Social Sciences and Humanities Open (Jan 2023)

Extending term limits, constitutional referendums and elections in francophone Africa

  • Michael Amoah

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 1
p. 100454

Abstract

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All five francophone Africa presidential elections in Guinea, Côte d ’Ivoire, Togo (2020), Chad and Congo-Brazzaville (2021) occurred with incumbents imposing their candidacies beyond presidential term limits which had expired, via controversial constitutional referendums, followed by elections which the incumbents went on to win. This research article discusses how they did it. The paper argues that once incumbents had successfully conducted the constitutional referendums to extend term limits, the election management boards (EMBs) that organized the extension referendums effectively ran the follow-up elections to simply endorse the extension. The successful extension referendums relegated opposition rivals to second rate contestants on the electoral landscape and ensured outright wins for the incumbents in the first round of each election, so as to avoid any second-round risks altogether.

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