DAKAR, Senegal
Expectations were growing that President Bassirou Diomaye
Faye's party would win Senegal's Sunday legislative elections after two
opposition leaders conceded while votes were still being counted.
Senegal's Presidential Bassirou Diomaye Faye casts his ballot during the early legislative election, at a polling station in Ndiaganiao, Mbour, Senegal November 17, 2024.
The heated campaign period had revived concerns about unrest as
political rivals clashed, sometimes violently. The West African nation saw some
of the worst political violence in recent history ahead of the presidential
election in March.
Faye,
who is seeking a clear parliamentary majority to implement his promised reform
agenda, urged the electorate to remain calm no matter the outcome, as he voted
in his home town of Ndiaganiao.
"I
once again call on voters... to show serenity, commit to the peaceful route,
and to accept the popular will that will be expressed through the ballot
box."
Polls
opened at 8 a.m. (0800 GMT) and closed at 6 p.m. It is not clear when
provisional results will be announced, but tallies from polling stations showed
Faye's Pastef party with a sizable lead, a source in the interior ministry
said.
These
results led the mayor of the capital Dakar, Barthelemy Dias, and the leader of
the Gueum Sa Bopp Les Jambars party to concede the race to Pastef.
"I would like to congratulate Pastef, the winner of the
election," said Dias, who is head of one of the opposition coalitions,
SAMM Sa Kaddu.
The
main threat to the ambitions of Faye's Pastef party is the unexpected alliance
of two opposition parties, including the Republic party (APR) headed by the
former Prime Minister Macky Sall. This coalition has yet to comment on the
results.
More
than 7 million registered voters had the chance to vote for candidates for the
165-seat assembly, choosing between 41 registered parties or other entities.
At
stake is Faye's mandate to make good on promises to crack down on corruption
and improve livelihoods that helped sweep him to power in April following a
landslide election victory.
Top
priorities for Senegalese voters were jobs and the economy, as inflation has
squeezed livelihoods and the nation's growing youth population struggles to
find employment. Many are impatient for change.
Faye
says his commitment to help has been stymied by the opposition-led assembly,
which he dissolved in September to pave the way for Sunday's vote. His
government is also grappling with slower-than-projected growth and a worsening
budget deficit.
In September, a government audit revealed that Senegal's debt and
budget deficit were much wider than the previous administration had reported,
causing the fiscal crisis to spiral. A $1.9 billion IMF programme agreed in
June 2023 has been on hold since the discovery.
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