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2007 Syrian parliamentary election

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

2007 Syrian parliamentary election

← 2003 22 April 2007 2012 →

All 250 seats in the Parliament of Syria
126 seats needed for a majority
Turnout56.12%
  First party Second party
 
Leader Bashar al-Assad
Party Ba'ath Party Independents
Alliance NPF
Last election 167 83
Seats won 169 81
Seat change Increase2 Decrease2

Speaker before election

Mahmoud al-Abrash
Ba'ath Party

Elected Speaker

Mahmoud al-Abrash
Ba'ath Party

Parliamentary elections were held in Syria on 22 April 2007. The number of seats reserved for the parties in the National Progressive Front was increased to 170 from 167, decreasing the seats for independents to 80 from 83.[1] The election was boycotted by the opposition in exile, who described it as a "farce".[2]

Pre-election events

The number of entrants to the parliamentary election race at the deadline reached 9,770, of whom 2,293 were approved, including 158 women. The entrants competed for 250 seats which are divided among the 14 governorates of Syria as follows:

Governorate Seats Percentage
Damascus 29 11.6%
Rif Dimashq 19 7.6%
Quneitra 5 2%
Daraa 10 4%
As Suwaydā' 6 2.4%
Homs 23 9.2%
Tartous 13 5.2%
Latakia 17 6.8%
Hama 22 8.8%
Idlib 18 7.2%
Aleppo 52 20.8%
Raqqa 8 3.2%
Deir ez-Zor 14 5.6%
Al Hasakah 14 5.6%

Results

According to results released on 26 April 2007, the National Progressive Front won 169 seats, while independents won the other 81 seats.[3] Turnout was 56.12% of the 11.96 million eligible voters, and 30 female candidates were elected, exactly as many as in 2003.[4] Opponents of the government and human rights activists claimed fraud and a turnout of at most 10 percent.[5]

PartySeats+/–
Ba'ath Party134–1
Arab Socialist Union Party8+1
Socialist Unionist Party6–1
Syrian Communist Party (Bakdash)5+1
Democratic Socialist Unionist Party40
Arab Socialist Movement3–1
Syrian Communist Party (Faisal)3–1
National Covenant Party3+1
Syrian Social Nationalist Party2+2
Arabic Democratic Union Party1New
Social Democratic Unionists0New
Independents81–2
Total2500
Source: Syrian Parliament

References

This page was last edited on 27 April 2022, at 19:30
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