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1982 Mauritian general election

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FieldValue
countryMauritius
typeparliamentary
previous_election1976 Mauritian general election
previous_year1976
next_election1983 Mauritian general election
next_year1983
seats_for_electionAll 62 directly elected seats in the Legislative Assembly
(and up to 8 BLS seats)
turnout88.84% ( 1.16 pp)
election_date
image1Anerood Jugnauth, 1980s.jpg
leader1Anerood Jugnauth
party1Mauritian Militant Movement
alliance1MMM–PSM
popular_vote1**621,059**
percentage1**43.16%**
last_election138.69%, 34 seats
seats1**42**
seat_change18
1blankAlliance seats
1data1**60**
2blankPopular vote
2data1**906,800**
3blankAlliance %
3data1**63.02%**
image2Seewoosagur Ramgoolam, 1970.jpg
leader2Seewoosagur Ramgoolam
party2Labour Party (Mauritius)
alliance2PAN
last_election228 seats (IP)
seats22
seat_change226
popular_vote2309,882
percentage221.54%
1data22
2data2363,519
3data225.27%
map_image1982 Mauritian general election - Results by constituency.svg
map_captionAlliance result by constituency. The colour shade shows the percentage of the elected candidate with the highest number of votes
titlePrime Minister
posttitleSubsequent Prime Minister
before_electionSeewoosagur Ramgoolam
before_partyLabour Party (Mauritius)
after_electionAnerood Jugnauth
after_partyMauritian Militant Movement

(and up to 8 BLS seats)

General elections were held in Mauritius on 11 June 1982. The election resulted in a landslide victory for the Mauritian Militant Movement–Mauritian Socialist Party alliance, which won all 60 of the directly elected mainland seats. Anerood Jugnauth became prime minister for the first time, replacing Seewoosagur Ramgoolam who had governed the country since its independence.

Ramgoolam had formed a coalition government in the aftermath of the previous election, composing of the Labour Party and the Parti Mauricien Social Démocrate, led by Gaëtan Duval. After several scandals that the government faced during its term, including economic mismanagement and postponement of elections, the government was defeated in a landslide, winning only a total of four best loser seats in the Legislative Assembly and none of its candidates were elected in any constituency.

The voting system involved twenty constituencies on Mauritius, which each elected three members. Two seats were elected by residents of Rodrigues, and up to eight seats were filled by the best losers system, although following this election, only four best loser seats were awarded. Voter turnout was 88.84%.

This election would be the first of three elections in which a party or an alliance received a 60-0 result, winning all of the elected mainland constituencies in Mauritius.

Ramgoolam received funding from the CIA during the election.

Background

In the aftermath of the previous election, the Mauritian Militant Movement (MMM) became the largest party in the Legislative Assembly, garnering a total of 34 seats, just two seats shy of the majority. The Labour Party (PTr), under the alliance of the Independence Party (IP) along with the Muslim Committee of Action (CAM), led by Seewoosagur Ramgoolam, came in second with 28 seats and lost its majority in the assembly. In order to prevent fears of the country being ruled under an MMM government, Ramgoolam formed a coalition government with the Parti Mauricien Social Démocrate (PMSD), led by Gaëtan Duval, bringing the coalition total to 36 seats, enough to form a one-seat majority government.

However, the coalition government faced several scandals during its term, which included economic mismanagement that resulted in the first devaluation of the rupee and the removal of subsidies on essential items which was imposed by the International Monetary Fund. In addition, relations with the opposition and the government were shaky and led to heated exchanges. With the thin-wafer majority that the government had in the assembly, it could not afford to loose on any votes. Intra-party relations, especially within the Labour Party, became fractious, with Harish Boodhoo and other Labour MPs constantly voting against the government.

Anerood Jugnauth, MMM leader and Leader of the Opposition, tabled a vote of no confidence against the government on 4 December 1979 due to the performance of the government and the scandals it was facing. The government narrowly won the vote, with Boodhoo's group saving the government's lifespan. One MMM MP defected to support the government for the vote.

Election date

Ramgoolam advised the Governor-General, Dayendranath Burrenchobay, to dissolve parliament on 18 December 1981, a few days before the automatic dissolution of the body. However, the writs for the election were not issued immediately. Under the Representation of People Ordinance of 1958, as amended in 1976, the Governor-General must issue the writs for the election within 55 days after the dissolution of parliament, and setting the dates for candidacy filling and when the election will be held.

The writs for the election were issued on 15 February 1982 by the Governor-General, two months after the dissolution of the parliament and scheduling the election on 11 June.

Electoral system

The Legislative Assembly has 62 directly elected members; 60 represent 20 three-seat constituencies, and two are elected from a constituency on the island of Rodrigues. The elections are held using the plurality block vote system with panachage, whereby voters have as many votes as seats available. In what is commonly known as the Best Loser System, should a community fail to win parliamentary representation, the Electoral Supervisory Commission can appoint up to eight unsuccessful candidates from these communities with the most votes. The Electoral Commission divides the electorate into four communities: Hindus, Muslims, Sino-Mauritians and the general population; the latter comprises voters who do not belong to the first three. Unless the Governor-General dissolves the Legislative Assembly early, members serve a five-year term.{{cite constitution|article=57|section=2|polity=Mauritius|date=1968|url= https://humanrights.govmu.org/Documents/Legislation/Constitution%20of%20Mauritius.pdf|access-date=6 November 2024|website=Human Rights Division – Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Regional Integration and International Trade}}

Parties and candidates

A total of 360 candidates representing 22 parties contested the election. The deadline for the submission and registration of candidates to the Electoral Supervisory Commission were on 19 April 1982, with the list being finalised on 21 April.

Countering the government, the Mauritian Militant Movement and Parti Socialiste Mauricien, a dissident party from the Labour Party formed by Harish Boodhoo, formed an alliance in early 1981. The MMM-PSM alliance fielded a total of 60 candidates for all the mainland constituencies, with the MMM being allocated 42 candidates and the PSM with 18 candidates. Of the 42 MMM candidates, 26 were incumbent members of the Legislative Assembly, whilst three of the 18 PSM candidates were Labour MPs who defected to the party (Boodhoo, Radha Gungoosingh and Rohit Beedassy).

For the Parti de l'Alliance Nationale, led by Seewoosagur Ramgoolam, the alliance was composed of the Labour Party and two other groups or parties that were primarily dissidents of the Parti Mauricien Social Démocrate: the Group Éliziér François and the Rassemblement pour le Progrès et la Liberté (RPL), led by Philo Blackburn. Other dissidents of the PMSD participated under the Labour banner. The Muslim Committee of Action did not contest for this election under the alliance but three dissidents of the party joined under the Labour banner and participated in the constituency of Port Louis Maritime–Port Louis East. The alliance finalised its candidate list on 15 April, which was criticised since it was still being reworked until the last minute.

As for the PMSD, led by Gaëtan Duval, it still participated in all of the 60 constituencies although some candidates, like Duval himself, contested in several other constituencies as well.

Major allianceMember partiesAlliance leaderCandidates
Parti de l'Alliance Nationale}}Parti de l'Alliance NationaleLabour Party (Mauritius)}}Labour Party
Rassemblement pour le Progrès et la Liberté}}Rassemblement pour le Progrès et la Liberté5
Group Éliziér François}}Group Éliziér François4
Mauritian Militant Movement}}MMM–PSMMauritian Militant Movement}}Mauritian Militant Movement
Parti Socialiste Mauricien}}Parti Socialiste Mauricien18

Results

The MMM–PSM alliance won all of the 60 elected mainland constituencies, of which 42 were taken by the MMM and 18 by the PSM. The MMM managed to win an outright majority in itself as a party, marking the first time that a party managed to do so. This is also the first time that a party or alliance managed to win all of the elected mainland constituencies. The Parti de l'Alliance Nationale did not win any of the elected constituencies, as did the Parti Mauricien Social Démocrate. In Rodrigues, the Rodrigues People's Organisation won both of the island's two constituency seats, gaining representation for the first time.

Four best loser seats were allocated in this election, out of the maximum eight seats that can be allocated. The Labour Party and the PMSD were given two seats each in order to balance the ethnic representation in the assembly.

Voter turnout was at 88.84%, a slight decrease of 1.16 pp from the previous election.

By constituency

ConstituencyMPPartyNotes
1Grand River North West–
Port Louis WestMathieu LacléMauritian Militant Movement}}
Jérôme BoulleMauritian Militant Movement}}MMMReelected
Rajnee DyalahMauritian Militant Movement}}MMMReelected
2Port Louis South–
Port Louis CentralKader BhayatMauritian Militant Movement}}
Vijay PadaruthParti Socialiste Mauricien}}PSMElected
Noël Lee Cheong LemMauritian Militant Movement}}MMMReelected
3Port Louis Maritime–
Port Louis EastOsman GendooMauritian Militant Movement}}
Cassam UteemMauritian Militant Movement}}MMMReelected
Bashir KhodabuxMauritian Militant Movement}}MMMReelected
4Port Louis North–
Montagne LongueShree Krisna BaligadooMauritian Militant Movement}}
Jankeeparsad NundalaleeParti Socialiste Mauricien}}PSMElected
Sylvio MichelMauritian Militant Movement}}MMMReelected
5Pamplemousses–TrioletDinesh RamjuttunParti Socialiste Mauricien}}
Prem KoonjooMauritian Militant Movement}}MMMElected
Diwakur BundhunMauritian Militant Movement}}MMMElected
6Grand Baie–Poudre D'OrMadan DullooMauritian Militant Movement}}
Dharmanand FokeerMauritian Militant Movement}}MMMReelected
Armoogum ParsuramenParti Socialiste Mauricien}}PSMElected
7Piton–Riviere du RempartAnerood JugnauthMauritian Militant Movement}}
Dharam GokhoolMauritian Militant Movement}}MMMElected
Mahen UtchanahMauritian Militant Movement}}MMMElected
8Quartier Militaire–MokaVinod GoodooryParti Socialiste Mauricien}}
Rama PoonoosamyMauritian Militant Movement}}MMMElected
Rashidally SoobadarParti Socialiste Mauricien}}PSMElected
9Flacq–Bon AccueilAjay DabyParti Socialiste Mauricien}}
Ravindranath LochunMauritian Militant Movement}}MMMElected
Dwarkanath GungahMauritian Militant Movement}}MMMReelected
10Montagne Blanche–
Grand River South EastJagdishwar GoburdhunMauritian Militant Movement}}
Ramduth JaddooMauritian Militant Movement}}MMMReelected
Azize AsgarallyMauritian Militant Movement}}MMMReelected
11Vieux Grand Port–Rose BelleRadha GungoosinghParti Socialiste Mauricien}}
Anandisswar ChoolunParti Socialiste Mauricien}}PSMElected
Raj MolayeMauritian Militant Movement}}MMMElected
12Mahebourg–Plaine MagnienLutchmeeparsadsing RamsahokMauritian Militant Movement}}
Suresh Chandra PoonithMauritian Militant Movement}}MMMReelected
Jocelyn SeenyenParti Socialiste Mauricien}}PSMElected
13Riviere des Anguilles–SouillacHarish BoodhooParti Socialiste Mauricien}}
Vishnu LutchmeenaraidooMauritian Militant Movement}}MMMElected
Swalay KasenallyMauritian Militant Movement}}MMMReelected
14Savanne–Black RiverAlan GanooMauritian Militant Movement}}
Kishore DeerpalsingParti Socialiste Mauricien}}PSMElected
Arianne Navarre-MarieMauritian Militant Movement}}MMMElected
15La Caverne–PhoenixUttam JawaheerParti Socialiste Mauricien}}
Satteeanund PeerthumMauritian Militant Movement}}MMMElected
Sahid MaudarbocusMauritian Militant Movement}}MMMElected
France RoussetyLabour Party (Mauritius)}}PTrBest Loser
16Vacoas–FlorealRohit BeedassyParti Socialiste Mauricien}}
France CanabadyMauritian Militant Movement}}MMMElected
Babooram MahadooParti Socialiste Mauricien}}PSMElected
17Curepipe–MidlandsAnil GayanMauritian Militant Movement}}
Louis Percy La FranceMauritian Militant Movement}}MMMElected
Karl OffmannParti Socialiste Mauricien}}PSMElected
18Belle Rose–Quatre BornesPaul BérengerMauritian Militant Movement}}
Kailash RuheeParti Socialiste Mauricien}}PSMElected
Devanand RottooMauritian Militant Movement}}MMMElected
Michael GloverLabour Party (Mauritius)}}PTrBest Loser
19Stanley–Rose HillJayen CuttareeMauritian Militant Movement}}
Jean-Claude de l'EstracMauritian Militant Movement}}MMMReelected
Shirin Aumeeruddy-CziffraMauritian Militant Movement}}MMMReelected
20Beau Bassin–Petite RiviereRégis FinetteMauritian Militant Movement}}
Subash RamdahenParti Socialiste Mauricien}}PSMElected
Finlay SalesseMauritian Militant Movement}}MMMReelected
21RodriguesFrance FélicitéRodrigues People's Organisation}}
Serge ClairRodrigues People's Organisation}}OPRElected
Gaëtan DuvalParti Mauricien Social Démocrate}}PMSDBest Loser
Nicol FrançoisParti Mauricien Social Démocrate}}PMSDBest Loser; Reelected
Source: [OEC](https://web.archive.org/web/20100507110940/http://www.gov.mu/portal/site/eco/menuitem.37ba32a3c4783128d6c8662948a521ca/?content_id=630b9dbfa1158010VgnVCM100000ca6a12acRCRD), [(candidate affiliations)](https://archive.org/details/jprs-report_jprs-80718/page/n17/mode/2up)

Aftermath

Following the decisive victory of the new alliance, the leaders of the alliance made televised statements calling for national unity. Anerood Jugnauth promised that he would be a 'prime minister for all Mauritians' whilst Harish Boodhoo outlined that change within the country would be 'done gently'. Paul Bérenger announced that the government planned to make general elections mandatory every five years, preventing the postponement of elections which Seewoosagur Ramgoolam had done in the past.

On his part, Ramgoolam accepted defeat and the verdict of the elections and denied plans that he planned to move out of Mauritius. He chaired his final cabinet meeting on 14 June and met with the Governor-General, Dayendranath Burrenchobay, the following day.

Jugnauth was sworn in along with his ministers on 15 June at State House in Port-Louis in front of the Governor-General. The new government also included the Rodrigues People's Organisation (OPR), which entered the government for the first time. The cabinet was composed of a total of 20 ministers, with the MMM having 14 ministers, the PSM with five and the OPR receiving one minister. Serge Clair, the new minister for Rodrigues from the OPR, was separately sworn in on 16 June. A thanksgiving rally was held a week later in the Champ de Mars.

References

References

  1. (16 November 2024). "13 juin 1982: Un sévère coup de balai élimine le PAN". [[L'Express (Mauritius).
  2. [[Dieter Nohlen]], Michael Krennerich & Bernhard Thibaut (1999) ''Elections in Africa: A data handbook'', p618 {{ISBN. 0-19-829645-2
  3. [http://www.eisa.org.za/WEP/mau1967background.htm Mauritius: Background to the 1967 Legislative Assembly election] EISA
  4. [http://www.eisa.org.za/wep/mau1982results.htm Mauritius: 1982 Legislative Assembly election results] EISA
  5. (12 June 2018). "Il y a 36 ans : Le premier 60-0 de l’histoire". [[L'Express (Mauritius).
  6. Levin, Dov H.. (2016-09-19). "Partisan electoral interventions by the great powers: Introducing the PEIG Dataset". Conflict Management and Peace Science.
  7. (16 November 2016). "The 1976-1981 Parliament An insider view". [[L'Express (Mauritius).
  8. (18 December 1981). "Reactions to dissolution of parliament reported". [[Le Mauricien]].
  9. (12 June 2022). "Le 12 juin 1982 — 40 ans déjà pour le premier 60-0 !". [[Le Mauricien]].
  10. (15 February 1982). "Legislative elections scheduled". [[Agence France-Presse]].
  11. "Electoral System". Inter-Parliamentary Union.
  12. (2015). "Is it time to let go? The Best Loser System in Mauritius". Afrika Focus.
  13. [http://www.eisa.org.za/wep/mau1982election.htm Mauritius: General election of June 1982] EISA
  14. (22 April 1982). "Parties contesting election listed". [[L'Express (Mauritius).
  15. (25 April 2007). "Le RPL de Philo ou l'échec d'une autre politique". [[L'Express (Mauritius).
  16. (14 March 1982). "MMM/PSM candidates meet to discuss strategy". [[L'Express (Mauritius).
  17. (4 May 2007). "Les candidats du PAN du 11 juin 1982". [[L'Express (Mauritius).
  18. "Maurice. Victoire électorale de la gauche". [[Encyclopædia Universalis]].
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