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2002 Iraqi presidential referendum

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FieldValue
countryIraq
flag_year1991
typepresidential
previous_election1995 Iraqi presidential referendum
previous_year1995
election_date
next_year2004
next_election[2004 Iraqi presidential election](2004-iraqi-presidential-election)
image1Iraq, Saddam Hussein (222).jpg
nominee1**Saddam Hussein**
party1Arab Socialist Ba'ath Party – Iraq Region
alliance1National Progressive Front (Iraq)
popular_vote1**11,445,638**
percentage1**100%**
titlePresident
map_image1995, 2002 Iraq presidential referendum results by governorate.svg
map_captionResults by governorate
**Hussein**:
before_electionSaddam Hussein
before_partyArab Socialist Ba'ath Party – Iraq Region
posttitleElected President
after_electionSaddam Hussein
after_partyArab Socialist Ba'ath Party – Iraq Region

Hussein:

A presidential referendum took place in Iraq on October 16, 2002. It was the second presidential election under the rule of Saddam Hussein (the first having taken place in 1995). According to official statistics, the turnout was 100%, with all 11,445,638 Iraqis registered to vote having voted "yes" in a referendum whether to support another seven year-term for President Saddam Hussein, which would legally have ended in 2009.

The referendum is considered to have been fraudulent, and was dismissed as propaganda by the United States and Britain. White House Press Secretary Ari Fleischer said: "Obviously, it's not a very serious day, not a very serious vote and nobody places any credibility on it". United States State Department spokesman Richard Boucher called it "not even worthy of our ridicule". Foreign election observers were banned from observing the vote, and journalists were confined to a specific area; as such, actual voter turnout could not be estimated. The Washington Post noted that no explanation was given to explain how all the alleged votes were counted overnight. Top Iraqi deputy Izzat Ibrahim affirmed the vote's legitimacy, saying: "You may like it or not, but this is a truthful figure."

Results

References

References

  1. "Iraq: Saddam Gets 100 Percent As Everyone Votes".
  2. Chandrasekaran, Rajiv. (17 October 2002). "Claiming 100 Percent Vote for Hussein, Iraq Hails Its 'Democracy'". The Washington Post.
  3. (16 October 2002). "Saddam scores 100% in leadership ballot". The Guardian.
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