Home LEAD Senegal signs off on ruling party’s parliament landslide

Senegal signs off on ruling party’s parliament landslide

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(FILES) Senegalese opposition presidential candidate Bassirou Diomaye Faye gestures as he acknowledges the crowd of supporters gathering at the Caroline Faye Stadium in Mbour, on March 22, 2024 for the closing rally of the presidential campaign. Senegal's presidential candidates were set to make their final pitches to voters on March 22, 2024, marking the end of a rushed campaign for what is considered an unprecedented election after weeks of political crisis. - Donald Trump's victory in the US presidential election, the continuing war in the Middle East or the Paris Olympics... are among the twelve events that marked the year 2024. (Photo by MARCO LONGARI / AFP)

Dakar, Senegal – (AFP) – Senegal’s Constitutional Council confirmed Wednesday the governing party’s win in parliamentary elections, giving it the majority needed to implement its pan-Africanist programme.

The final results give the Pastef party 130 seats out of 165 in parliament, one of the largest majorities ever won by a single party in the west African nation.

Pastef’s Bassirou Diomaye Faye swept to the presidency in March pledging a shake-up in Senegal, which is facing soaring unemployment and three years of economic and political crisis.

But an opposition-dominated parliament hampered his efforts to implement leftist policies, and Faye dissolved the assembly as soon as he was constitutionally allowed.

The Council’s final results serve as vindication for the campaign of Prime Minister Ousmane Sonko, with the former firebrand opposition leader criss-crossing the country to rally support for Pastef’s platform.

They also confirm the defeat of the opposition, with coalitions headed by former president Macky Sall and his protege Amadou Ba winning just 16 and seven seats respectively.

Meanwhile the movement of Dakar mayor Barthelemy Dias, whose fiery exchanges with Sonko caught the eye on the campaign trail, gained three seats in the legislature.

Independent Tahirou Sarr also won a seat after a campaign heavy on nationalist rhetoric and attacks on Senegal’s Guinean and Lebanese communities.

Other governments have won stronger majorities than Pastef, but those came via coalitions rather than a single party.

In 1988, Senegal’s Socialist Party won 103 out of 120 seats under then-president Abdou Diouf.

© Agence France-Presse

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