour were able to participate in local elections 4 This principle of a non racial franchise was to be entrenched when the Cape was granted representative government in 1853 Part of the reason no doubt lay in the desire to give propertied Khoikhoi a greater stake in the political system In 1850 the Khoikhoi of the Kat River Settlement had risen in rebellion and though the uprising was defeated it did concentrate the minds of those colonial officials and politicians who were responsible for drawing up the constitution of 1853 As the Cape s Attorney General William Porter famously said I would rather meet the Hottentot at the hustings voting for his representative than meet the Hottentot in the wilds with a gun on his shoulder 5 In terms of the constitution of 1853 any man who owned property worth at least 25 was entitled to vote for or stand in the Cape s Parliament By 1886 Africans made up 43 per cent of the vote in six constituencies of the Eastern Cape and were a real political force 6 It was not long before white politicians began challenging the rights of Coloureds and Africans to vote The passage of the Franchise and Ballot Act which raised the property qualification from 25 to 75 in 1892 met with an angry response from African and Coloured voters 7 These developments were not without criticism or opposition Indeed the abolition of slavery and the promulgation of Ordinance 50 and the accompanying extension of rights to the black population were deeply resented by the white Dutch farmers of the Cape as undermining their way of life Starting in 1834 thousands of these Boers set out on one of the most defining events of white South African history the Great Trek The Dutch who moved away from the Cape did so in the hope of leaving British control and British ways of ordering society behind them In the interior of southern Africa they would carve out independent states for themselves the South African or Transvaal Republic and the Orange Free State whose constitutions enshrined the principle of no equality between white and black in either church or state After the Second Anglo Boer War whites made peace with each other and in October 1909 came together at the National Convention Held in Durban it brought together politicians from the Cape Transvaal Natal and the Orange River Colony as well as Rhodesia They aimed to draw up a constitution for the Union of South Africa uniting the British possessions The result was the South Africa Act Only white men were invited to consider the future of their country women and all other racial groups were excluded This was in some ways anomalous After all qualified black men had enjoyed the vote in the Cape since the 1850s and as long as they had sufficient property income and education continued to do so By 1909 there were 14 388 Coloured and 6 633 African voters in the Cape 8 Between them they made up 14 8 per cent of the electorate In Natal too African men had the right to vote but it was so constrained by hurdles that it was almost theoretical Not only did they have to prove they had property but they also had to prove that they were civilised and had been so for seven years The Governor might then grant them the vote Indians also had to overcome obstacles designed to prevent them from being enfranchised 9 In the Transvaal and Orange Free State only white men could vote The Cape argued that their non racial franchise should be extended across the proposed Union This was rejected by the Transvaal and Orange Free State Finally a compromise of sorts was arrived at maintaining the Cape s existing voting system without extending it to the rest of the country but insisting that this compromise was entrenched in the constitution 10 Africans and Coloured people would retain most of their voting rights in the Cape rights but would not receive them in any other part of the Union African and Coloured politicians came together to resist these plans and called on a former Cape Prime Minister William Philip Schreiner to lead a delegation to the UK to call for the Cape franchise to be implemented in the whole of South Africa This he did but the delegation was unsuccessful in its appeal despite receiving considerable support from the infant Labour Party and other liberal British organisations 11 At the Union edit The Union of South Africa was created on 31 May 1910 by the South Africa Act 1909 an act of the British Parliament The House of Assembly the lower house of the newly created Parliament of South Africa and the provincial councils were elected by first past the post voting in single member electoral divisions The franchise in these elections was initially the same as the franchise for the lower houses in the four colonies that had formed the Union so there were different qualifications in different provinces In the Transvaal and the Orange Free State the vote was limited by law to white men over the age of 21 In Natal the vote was limited to men over 21 who met property and literacy qualifications in theory this could include non white men but in practice only very small numbers managed to qualify in 1910 over 99 of the electorate was white In the Cape Province the franchise was also limited to men over 21 who met property and literacy qualifications and non white men did qualify in significant numbers making up approximately 15 of the electorate in 1910 The qualifications in the Cape and Natal also excluded a substantial number of poorer white men Only white men could stand for election to the House of Assembly even from the Cape constituencies The franchise rights of non white voters in the Cape but not in Natal were entrenched in the South Africa Act by a provision that they could only be reduced by an act of Parliament passed by a two thirds majority of both houses of Parliament sitting in a joint session Enfranchisement of white women and poor whites edit In 1930 the National Party government of J B M Hertzog passed the Women s Enfranchisement Act which extended the right to vote and the right to stand for election to all white women over the age of 21 In the following year the Franchise Laws Amendment Act lifted the property and literacy requirements for white male voters in the Cape and Natal with the result that all white citizens over 21 were enfranchised As the exclusion of women and the literacy and property qualifications continued to apply to non white voters these acts had the effect of diluting their electoral power by more than doubling the size of the white electorate At the next following general election in 1933 Leila Reitz was elected as the first female MP representing Parktown for the South African Party Segregation of black voters edit In 1936 the Hertzog government enacted the Representation of Natives Act which removed black voters from the common voters rolls and placed them on separate native voters rolls The act was passed by the required two thirds majority in a joint session Black voters could no longer vote in ordinary elections for the House of Assembly or the Cape Provincial Council instead they would separately elect three members of the assembly and two members of the council Four senators would also be indirectly elected by chiefs tribal councils and local councils for native areas The Representation of Natives Act was repealed in 1959 and consequently the seats of the native representative members were abolished in 1960 From this point the only political representation of black South Africans was in the Bantustan legislatures Segregation of coloured voters edit Main article Coloured vote constitutional crisis After coming to power in 1948 the National Party engaged in a policy of removing coloured voters similarly to black voters In 1951 Parliament passed the Separate Representation of Voters Act which removed coloured voters from the common voters roll and instead allowed them to separately elect four MPs The act was challenged on the basis that it had not been passed with a two thirds majority in a joint sitting as required by the South Africa Act and in 1952 the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court declared it to be invalid A subsequent attempt by the government to circumvent the Supreme Court by creating a High Court of Parliament failed In the election of 1953 coloured voters in the Cape cast their ballots in the same constituencies as white voters In 1955 the government introduced a new act which reconstituted the Senate providing the two thirds majority necessary to validate the Separate Representation of Voters Act This separate representation of coloured voters in the House of Assembly was ended in 1970 Instead all coloured adults were given the right to vote for the Coloured Persons Representative Council which had limited legislative powers and was permanently dissolved in 1980 Republic referendum edit In 1960 a whites only referendum was held to decide whether South Africa should become a republic No changes were made to the franchise with the Republic s emergence in 1961 However with the policy of establishing Bantustans the remaining black representation in the Senate was completely removed Tricameral Parliament edit In 1983 a referendum on constitutional reform was held as a result of which the Tricameral Parliament was formed consisting of three separate houses to represent white coloured and Indian South Africans The existing House of Assembly was retained with its white electorate while two new houses were created the House of Representatives elected by coloured voters and the House of Delegates elected by Indian voters Many Indians and Coloureds rejected this powerless government as it was a strategy by the government to divide and rule over the nonwhite vote Elections to these houses were conducted on the basis of first past the post voting in single member electoral divisions End of Apartheid edit During the negotiations to end apartheid the Interim Constitution was enacted It introduced universal suffrage on a non racial basis and replaced first past the post voting with party list proportional representation South Africans of all races took part in the first fully democratic elections in 1994 Universal adult suffrage a national common voters roll regular elections and a multi party system of democratic government are founding principles of the 1996 Constitution of South Africa and the right of all citizens to vote is included in the Bill of Rights In the post apartheid era the Constitutional Court has struck down two attempts by the government to deny the vote to convicted criminals in prison The court has also ruled that South Africans living outside the country must be allowed to vote In 2020 in the New Nation Movement case the court ruled that the pure party list electoral system is unconstitutional because it prevents individuals from standing as candidates without joining a political party Parliament was given two years to adopt a new electoral system Voting districts editEach voter in South Africa is assigned to a voting district based on the voter s residence at the time that they registered to vote 12 Each voting district is uniquely associated with a single voting station 12 Voters who are outside their registered district on election day may vote at another polling station but additional paperwork is required 13 Voting districts have no significance outside of the election process and district boundaries are drawn for purposes of efficiently planning and administering elections Urban voting districts are drawn to have a population of around 3 000 within a radius of 7 5 kilometres 4 7 mi and rural voting districts are drawn to have a population of around 1 200 within a radius of 10 kilometres 6 2 mi As of 2019 there were 22 933 voting districts nationwide 14 The district boundaries are set by the Electoral Commission s Delimitation Directorate and are reviewed and adjusted before each election 12 List of elections editMain article List of elections in South Africa Since 1910 parliamentary general elections have been held on the following dates 15 September 1910 20 October 1915 10 March 1920 8 February 1921 19 June 1924 12 June 1929 17 May 1933 18 May 1938 7 July 1943 26 May 1948 15 April 1953 16 April 1958 18 October 1961 30 March 1966 22 April 1970 24 April 1974 30 November 1977 29 April 1981 22 and 28 August 1984 House of Representatives and House of Delegates 6 May 1987 House of Assembly 6 September 1989 all three houses 26 29 April 1994 2 June 1999 14 April 2004 22 April 2009 7 May 2014 8 May 2019Last election results edit2019 general election edit Main article 2019 South African general election nbsp PartyVotes Seats African National Congress10 026 47557 50 4 65230 19Democratic Alliance3 622 53120 77 1 3684 5Economic Freedom Fighters1 882 48010 80 4 4544 19Inkatha Freedom Party588 8393 38 0 9814 4Freedom Front Plus414 8642 38 1 4810 6African Christian Democratic Party146 2620 84 0 274 1United Democratic Movement78 0300 45 0 552 2African Transformation Movement76 8300 44New2NewGood70 4080 40New2NewNational Freedom Party61 2200 35 1 222 4African Independent Congress48 1070 28 0 252 1Congress of the People47 4610 27 0 402 1Pan Africanist Congress32 6770 19 0 0210Al Jama ah31 4680 18 0 041 1African Security Congress26 2620 15New0NewSocialist Revolutionary Workers Party24 4390 14New0NewBlack First Land First19 7960 11New0NewAfrican People s Convention19 5930 11 0 060 1Afrikan Alliance of Social Democrats18 8340 11New0NewCapitalist Party of South Africa15 9150 09New0NewAlliance for Transformation for All14 2660 08New0NewAgang South Africa13 8560 08 0 200 2Azanian People s Organisation12 8230 07 0 0400Independent Civic Organisation12 3860 07 0 0100Minority Front11 9610 07 0 0500Democratic Liberal Congress10 6600 06New0NewBetter Residents Association9 1790 05 0 0300Forum for Service Delivery7 5640 04New0NewFront National7 1440 04 0 0100Land Party7 0740 04New0NewAfrican Covenant7 0190 04New0NewPatriotic Alliance6 6600 04 0 0300African Democratic Change6 4990 04New0NewEconomic Emancipation Forum6 3210 04New0NewWomen Forward6 1080 04New0NewChristian Political Movement4 9800 03New0NewAfrican Content Movement4 8410 03New0NewInternational Revelation Congress4 2470 02New0NewNational People s Front4 0190 02New0NewAfrican Renaissance Unity Party3 8600 02New0NewAfrican Congress of Democrats3 7680 02New0NewSouth African National Congress of Traditional Authorities3 7140 02New0NewCompatriots of South Africa3 4060 02New0NewPeople s Revolutionary Movement2 8440 02New0NewPower of Africans Unity2 6850 02New0NewFree Democrats2 5800 01New0NewSouth African Maintenance and Estate Beneficiaries Association2 4450 01New0NewNational People s Ambassadors1 9790 01New0NewTotal17 437 379100 00 4000Valid votes17 437 37998 67Invalid blank votes235 4721 33Total votes17 672 851100 00Registered voters turnout26 756 64966 05Source Electoral Commission of South AfricaSee also editElectoral calendar Electoral systemReferences edit Martin Legassick The struggle for the Eastern Cape 1800 1854 KMM Review Publishing Company Johannesburg 2010 p 5 Report of Commission of Inquiry regarding Cape Coloured Population of the Union U G 54 1937 Government Printer Pretoria 1937 p 212 para 1034 MacAulay Zachary July 1829 Natives of South Africa Anti Slavery Monthly Reporter No 50 Retrieved 11 May 2021 Report of Commission of Inquiry regarding Cape Coloured Population of the Union U G 54 1937 Government Printer Pretoria 1937 p 213 para 1037 Stanley Trapido The friends of the natives merchants peasants and the political and ideological structure of liberalism in the Cape 1854 1910 in Shula Marks and Anthony Atmore eds Economy and society in pre industrial South Africa Longman London 1980 p 262 Andre Odendaal The Founders The Origins of the ANC and the Struggle for Democracy in South Africa Jacana Auckland Park 2012 p 96 Richard van der Ross A Political and Social History of the Cape Coloured People 1880 1970 Thesis submitted to the University of Cape Town 1973 UCT Special Collections p 11 L M Thompson The Unification of South Africa 1902 1910 Oxford at the Clarendon Press Oxford 1960 p 110 L M Thompson The Unification of South Africa 1902 1910 Oxford at the Clarendon Press Oxford 1960 p 111 National Archive Secret Despatch from Selborne to Crewe 24 October 1908 PRO CO 879 106 8 Martin Plaut Promise and Despair the First Struggle for a Non Racial South Africa Jacana Press 2016 a b c Electoral Commission of South Africa About voting districts and stations Retrieved 24 February 2020 Each voting district is serviced by one voting station only Can you vote at any voting station Yes you can but 7 May 2019 Retrieved 24 February 2020 Publication of the Voting District including mobile stations SABC News 7 March 2019 Retrieved 24 February 2020 External links edit Women s suffrage Archived from the original on 5 March 2006 Retrieved 4 March 2006 Adam Carr s Election Archive African Elections Database Democratic Development in South Africa Archived 3 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine from the Dean Peter Krogh Foreign Affairs Digital Archives Archived 12 January 2012 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Elections in South Africa amp oldid 1211223306, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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