2006 Haitian general election

2006 Haitian general election

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Presidential election
Registered3,533,430
 
Nominee René Préval Leslie Manigat
Party Lespwa RPND
Popular vote 992,796 240,306
Percentage 51.21% 12.40%

 
Nominee Charles-Henri Baker Jean Chavannes Jeune
Party Respect UNCRH
Popular vote 159,683 108,283
Percentage 8.24% 5.59%

President before election

Boniface Alexandre
Independent

Elected President

René Préval
Lespwa

General elections were held in Haiti on 7 February 2006 to elect the replacements for the interim government of Gérard Latortue, which had been put in place after the 2004 Haiti rebellion. The elections were delayed four times, having originally been scheduled for October and November 2005. Voters elected a president, all 99 seats in the Chamber of Deputies of Haiti and all 30 seats in the Senate of Haiti.[1] Voter turnout was around 60%.[1] Run-off elections for the Chamber of Deputies of Haiti were held on 21 April, with around 28% turnout.[1]

According to official statistics, René Préval of the Lespwa coalition led the count for President with 48.8% of the vote, less than the 50% needed to be declared elected on the first round. Préval spoke of fraud, and voting bags and marked ballots found in a garbage dump triggered street protests by his supporters.[1] The United Nations Mission in Haiti spoke of an "apparent grave breach of the electoral process".[1] On 16 February, following meetings between the electoral council and the interim government, it was agreed that blank ballots would be excluded from the percentage calculations, resulting in a total vote for Preval of 51.1%. A second round of voting for president was thus avoided.[1][2]

  1. ^ a b c d e f Inter-Parliamentary Union, Haiti: Chambre des Députés (Chamber of Deputies)
  2. ^ "Aljazeera.Net - Preval declared winner in Haiti polls". Archived from the original on 2006-02-18. Retrieved 2006-02-16. [1]