Jump to navigation

Liberia

Boost for opposition alliance as Weah faces run-off

The President's hopes of an easy victory have been scuppered by a razor-thin margin in the first round of voting

A run-off appears to be inevitable. President George Weah and opposition leader Joseph Boakai were on 43.80% of the vote and 43.54% respectively, according to tallied results from 72.92% of polling stations in the 10 October polls released by the electoral commission. It is inconceivable that either will clear the 50% winning threshold.

The second round will be held on 7 November.

The race is much tighter than in 2017, when Weah won the first round with 38.4% of the vote ahead of Boakai's 28.8% before going on to win the run-off by a 61.5%-38.5% margin. That represents a major setback for Weah's camp, which had been expecting an easy victory as recently as several months ago.

Ahead of the first round, the alliance of Boakai and Prince Yormie Johnson contended that they had the numbers to beat Weah in a run-off. They had also accused Weah of manipulating the electoral commission and other state institutions to ensure a first round victory (Dispatches, 11/10/23 Clashes mar run-up to national elections).

United States Secretary of State Antony Blinken had warned that officials suspected of rigging or manipulating the polls or of election violence would face travel bans.

Voting was peaceful and well-managed, according to international observers.

However, the electoral commission, which has been widely criticised for a perceived lack of transparency in administering the polls, is still under close scrutiny from international election observers from the European Union, United States and Economic Community of West African States, and others.

In a statement on 15 October, Ecowas said that it was aware of 'attempts by some Liberian stakeholders to declare premature victories or put undue pressure on the National Elections Commission'.



Related Articles

Weah stays in pole position

The controversial president has a poor governing record, but no candidate looks strong enough to defeat him in October’s poll

The temperature is rising fast in the run-up to Liberia's parliamentary and presidential election in October. Last month, President George Weah used the occasion of his sixth annual...


West Africa, according to Mr Taylor

Charles Taylor and his ally, Burkina Faso's Blaise Compaoré, are undermining peace in the region – and they have more plans

Among others, Ghana, Nigeria, Sierra Leone, Britain and the United States believe Liberian President Charles Taylor has trained and armed the brutally effective rebels of Sierra Leone’s Revolutionary...


Killers united

The Norwegian court trying Anders Behring Breivik, the self-confessed killer of 77 people in July 2011, has heard evidence on his stay in Liberia. In the 1,500-page...


Flag-waving, gun-running, all the conveniences

Despite all its domestic troubles, Liberia is host to the world's second-largest maritime open-registry, better known as a flag of convenience. Until 1994, when it was overtaken by...