Vincentian general election, 2015

Vincentian general election, 2015
Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
9 December 2015

15 seats in the House of Assembly of Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
  First party Second party
 
Leader Ralph Gonsalves Arnhim Eustace
Party Unity Labour Party New Democratic Party
Leader's seat North Central Windward East Kingstown
Last election 8 seats 7 seats
Seats won 8 seats 7 seats
Seat change Steady Steady
Popular vote 34,246 31,027
Percentage 52.28% 47.37%

Presidential election results map. Red denotes Constituency won by Ralph Gonsalves, and Blue denotes those won by Arnhim Eustace.

Prime Minister before election

Ralph Gonsalves
Unity Labour Party

Elected Prime Minister

Ralph Gonsalves
Unity Labour Party

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General elections were held in Saint Vincent and the Grenadines on 9 December 2015.[1] The result was a victory for the Unity Labour Party, which retained its one seat majority. However, there was controversy as to the results in three constituencies.

Electoral system

The 15 elected members of the House of Assembly were elected in single-member constituencies using the first-past-the-post system.[2]

Campaign

A total of 43 candidates contested the elections.[3] The two biggest parties were the incumbent Unity Labor Party of Prime Minister Ralph Gonsalves and the opposition New Democratic Party of Arnhim Eustace, both of which ran candidates in all the 15 constituencies. Smaller parties included the Green Party and the Democratic Republican Party, who only competed in seven and six constituencies respectively.[4]

As 11,902 registered voters were first-time voters, both major parties looked to woo young voters. Gonsalves emphasised the importance of the youth as "solutions to the problem of our civilisation" rather than "problems to be solved." Eustace announced initiatives aimed at decreasing unemployment, including "proposals for youth, sports, and culture."[4]

Conduct

The OAS sent an observer team.[5] There were 227 polling stations, which opened between 07:00 and 17:00.[4]

Results

Party Votes % Seats +/–
Unity Labour Party34,24652.2880
New Democratic Party31,02747.3770
Democratic Republican Party1540.240New
Green Party770.1200
Invalid votes202
Total65,706100150
Registered voters/turnout89,52773.39
Source: Electoral Office

Elected MPs

Constituency Elected member Party
Central KingstownSt. Clair Leacock New Democratic Party
Central LeewardLouis Straker Unity Labour Party
East KingstownArnhim Eustace New Democratic Party
East St. GeorgeCamillo Gonsalves Unity Labour Party
MarriaquaSt. Clair Prince Unity Labour Party
North Central WindwardRalph Gonsalves Unity Labour Party
North LeewardRoland Mathews New Democratic Party
North WindwardMontgomery Daniel Unity Labour Party
Northern GrenadinesGodwin L. Friday New Democratic Party
South Central WindwardSaboto Caesar Unity Labour Party
South LeewardNigel StephensonNew Democratic Party
South WindwardFrederick StephensonUnity Labour Party
Southern GrenadinesTerrance Ollivierre New Democratic Party
West KingstownDaniel Cummings New Democratic Party
West St. GeorgeCecil Mckie Unity Labour Party
Source: I-Witness News

Reactions

In reaction to the win Gonsalves said: "I am humbled and honoured that the people of St Vincent and the Grenadines embraced our bold vision for the future and rejected the politics of hate,"[6] he also called for national unity to address developmental challenges. However he added that there were issues in the constituencies of North Leeward and South Leeward and "we are also calling for an immediate recount to ensure that all the votes are counted in those constituencies. There are more rejected ballots than the margin and those ballots should be examined closely to determine the intent of the voters."[6]

The NDP refused to concede the defeat according to inconsistencies in the Central Leeward constituency. A party statement read: "We of the New Democratic Party are confident that we have won the general elections based on figures received by our various polling agents. Our figures show that we won the Central Leeward seat by six votes, which means that we won the general elections by eight seats to seven."[7] Leader of the opposition Arnhim Eustace, who won his seat against ULP candidate Luke Brown by fewer than 50 votes, added that there were many irregularities took place in his constituency of East Kingstown, including "illegal voting, and contradictory voters list to agents."[6]

References

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