...

Logo Yotel Air CDG
in partnership with
Logo Nextory

Senegal parliamentary elections: Polls open, over 7 million expected to vote

• Nov 22, 2024, 2:29 PM
4 min de lecture
1

Senegalese are voting on Sunday (Nov. 17) in a key legislative election that's set to determine if the country's newly-elected president can carry out ambitious reforms.

Voters in Senegal are choosing today 165 lawmakers in the nation's assembly, where the party of President Bassirou Diomaye Faye currently does not hold a majority.

Parties have fielded 41 candidate lists and four major coalitions dominate the race. Former President Macky Sall leads the Takku Wallu opposition platform.

Faye, who was elected in March on an anti-establishment platform, said that has blocked him from executing the reforms he pledged during his campaign, including fighting corruption, reviewing fishing permits for foreign companies, and securing a bigger share from the country’s natural resources for the population.

His prime minister Ousmane Sonko did not present in the assembly where the opposition threatened a vote of no confidence.

Politicians wrapped up a tense electoral campaign on Friday (Nov. 15). The campaign was marked by sporadic clashes between different party supporters. Clashes erupted between supporters in central Senegal in recent weeks and the headquarters of an opposition party were set on fire in the capital Dakar, the ministry of the interior said Monday (Nov. 11).

On Tuesday (Nov. 12), Ousmane Sonko, the country’s prime minister and a popular opposition figure who helped catapult Faye to victory, denounced attacks against supporters of his party PASTEF in Dakar and other cities.

“May each patriot they have attacked and injured, be proportionally avenged. We will exercise our legitimate right to respond,” he wrote on X, before back-pedalling and asking his supporters to remain peaceful in a speech later that day.

Last month Sonko's vehicle was attacked with stones as clashes broke out between his supporters and unidentified attackers while he was campaigning in Koungueul, in the center of the country. The leader of an allied party, former minister Malick Gackou, had his arm broken in the incident, according to local media.

In September, president Faye dissolved the opposition-led parliament, paving the way for a snap legislative election.

Senegalese queued outside polling stations on Sunday as polls opened for a key legislative election that's set to determine if the country's newly-elected president can carry out ambitious reforms.

More than 7 million registered voters in the West African country are choosing 165 lawmakers in the national assembly, where the party of President Bassirou Diomaye Faye currently does not hold a majority.

Parties have fielded 41 candidate lists and four major coalitions dominate the race.

Faye, who was elected in March on an anti-establishment platform, says he has been blocked him from executing the reforms he pledged during his campaign, including reviewing fishing permits for foreign companies.

His prime minister Ousmane Sonko did not present his policy speech in Parliament where the opposition threatened a vote of no confidence.

Faye’s political party, PASTEF, needs at least 83 seats in order to gain a majority .

The first provisional results are expected by Monday.

morning, but the final count will only be published later during the week.

A record 38 French parties are fielding candidate lists for the European parliamentary elections this year, some of them established political figures and...

Former President Macky Sall leads the Takku Wallu opposition platform.

Faye, who was elected in March on an anti-establishment platform, says that has blocked him from executing the reforms he pledged during his campaign, including fighting corruption, reviewing fishing permits for foreign companies and securing a bigger share from the country’s natural resources for the population.

In September, he dissolved the opposition-led parliament, paving the way for a snap legislative election.

His party is facing the Takku Wallu opposition platform led by former President Macky Sall, alongside 39 other registered parties and coalitions.

Polls will close at 6 p.m (1800 GMT).

The first provisional results are expected to be known by Monday morning, but the final count will only be published later during the week.

Faye’s political party, PASTEF, needs at least 83 seats in order to gain a majority in the assembly.

Analysts say it has a high chance of securing that, given its popularity and Faye's margin of victory in the March presidential election.


Yesterday

EU recalls its ambassador from Niger as relations deteriorate
• 3:54 PM
1 min
The European Union (EU) has recalled its ambassador from Niamey, Niger's capital, for consultations in Brussels following tensions with the country's transitional authorities regarding EU humanitarian aid for flood victims in the West African nation.
Read the article
Kendrick Lamar surprises with new album 'GNX'
• 2:40 PM
1 min
Kendrick Lamar gave music listeners an early holiday present Friday with the surprise drop of a new album.
Read the article
Haitians react to comments by President Emmanuel Macron caught on camera
• 11:57 AM
2 min
Haitians reacted Friday with indignation to comments made by French President Emmanuel Macron recorded at the G20 summit in Brazil earlier this week.
Read the article
Tanzania: Opposition leader Freeman Mbowe released on bail after arrest
• 9:42 AM
2 min
Freeman Mbowe, the leader of Tanzania's main opposition party, has been released on bail, his party announced on Saturday. He was arrested the previous day, just days before the upcoming local elections.
Read the article
More aid workers have been killed in 2024 than in any other year, UN says
• 9:04 AM
2 min
More aid workers, health care staffers, delivery personnel and other humanitarians have been killed in 2024 than in any other single year, the United Nations reported Friday.
Read the article
COP29 summit: Anger at ‘meagre’ figure for climate cash
• 7:41 AM
2 min
A new draft of a deal on cash to curb and adapt to climate change released Friday at the United Nations climate summit pledged $250 billion annually by 2035 from wealthy countries to poorer ones. The amount pleases the countries who will be paying, but no
Read the article