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1981 South African general election

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FieldValue
countrySouth Africa
flag_year1928
typeParliamentary
previous_election1977 South African general election
previous_year1977
election_date29 April 1981
next_year[1984 (HoR, HoD)](1984-south-african-general-election) →
[1987 (HoA)](1987-south-african-general-election)
elected_members18th South African Parliament
seats_for_election165 of the 177 seats in the House of Assembly
majority_seats83
registered2,290,626
turnout59.90% ( 11.38pp)
image_size130x130px
image1PW Botha 1962.jpg
leader1P. W. Botha
party1National Party (South Africa)
last_election165.34%, 134 seats
seats1**131**
seat_change13
popular_vote1**778,371**
percentage1**57.66%**
swing17.68pp
image2
leader2Frederik van Zyl Slabbert
party2Progressive Federal Party
last_election216.95%, 17 seats
seats226
seat_change29
popular_vote2265,297
percentage219.65%
swing22.70pp
image3
leader3Vause Raw
party3New Republic Party (South Africa)
last_election312.15%, 10 seats
seats38
seat_change32
popular_vote393,603
percentage36.93%
swing35.22pp
titlePrime Minister
before_electionP. W. Botha
before_partyNational Party (South Africa)
after_electionP. W. Botha
after_partyNational Party (South Africa)
map_imageSouth Africa election 1981.png
map_captionResults by province

1987 (HoA)

General elections were held in South Africa on 29 April 1981. The National Party, under the leadership of P. W. Botha since 1978, lost some support, but achieved another landslide victory, winning 131 of 165 directly elected seats in the House of Assembly.

Meanwhile, the Progressive Federal Party – led since 1979 by Frederik van Zyl Slabbert, an Afrikaner – increased its representation to 26 seats, thereby consolidating its position as the official opposition. The Herstigte Nasionale Party (HNP) now under the leadership of Jaap Marais and representing right-wing Afrikaner conservatives, received 14.1% of the vote. The HNP's tally marked a historic result; twice that of the former official opposition NRP, and within a touching distance of the liberal PFP, but failed to win a seat under the first-past-the-post system due to splitting its voter base with the NP in more liberal areas and being decisively defeated in the Afrikaner heartlands. In 1985, under the same parliament, HNP candidate Louis Stofberg managed a win in a by-election for Sasolburg, but the success was soon overrun by the Conservative Party under NP renegade Andries Treurnicht.

Despite divisions among the opposition, the NP lost three seats compared to its record 1977 result.

Background

The 1981 elections were the first since the abolition of the Senate and ongoing constitutional changes meant to bring in a more presidential system. The House of Assembly had become the sole chamber of Parliament.

The elections were also the last to be held under the then 1961 constitution, under which South Africa had become a republic, while retaining a Westminster-style parliamentary system. In foreign policy, the Lancaster House Agreement and the shift to black majority rule and a ZANU–PF government in newly independent Zimbabwe the preceding year, was likely to have affected the results, including boost for the HNP and increased white wariness of the government's policy. The Angolan War and Border Wars had also raged on without obvious results, with a South Africa-backed UNITA in fierce opposition to the government of the MPLA in Luanda. Exceeding costs, and failure to accomplish strategic goals would have alienated both liberal and more hawkish voters dissatisfied with developments in a continent which, a decade earlier, South Africa would have dominated militarily. The 1976 Soweto uprising and following sanctions and boycotts still affected the South African economy, causing stagnant wages, unemployment and psychological alienation driving increased voter dissatisfaction.

Although technically a Westminster system, Botha's initial reforms of the House of Assembly now included twelve additional members, four of whom were appointed by the State President and eight were indirectly elected by the directly elected members. These reforms secured the NP's existing majority, which became even more important with the planned introduction of the Tricameral Parliament in 1984, with the NP's majority role becoming more fragile with the introduction of Coloured and Indian representatives, albeit in different chambers. The elected additional members were chosen by means of proportional representation, by means of the single transferable vote.

Results

Of the twelve appointed and indirectly elected members, 11 were National Party representatives and one was from the Progressive Federal Party.

By province

ProvinceNationalNew RepublicProgressiveTotal
Transvaal**67**0976
Cape**43**11155
Natal77620
Orange Free State**14**0014
**Total****131****8****26****165**

References

References

  1. [http://www.ipu.org/parline-e/reports/arc/SOUTH_AFRICA_1981_E.PDF SOUTH AFRICA Date of Elections: 29 April 1981] [[International Parliamentary Union]]
  2. [https://books.google.com/books?id=n1MNAQAAIAAJ&q=Senate+%22South+Africa%22+abolished+1981 ''Parliaments of South Africa''], J.J.L Cloete, J.L. van Schaik, 1985, page 62
  3. [https://books.google.com/books?id=4ksuAQAAIAAJ&q=%22House+of+Assembly%22+%22South+Africa%22+%22additional+members%22+1981 ''The Comparative and International Law Journal of Southern Africa''], Volume 13, Institute of Foreign and Comparative Law, University of South Africa, 1981, page 354
  4. (15 May 1981). "Notice 344 of 1981: Department of Internal Affairs". [[Government Gazette of South Africa.
  5. [[Dieter Nohlen]], Michael Krennerich & Bernhard Thibaut (1999) ''Elections in Africa: A data handbook'', pp832–836 {{ISBN. 0-19-829645-2
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