Election: United Republic of Tanzania
Presidential and parliamentary elections will be held in Tanzania on 31 October 2010.
Description of government structure:
Assembly: Tanzania has a unicameral National Assembly (Bunge) with 274 seats.
Description of electoral system:
The President is elected by popular vote to serve a 5-year term.
In the National Assembly (Bunge), 232 members are elected by popular vote to serve 5-year terms, 37 members are allocated for women to serve 5-year terms and 5 members are allocated to members of the Zanzibar House of Representatives to serve 5-year terms.
To read further please visit IFES Election Guide.
CURRENT SYSTEM
The electoral system currently used in Tanzania is mainly “First Past the Post”. This system is similar to other electoral systems operating in some of ex-British colonies. The whole country is demarcated into constituencies and wards. Each constituency elects its representative to the Parliament while every ward in Tanzania mainland elects a councillor to be a representative in a council.
Every registered Political Party has the right to sponsor one Candidate for Presidential, Parliamentary and Councillors Elections. As such in every contested seat an election can have up to eighteen candidates because at the moment there are eighteen Political Parties with permanent registration. A candidate who wins majority votes is declared elected.
In respect to the Presidential Election, if a Presidential Candidate hails from one part of the United Republic his/her running mate who is a Vice-Presidential Candidate shall come from the other part of the Union and both are elected together and at the same time. The Presidential Candidate who wins the majority of votes is declared President and his/her running mate is automatically declared Vice President.
Tanzania has also a system of proportional representation according to votes, in the elections of Members of the Parliament for Women Special Seats. These are special seats for women which are thirty percent of the total number of elected constituency members, plus five members elected by the Zanzibar House of Representative, the Attorney General of the United Public of Tanzania (ex-officio Member of the Parliament), the Speaker and ten presidential nominees.
Regarding the councillor’s election, proportional representation for women special seats, is not less than one third of the all elected Councilors and Members of Parliament in each Council. The special seats are apportioned according to seats each political party, has won in the council.
To read the complete details please the National Election Commission of Tanzania.
If you would like to share your thoughts on this election with the iKNOW Politics members, please leave your comments below.
Anna Tibaijuka headed for politics
Interesting...she certainly would bring first hand knowledge of working on the type of development issues that Tanzania is currently tackling. Worth following to see how she fares.
http://www.nation.co.ke/News/politics/Tibaijuka%20walks%20into%20real%2…
Anna Tibaijuka headed for politics
Interesting...she certainly would bring first hand knowledge of working on the type of development issues that Tanzania is currently tackling. Worth following to see how she fares.
http://www.nation.co.ke/News/politics/Tibaijuka%20walks%20into%20real%2…