You have commented 339 times on Rantburg.

Your Name
Your e-mail (optional)
Website (optional)
My Original Nic        Pic-a-Nic        Sorry. Comments have been closed on this article.
Bold Italic Underline Strike Bullet Blockquote Small Big Link Squish Foto Photo
Africa Subsaharan
Ruling party set to win in Tanzanian poll
2005-12-14
But I think we all saw this one coming.
DAR ES SALAAM - Tanzanian voters are set on Wednesday to cast their ballots in elections widely expected to extend the mandate of the ruling Revolutionary Party (CCM) after 44 years at the helm of the east African nation. Some 16 million people are eligible to vote for the presidency of the union, created in 1964 between mainland Tanganyika and the Indian Ocean Zanzibar archipelago, and 232-seat national parliament.

Despite the impending retirement of incumbent President Benjamin Mkapa, who is constitutionally barred from seeking a third term, the polls will almost certainly see the election of CCM nominee and current Foreign Minister Jakaya Kikwete, 55, to lead the Union of Tanzania, observers say.

While violent clashes and allegations of widespread fraud marred polling that went ahead as scheduled on Zanzibar for the islands’ presidency and local legislature, the extended campaign on the mainland has been relatively calm for the country’s third multi-party elections.

Ten of the 18 parties contesting the general election have put forward presidential candidates, but Kikwete looms large over Civic United Front leader Lipumba, 56, and the other main opposition candidate, Augustine Mrema, 60, of the Tanzanian Labor Party. Kikwete, who collapsed due to heat exhaution at his final rally on Tuesday, has spent much time in lavish state-funded campaign rallies, pledging to emulate Mkapa and his policies to fight poverty and boost development in the largely agrarian nation of 35 million.

More than half the population and more than 80 percent of its working population are estimated to depend on agriculture, which is still recovering from earlier disasterous socialist policies.

Wednesday’s vote is Tanzania’s third since pluralism was restored in 1992, 31 years after it broke from British colonial rule and the opposition is hoping to boost its numbers in the parliament that sits in the northern city of Dodoma. CCM has been in power since the east African nation broke free from British colonists in 1961.
Posted by:Steve White

#3  A bunch of Tanzanian doctorial students used to be in one of my dad's churches. Got to know them pretty well. Some stayed here some went back.
Posted by: 3dc   2005-12-14 13:56  

#2  Thanks for the Tanzanian politix primer, 3dc.
Posted by: Seafarious   2005-12-14 01:11  

#1  Tanzania is a interesting country.
The Zanzibar part had problems but it is Majority Muslim so its normal.
The Mainland is mostly Lutheran.

The government is structured as FAMILY SOCIALISM which means every clan has its designated connection to the government.

Election campaigns take place on a chautauqua circuit. All campaigning must take place on this circuit. You can't say anything bad about the other guy(s) only what you would do. You can not run ads and can not get campaign donations.
Its one party but everybody is in the party with multiple people running for positions. In that sense it could be one of the fairest election forms in Africa.

Posted by: 3dc   2005-12-14 01:05  

00:00