Liberia: 2017 General Elections
This blogpost will be updated regularly (and reposted) to reflect evolving electoral reality in Liberia.
Liberian electorate will on October 10 go to the polls to elect a new president and 73 representatives for a six-year term. Final results will be announced 15 days later on October 25, according to Liberia’s National Elections Commission (NEC) election calendar.
How significant is the 2017 general election?
The 2017 general election is historically important for a number of reasons:
Incumbent President Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf is constitutionally unqualified to seek a third-term and she shows no sign of reneging on her promise to step down in January 2018;
The last time a sort of democratic transition took place was in 1944, which makes the October 10 election the country most significant and consequential election in over 70 years;
And although President Johnson-Sirleaf is not on the ballot (her vice is), the October 10 election could be a referendum on her party’s 12 years of governance.
Will the election commission deliver a free, fair and credible election?
The current commission head by Chairman Jerome G. Korkoya has successful hosted a number of free, fair and credible by-elections and a Special Senatorial Election, despite (of course!) technical and financial constraints.
But of recent Chairman Korkoya has been mired in a legal controversy over his purported U.S. citizenship, which is incompatible with Liberia’s immigration and naturalization laws.
Nonetheless, the National Election Commission (NEC) is on course with the implementation of the 2017 election calendar.
Will the National Election Commission enforce the Code of Conduct?
Liberia’s 1986 Constitution calls for a Code of Conduct (COC) for public officials and employees of government. But, due in large part to the country’s intermittent 14 years of civil war, this constitutional mandate was not enacted until 2014.
By 2015, however, the constitutionality of the COC - specifically the controversial Part V, Sections 5.1 and 5.2 which sort of “bans” certain category of public officials from actively participation in political activities - was challenged by a potentially affected party. The Supreme Court in its March 2017 ruling upheld the constitutionality of the Code of Conduct, albeit nothing that the law “suffers grave language or textual deficit.”
In addition to the Code, the residency and domicile clauses of the 1986 Constitution are likely to be challenged and contested by potentially affected parties if enforced by NEC.
Enforcement of regulations and statues remains a huge challenge, hence it remains to be seen whether the COC will be adhered to or enforced.
There are at least 21 registered political parties in Liberia, according to the NEC’s website. But it is expected that no more than 10 political parties will put up presidential candidates.
A combination of a few old and many new political actors are campaigning to succeed Africa’s first democratically elected female head of state, Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf.
Prominent among the old political actors are Sirleaf’s vice Joseph Nyumah Boakai of the governing Unity Party (UP), George Weah of the Coalition of Democratic, Charles Brumskine of the Liberty Party (LP), and Prince Johnson of the Movement for Democracy and Reconstruction (MDR).
Notable new presidential contenders are Alexander Cummings of the Alternative National Congress (ANC), Benoni Urey of All Liberian Party (ALP), J. Mills Jones of the Movement of Economic Empowerment (MOVEE), and MacDella Cooper of the Union of Liberian Democrats (ULD).
Recent polls (see here, here, and here) put Boakai, Weah, and Brumskine ahead of the presidential pack.
How are the campaigns using social media?
Most of the presidential contenders are utilizing social media to among others take jab at one another and carry events (such as endorsements, primaries and rallies) live on Facebook.
MacDella Cooper of the ULD, to name but a few, has an active social media present as well as Joseph Nyumah Boakai of the UP, George Weah of the CDC and Charles Walker Brumskine of the LP.
How important is ethnicity in the 2017 elections?
The Congo-Country divide is a trending issue in the 2017 elections, with one party accusing the other of propagating the divide between the settlers (commonly known as Congo people) who founded the Republic in 1847 and the non-settlers (i.e., Country people) who were met on the ground in the 1820s.
Regional factor and vote-rich county politics are also in play as presidential hopefuls such as Charles Brumskine, Alexander Cummings and George Weah picked their running mate from the strategic, vote-rich counties of Nimba and Bong.
The governing UP presidential hopeful, Joseph Boakai, is yet to select his running mate.
How are the political parties funding their campaigns?
According to the New Elections Law of Liberia and NEC’s 2017 regulations and guidelines, those of “Liberian nationality or origin” regardless of residency “shall have the right to contribute to the funds and election expenses of any political party or candidate.”
But such funding shall not exceed $2, 000, 000, $1, 500, 000, $600, 000 and $400, 000, respectively, for president, vice president, senator and representative.
If current spending levels continue, the opposition Liberty Party is poised to outspend all political parties including the governing Unity Party.
Will there be post-election violence?
Probably not. Or perhaps. But if the previous three nation-wide elections (2005, 2011, and 2014) are any guide, nothing of significant proportion as is typically seen in a post-election violence setting could occur in Liberia.
Make it trend, #LiberiaDecides #LiberiaElections2017 or #LIB2017.