Zimbabwean general election, 1990

Zimbabwean presidential election, 1990
Zimbabwe
23 March 1990

 
Candidate Robert Mugabe Edgar Tekere
Party ZANU-PF Zimbabwe Unity Movement
Popular vote 2,026,976 413,840
Percentage 83.05% 16.95%

President before election

Robert Mugabe
ZANU-PF

Elected President

Robert Mugabe
ZANU-PF

This article is part of a series on the
politics and government of
Zimbabwe
See also

Politics portal

General elections were held in Zimbabwe on 23 March 1990 to elect the President and Parliament. They were the first elections to be contested under the amended constitution of 1987, which established an elected executive presidency and abolished the Senate. They were also the first ever elections in the country to be contested on a single roll, i.e. with no separate voting for whites and blacks.

The result was a victory for incument President Robert Mugabe, whose ZANU-PF party won 117 of the 120 elected seats in Parliament.[1]

Results

President

Candidate Party Votes %
Robert MugabeZANU-PF2,026,97683.05
Edgar TekereZimbabwe Unity Movement413,84016.95
Invalid/blank votes146,388
Total2,587,204100
Registered voters/turnout4,799,33353.91
Source: African Elections database

Parliament

Party Votes % Seats +/–
ZANU-PF1,690,07180.54117+53
Zimbabwe Unity Movement369,03117.592New
ZANU-Ndonga19,4480.9310
UANC11,1910.530New
National Democratic Union4980.020New
Independents7,9540.380–1
Invalid/blank votes139,653
Total2,237,846100120+20
Source: African Elections Database

References

  1. Elections in Zimbabwe African Elections Database
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Monday, December 28, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.