Madagascar presidential election
The independent Electoral Commission of Madagascar proposed the country’s 2024 general election dates as the government urges turn up. Image by flickr.com

Home » Madagascar will hold presidential election in November 2024

Madagascar will hold presidential election in November 2024

Voters in Madagascar will go to the polls by the end of the year to re-elect President Andry Rajoelina or pick a successor, the government announced Tuesday 11 July 2023. “The head of government summons voters to the polls” on November 9 for the “first round of presidential election” and on “December 20 for the […]

12-07-23 20:34
Madagascar presidential election
The independent Electoral Commission of Madagascar proposed the country’s 2024 general election dates as the government urges turn up. Image by flickr.com

Voters in Madagascar will go to the polls by the end of the year to re-elect President Andry Rajoelina or pick a successor, the government announced Tuesday 11 July 2023.

“The head of government summons voters to the polls” on November 9 for the “first round of presidential election” and on “December 20 for the second round, if there is one”, said a statement from Prime Minister Christian Ntsay’s office.

ALSO READ: Trial to begin in Madagascar over alleged coup plot

WHO WON THE LAST MADAGASCAR ELECTION?

The dates had already been proposed by the Independent National Electoral Commission. The vote comes at a tense time on the large Indian Ocean island amid questions about Rajoelina’s dual nationality.

Rajoelina, who won the last vote in December 2018 in an election beset by fraud allegations, was born in Antsirabe, a town in central Madagascar, but was secretly naturalised in France in 2014.

ALSO READ: Eben Etzebeth ‘very emotional’ after father’s tragic death

Under local law, if a person acquires foreign citizenship, he or she automatically loses the Madagascan nationality and cannot stand for public office in any election.

TGV PARTY DISPUTES THE INTERPRETATION OF THE LAW

But Rajoelina’s TGV party is vigorously disputing the interpretation of the law, saying his dual citizenship does not stand in the way of his candidacy. A former mayor of Antananarivo, the 49-year-old Rajoelina, first came to power in 2009, ousting Marc Ravalomanana with the backing of the military.

ALSO READ: Madagascar sacks health minister following call for international help

He returned to the presidency in 2019 after beating archrival Ravalomanana in the 2018 two-round election. The opposition and rights groups accuse his government of stifling dissent in one of the poorest nations in the world.

str/sn/bp
© Agence France-Presse