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The preliminary vote count was released.
The preliminary vote count was released.


{|class="wikitable" style="text-align: right;"
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align: right;"
!Candidate
! Candidate
!Party
! Party
!Votes
! Votes
!%
! %
|-
|-
|align=left|[[Juan Orlando Hernández]]||align=left|[[National Party of Honduras|National Party]]||734,357||34.08
| align="left" | [[Juan Orlando Hernández]] || align="left" | [[National Party of Honduras|National Party]] || 900,626 || 35.62
|-
|-
|align=left|[[Xiomara Castro]]||align=left|[[Liberty and Refoundation]]||623,080||28.92
| align="left" | [[Xiomara Castro]] || align="left" | [[Liberty and Refoundation]] || 740,973 || 29.31
|-
|-
|align=left|[[Mauricio Villeda]]||align=left|[[Liberal Party of Honduras|Liberal Party]]||445,919||20.70
| align="left" | [[Mauricio Villeda]] || align="left" | [[Liberal Party of Honduras|Liberal Party]] || 510,052 || 20.17
|-
|-
|align=left|[[Salvador Nasralla]]||align=left|[[Anti-Corruption Party]]||337,014||15.64
| align="left" | [[Salvador Nasralla]] || align="left" | [[Anti-Corruption Party]] || 360,277 || 14.25
|-
|-
|align=left|[[Romeo Vásquez Velásquez]]||align=left|[[Honduran Patriotic Alliance|Patriotic Alliance]]||4,459||0.21
| align="left" | [[Romeo Vásquez Velásquez]] || align="left" | [[Honduran Patriotic Alliance|Patriotic Alliance]] || 5,155 || 0.20
|-
|-
|align=left|[[Orle Solís]]||align=left|[[Christian Democratic Party of Honduras|Christian Democratic Party]]||3,766||0.17
| align="left" | [[Orle Solís]] || align="left" | [[Christian Democratic Party of Honduras|Christian Democratic Party]] || 4,354 || 0.17
|-
|-
|align=left|[[Jorge Aguilar Paredes]]||align=left|[[Innovation and Unity Party]]||3,595||0.17
| align="left" | [[Jorge Aguilar Paredes]] || align="left" | [[Innovation and Unity Party]] || 4,019 || 0.16
|-
|-
|align=left|[[Andrés Pavón]]||align=left|[[FAPER]]-[[Democratic Unification Party]]||2,357||0.11
| align="left" | [[Andrés Pavón]] || align="left" | [[FAPER]]-[[Democratic Unification Party]] || 2,729 || 0.11
|- style="font-weight: bold; background: #ececec"
| align="left" colspan="2" | Valid votes || 2,528,185 || 95.46
|-
|-
|align=left colspan=2|Invalid/blank votes||95,676||
| align="left" colspan="2" | Null votes || 82,934 || 3.13
|-
|-
|align=left colspan=2|'''Total'''||'''2,250,223'''||'''100'''
| align="left" colspan="2" | Blank votes || 37,401 || 1.41
|- style="font-weight: bold; background: #ececec"
| align="left" colspan="2" | Total votes || 2,648,520 || 100.00
|-
|-
|align=left colspan=2|Registered voters/turnout||5,355,112||62.03
| align="left" colspan="2" | Registered voters/turnout || 5,355,112 || 62.03<sup>a</sup>
|-
|-
|align=left colspan=4|Source: [http://siede.tse.hn/app_dev.php/divulgacionmonitoreo/reporte-presidente TSE] (67.74% of ballot boxes counted)
| align="left" colspan="4" | <small>Source: [http://siede.tse.hn/app_dev.php/divulgacionmonitoreo/reporte-presidente TSE] (67.74% of ballot boxes counted)</small><br>
<small><sup>a</sup> Projection.</small>
|}
|}



Revision as of 21:51, 27 November 2013

Honduran general election, 2013

← 2009 November 24, 2013 2017 →
  File:Juan Orlando Hernandez.jpg
Nominee Juan Orlando Hernández Xiomara Castro
Party National Libre

  File:Salvador Nasralla.jpg
Nominee Mauricio Villeda Salvador Nasralla
Party Liberal Partido Anticorrupción

President before election

Porfirio Lobo Sosa
National

Elected President

Juan Orlando Hernández
National

General elections were held in Honduras on November 24, 2013.[1] Voters went to the polls to elect a new President of Honduras to serve a four-year term starting January 27, 2014; 128 members to serve four-year terms in the National Congress; 298 Mayors and vice-mayors and their respective councilors; and 20 representatives to the Central American Parliament.

The closely watched presidential election saw a field of eight candidates vying to succeed outgoing President Porfirio Lobo Sosa, who is not eligible to run for re-election. Salvador Nasralla, a sports journalist and television personality, and Xiomara Castro, the wife of the deposed president Mel Zelaya, both candidates from newly formed political parties (the Anti-Corruption Party and Libre, respectively) were leading in most of the early polls. However, as the election neared, the candidates of the two traditional parties – Juan Orlando Hernández of the National Party and Mauricio Villeda of the Liberal Party – both surged in the polls. Because the constitution of Honduras does not require an absolute majority to win the presidency, the winner will be the candidate with the most votes regardless of percentage.

Background

This is the first election to be contested by the opposition since the controversial and polarising 2009 Honduran coup d'état. The social mobilization since then led to the founding of the main opposition party, Libre.[2]

The two-party system

Honduras has historically been dominated by a two-party system – the National Party and the Liberal Party. This election represents the first time in Honduran history in which other parties have a chance at winning the presidency or at least gaining a significant representation in the Congress, four of which find their genesis post-coup.[3]

Human rights concerns

The elections are set to take place amidst a deteriorating human rights situations.[4] Amnesty International called attention to the killings of human rights defenders in the lead up to the election, noting that Honduras has the highest homicide rate in the world yet only twenty percent of homicides are investigated.[4] Honduran human rights organizations formed the Board of Analysis on the Human Rights Situation to monitor human rights violations surrounding the election,[5] pointing to the level of political violence in the country: human rights group Rights Action examined the period between May 2012 and October 2013 and documented 36 killings and 24 armed attacks against pre-candidates, candidates, their families and campaign leaders across all parties, with Libre experiencing the majority of both armed attacks and killings.[6] In light of this situation, 24 U.S. Senators signed a letter to the U.S. State Department expressing their concerns about the upcoming elections.[7]

Major issues

Key electoral issues have been citizen security, organized crime, unemployment, and corruption.[8] One of the main components of Hernández's campaign is his promise to put "a soldier on every corner."[9] For her part, Castro has emphasized the need for community policing and secure borders.[10]

Fraud concerns and international observers

Honduran elections have historically been marred by fraud,[11][12][13] and polls leading up to the elections found that 59% of Hondurans believe the elections will be fraudulent.[14] However, the Supreme Electoral Tribunal (TSE) has stated that these will be the most clean and fair elections in Honduras's history, and both the traditionally dominant parties – the National and Liberal parties – agree.[15] The newly formed Libre Party and Anti-Corruption Party fear that there will be fraud, a position backed by the Carter Center.[15] Anti-Corruption Party candidate Salvador Nasralla publicly denounced attempts at vote-buying by the National Party across the country.[16] Nasralla highlighted National Party control of key government institutions like the Public Ministry and the Supreme Court.[16] Dana Frank, writing in The Nation, echoed these concerns, noting National Party candidate Hernández's participation in both the illegal naming of a new attorney general in August 2013 and the illegal destitution of four Supreme Court judges in December 2012,[9] the latter of which ultimately resulted in Hernández securing his party's nomination for the presidency.[11]

The TSE has stated that over 700 international election observers, representing various governments and organizations, including the United Nations, the Organization of American States, the European Union, and the Carter Center, will be present to monitor the elections.[17] In the days before the election, international observers in the department of Yoro and in the capital Tegucigalpa reported targeted harassment and intimidation on the part of immigration officials and unidentified armed men.[18][19] The TSE confirmed these reports and ordered the Honduran immigration authorities to stop all of these types of operations concerning election observers.[20]

Presidential race

Primaries

Primaries were held for the National Party, Liberal Party and Libre.

National

Juan Orlando Hernández, president of the National Congress of Honduras, won the presidential nomination of the National Party. The other candidates were Ricardo Álvarez (the Mayor of Tegucigalpa), Fernando Anduray (National Congress deputy), Victor Hugo Barnica (Third Vice President of Honduras), Eva Fernandez, Loreley Fernandez, and Miguel Pastor (Secretary of State for Public Works, Transport, and Housing). The Supreme Electoral Tribunal certified Hernández's victory, but Álvarez immediately presented an appeal, accusing Hernández of fraud and asking for a recount.[21] The appeal was rejected by the Constitutional Chamber of the Supreme Court, four of whose five members were replaced by Hernández a month earlier in a move widely criticized as an illegal "technical coup".[22][9][23] Álvarez and Pastor refused to attend the party convention in protest, claiming that they were being persecuted by their own party.[24]

Liberal

Mauricio Villeda, won the presidential nomination of the Liberal Party. Other candidates in the fray for the presidential nomination were Esteban Handal Perez and Yani Rosenthal (National Congress deputy and former Minister of Presidency).

Libre

Xiomara Castro de Zelaya, former First Lady of Honduras, was the sole presidential candidate in the Libre primaries.

Opinion polls

President

polling organisation, [ref] date poll details candidate
Hernández (PN) Castro (Libre) Villeda (PL) Nasralla (PAC) (other response)
Cid/Gallup[25] 6–12 September 2013 national; 1220 adults 27% 29% 15% 11%
Paradigma[26] 16–24 September 2013 national; 2400 adults 21.9% 22.8% 12.0% 10.0% Others: 1%; Don’t know/no response: 11%; None: 21.3%
TecniMerk[27] 28 September – 5 October, 2013 national; 2500 adults 21.0% 31.2% 13.3% 14.8% Don’t know/no response: 18.5%
Cid/Gallup[28] 9–15 October 2013 national; 1525 adults 28% 27% 17% 9%
Paradigma[29] 10–19 October 2013 national; 4025 adults 25.7% 22.2% 10.7% 9.9% Others: 0.7%; Don’t know/no response: 12.3%; None: 18.5%

Congress

polling organisation, [ref] date poll details PN Libre PL PAC Other party None/Independents/No answer
Cid/Gallup[25] 6–12 September 2013 national; 1220 adults 32% 22% 21% 8% 17%
Paradigma[26] 16–24 September 2013 national; 2400 adults 28.7% 20.6% 19.1% 3.7% 0.9% 27.0%
TecniMerk[27] 28 September – 5 October, 2013 national; 2500 adults 28.5% 28.2% 14.8% 9.6%
Cid/Gallup[28] 9–15 October 2013 national; 1525 adults 35% 19% 22% 6% 18%
Paradigma[29] 10–19 October 2013 national; 4025 adults 30.0% 20.0% 18.0% 3.2% 0.5% 28.3%

Results

President

The preliminary vote count was released.

Candidate Party Votes %
Juan Orlando Hernández National Party 900,626 35.62
Xiomara Castro Liberty and Refoundation 740,973 29.31
Mauricio Villeda Liberal Party 510,052 20.17
Salvador Nasralla Anti-Corruption Party 360,277 14.25
Romeo Vásquez Velásquez Patriotic Alliance 5,155 0.20
Orle Solís Christian Democratic Party 4,354 0.17
Jorge Aguilar Paredes Innovation and Unity Party 4,019 0.16
Andrés Pavón FAPER-Democratic Unification Party 2,729 0.11
Valid votes 2,528,185 95.46
Null votes 82,934 3.13
Blank votes 37,401 1.41
Total votes 2,648,520 100.00
Registered voters/turnout 5,355,112 62.03a
Source: TSE (67.74% of ballot boxes counted)

a Projection.

Aftermath

Juan Orlando Hernandez was announced as the winner in a result the Supreme Electoral Tribunal's head, David Matamoros, called "irreversible",[30] this followed initial claims by both leading candidates of having won. While opposition protests continued, Hernandez said the result was "not negotiable with anybody" and named a transition team.[30]

References

  1. ^ Tribunal Supremo Electoral Honduras (04-09-2013). "Universidades de País Apoyaran al TSE para la Realización de las Elecciones Generales". http://www.tse.hn. Retrieved 04-16-2013. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= and |date= (help); External link in |publisher= (help)
  2. ^ Nina Lakhami (November 23, 2013). "The fight to take power in Honduras". Al Jazeera. Retrieved 2913-11-23. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)
  3. ^ Carlos Salinas (October 8, 2013). "Honduras rompe cien años de bipartidismo". El País. Retrieved 2013-11-17.
  4. ^ a b "Honduras: Elections should mark a turning point for human rights". Amnesty International. 5 November 2013. Retrieved 2013-11-16.
  5. ^ "Humanitarian national emergency". Radio Mundo Real. October 31, 2013. Retrieved 2013-11-16.
  6. ^ Karen Spring (October 21, 2013). "Context of the Honduran Electoral Process 2012: Incomplete list of Killings and Armed Attacks Related to Political Campaigning in Honduras" (PDF). Retrieved 2013-11-16.
  7. ^ Lauren Carasik (November 3, 2013). "Honduras' political violence threatens to undermine its November elections". Al Jazeera America. Retrieved 2013-11-16.
  8. ^ Javier Sánchez (May 24, 2013). "Histórico abanico de partidos". La Tribuna. Retrieved 2013-11-17.
  9. ^ a b c Dana Frank (November 6, 2013). "A High-Stakes Election in Honduras". The Nation. Retrieved 2013-11-17.
  10. ^ "En Tocoa, Colón: Xiomara ofrece policía comunitaria y enviaría militares a cuidar fronteras". El Tiempo. August 4, 2013. Retrieved 2013-11-17.
  11. ^ a b Gina Kawas (November 6, 2013). "El fantasma del fraude electoral en Honduras". Panam Post. Retrieved 2013-11-17. (Spanish)
  12. ^ Orlin Cruz Martínez (October 4, 2013). "A Propósito de Fraude Electoral". El Tiempo. Retrieved 2013-11-17. (Spanish)
  13. ^ Parvez Jabri (October 19, 2013). "US lawmakers warn Kerry of Honduras vote problems". Business Recorder. Retrieved 2013-11-17.
  14. ^ "Survey shows Honduran citizens expect electoral fraud, and are dissatisfied with democracy". Resistencia Honduras. September 27, 2013. Retrieved 2013-11-16.
  15. ^ a b Gustavo Veiga (November 4, 2013). "Honduras irá a las urnas marcada por el golpe". Página 12. Retrieved 2013-11-16. (Spanish)
  16. ^ a b ""Partido Nacional ya compró credenciales": Nasralla". La Prensa. August 19, 2013. Retrieved 2013-11-17. (Spanish)
  17. ^ "Unos 700 observadores internacionales vigilarán las elecciones en Honduras". El Mundo. November 9, 2013. Retrieved 2013-11-17.
  18. ^ "Honduras: Detienen a Delegación Internacional de Observación de DDHH". Diario Uchile. November 23, 2013. Retrieved 2013-11-23. (Spanish)
  19. ^ "Hombres armados amedrentan a acompañantes electorales de Honduras". teleSUR. November 23, 2013. Retrieved 2013-11-23. (Spanish)
  20. ^ "Ordenan a Migración detener operativo". El Heraldo. November 23, 2013. Retrieved 2013-11-23. (Spanish)
  21. ^ "Ricardo Álvarez anuncia que presentará recurso". El Heraldo. December 11, 2012. Retrieved 2013-11-17. (Spanish)
  22. ^ "Sala Constitucional declara inadmisible conteo voto por voto". El Heraldo. January 24, 2013. Retrieved 2013-11-17.
  23. ^ Annie Bird (January 8, 2013). "December 12, 2012 "Coup" in Honduras: The Constitutional Court Dismissed as Primary Elections are Challenged". Rights Action. Retrieved 2013-11-17.
  24. ^ "Ricardo y Miguel confirman que no irán a Convención nacionalista". La Prensa. August 15, 2013. Retrieved 2013-11-17. (Spanish)
  25. ^ a b "Remonta Juan Orlando Hernández en intención de voto presidencial", La Prensa (in Spanish), 24 September 2013, retrieved 2013-11-16
  26. ^ a b "Intención de voto para presidente a nivel nacional – Encuestra Septiembre 2013", Paradigma Encuestadora (in Spanish), 29 September 2013, retrieved 2013-11-16
  27. ^ a b "Honduras: Xiomara Castro sigue encabezando encuestas", Kaos en la Red (in Spanish), 11 October 2013, retrieved 2013-11-22
  28. ^ a b "Honduras: Juan Orlando arriba 5 puntos según CID-Gallup", La Prensa (in Spanish), 24 October 2013, retrieved 2013-11-16
  29. ^ a b "Intención de voto para presidente a nivel nacional – Encuestra Octubre 2013", Paradigma Encuestadora (in Spanish), 21 October 2013, retrieved 2013-11-16
  30. ^ a b "Hernandez lead 'irreversible' in Honduras". Al Jazeera. November 26, 2013. Retrieved 2013-11-26.

See also

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