Algeria: National Liberation Front Earns Most Seats in Legislative Elections

Published June 24th, 2021 - 09:21 GMT
Legislative elections ends with FLN gets major seats.
Abou El-Fadhl Baadji, Secretary General of the National Liberation Front (FLN), gives a press conference at the party headquarters in the capital Algiers on June 16, 2021. Algeria's long-dominant National Liberation Front (FLN) won weekend parliamentary elections, but with a significantly reduced number of seats and with the country's lowest ever turnout at 23 percent, the electoral board said on June 15. Ryad KRAMDI / AFP
Highlights
President of Constitutional Council announced final results of elections held on June 12

Algeria’s ruling party the National Liberation Front (FLN) was the winner of general elections held on June 12, securing 98 of parliament’s 407 seats, according to the final results announced Wednesday. 

Speaking on state television, Kamel Feniche, president of the Constitutional Council, said there were some changes in the distribution of seats in various states after examining objections made by independent lists and political parties.

Of the 361 objections to the council, 48 were accepted, he noted, and the poll results were canceled and corrected in some states.


Feniche said the FLN, one of the "pro-regime" parties during the era of former President Abdelaziz Bouteflika, was forced to leave the administration as a result of popular movements in 2019.

It took the lead with a total of 98 seats, corresponding to 24.07% of the 407 seats in the National People's Assembly, he added.

In parliament, independents won 84 seats and the Islamic-leaning Peace Society Movement 65, while the pro-regime Democratic National Rally party won 58 seats, said Feniche, adding the Future Party has 48 seats, while the National Building Movement won 39 seats, followed by the Justice and Development Front party with two seats.

Algeria went to the ballot box on June 12 to elect 407 representatives of the National People's Assembly.

Only 30.2% of the country’s more than 24 million registered voters cast ballots, which was the lowest turnout ever recorded in an Algerian election.

This article has been adapted from its original source.

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