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The 2009 Liberian by-elections were held by mid February and on November 10 in River Gee County and Montserrado County respectively. Both elections were caused by deaths in the Senate and both resulted in run-off elections. The Montserrado County run-off election was held on November 24. The winners of the elections were J. Nathaniel Williams in River Gee and Geraldine Doe-Sheriff in Montserrado.

Background

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River Gee County

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By mid November 2008, River Gee County Senator Isaac Nyenekarto Johnson of the Liberian Action Party (LAP) died.[1] The Senate officially notified the National Elections Commission (NEC) of his death by December.[2]

There were seven candidates in the election: J. Nathaniel Williams of the Liberia Destiny Party, Conmany B. Wesseh of the Unity Party, Hixenbaugh Kear Darbeh of the LAP, Patrick T. Dexter of the Congress for Democratic Change, Edmund B. Gibson Jr. of the National Patriotic Party, P. Tarpowah Dortu Kear of the Alliance for Peace and Democracy as well as independent candidate Jonathan Boy Charles Sogbie.[3]

Montserrado County

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Montserrado Senator Hannah G. Brent of the Congress for Democratic Change (CDC) died on August 3, 2009.[4] The National Elections Commission (NEC) was notified of her death on September 1. The by-election to fill the vacancy left by Brent's death was slated for November 10. The 53rd Legislature had experienced the most deaths in Liberia's history, with there being two vacancies in the Senate filled before Brent's death. The Montserrado by-election was the largest of these by-elections, and the largest election the NEC conducted since the 2005 general election. Montserrado is Liberia's most populous county, with a high population density. This presented challenges for the NEC.[5]

Out of eleven prospective candidates, there were ten candidates nominated for the Senate seat by October 14, when campaigning official began. One candidate was rejected by the NEC, Musu Ketter, as her check to pay registration fees bounced.[6] By September, Francis Chu-Chu Horton was petitioned by the National Democratic Party of Liberia to run for the office, but he rejected the offer.[7] Half of the candidates were nominated by political parties and the other half were independents.[6]

At this time, the ruling Unity Party (UP) was going through a merger with the Liberian Action Party (LAP) and the Liberia Unification Party (LUP). The merger was announced on April 1, but it wouldn't be finalized until January 2010. On September 22, the political alliance selected its nominee. The two candidates in the running to be nominated were Clemenceau B. Urey of the UP, an insurance businessman who defeated George Kilando in the UP primary, and Meima Sirleaf Karneh of the LUP, assistant commerce minister.[8] Urey was ultimately nominated as the UP candidate.[6]

The opposition Congress for Democratic Change (CDC) nominated Geraldine Doe-Sheriff. By late October, the former ruling National Patriotic Party (NPP) announced its endorsement of Doe-Sheriff.[9] This sparked division within the NPP, combined with the extended term of the party's leader, Theophelus Gould. The announcement of the endorsement was shortly followed by the resignation of a member of the NPP national executive committee, John T. Richardson, who served as national security advisor under President Charles Taylor. Benoni Urey, an NPP party executive, claimed that the endorsement was made without the consensus of the party's leadership. He further claimed the national executive committee had agreed not to endorse a candidate for the 2009 by-election. Benoni Urey threatened to resign from the party, as did fellow party executives Cyril Allen and Oscar Cooper.[10]

Clemenceau Urey and Doe-Sheriff, along with the Liberty Party's (LP) Abraham Darius Dillon, were considered the election's front-runners.[11] Other candidates were Jasper S. Fallah Ndaborlor of the Free Democratic Party and Wilson Kargeor Tarpeh of the Alliance for Peace and Democracy who was also backed by the Liberian People's Party. The independent candidates were Daniel G. Johnson, Grace Tee McGill Kpaan, Nathaniel Semoda Toe Jr., Jacqueline Maulyne Capehart, and Alhaji G.V. Kromah.[6][12]

Two groups, the New Deal Movement and the National Students Intellectual Council Of Liberia, filed separate objections in regard to the candidacy of Kromah. Both objected on the grounds that he was an individual reported to have committed crimes against humanity in the civil war by the Truth and Reconciliation Commission. The NEC ruled that it was outside of its authority to rule on the criminal matter.[6]

There was a debate held between all ten candidates in late October.[13] Campaigning officially ended on November 8.[6]

Aftermath

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River Gee County

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The election was held by mid February. The results of the initial election showed Williams in the lead with 2,079 votes, 32.2% of the total, compared to Wesseh's 1,528.[3] With no candidate earning 50% of the vote, a run-off election was held between the two top candidates. The run-off election saw Williams achieve victory with 3,498, 52.8% of the total.[14]

Montserrado County

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The by-election was held on November 10. It was marred by irregularities and mistakes by the NEC which garnered them criticism, including by President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf.[15] Only a few of the polling centers opened on time. Voter turnout was low.[16] This was due in part to voter apathy, as well as poor civic education prior to the election.[15] It was reported some voters were confused about where to voter, as some precinct centers had been merged in preparation for the 2011 general election.[16]

On November 11, preliminary results from 33 polling centers showed Urey ahead of Doe-Sheriff.[17] By November 12, NEC Chairman James Fromayan claimed that he had received threats on his life from members of the CDC. CDC leader George Weah maintained that there had been cheating in the 2005 general election that cost him and his party the presidency. He had warned there would be consequences if such cheating happened again.[15] The CDC denied that its members had threatened Fromayan.[18]

The full results of the first round of the election were released by November 14. They showed Doe-Sheriff ahead of Urey. Doe-Sheriff did not receive over 50% of the vote, so a run-off election was triggered, scheduled for November 24.[19] Fromayan had admitted that the election had not been conducted perfectly. By November 19, he had announced that the NEC was working with a group known as the Liberia Crusaders for Peace in an attempt spread civic education in hopes of increasing voter turnout for the second round of the election.[20]

The second round, on November 24, saw an even lower voter turn out, with only 20% of the estimated 477,000 voters casting a ballot.[21] On November 26, Doe-Sheriff was announced as the winner by the NEC.[22] She was certified by the NEC on December 1. During the certification ceremony, NEC Chairman Fromayan repeated claims that he had been threatened by CDC members. CDC leader Weah quickly rebutted these claims and called for Fromayan's resignation due to his alleged bias against the CDC.[23]

Results

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The following are the results for the 2009 by-elections from the NEC.[3][14][19][24]

2024 River Gee County Senatorial By-election, Round 1
Party Candidate Votes %
LDP J. Nathaniel Williams 2,079 32.2%
UP Conmany B. Wesseh 1,528 23.7%
Independent Jonathan Boy Charles Sogbie 1,348 20.9%
LAP Hixenbaugh Kear Darbeh 650 10.1%
CDC Patrick T. Dexter Johnson 367 5.7%
NPP Edmund B. Gibson Jr. 295 4.6%
APD P. Tarpowah Dortu Kear Jr. 183 2.8%
Total votes 6,450 100.0
Rejected ballots 379
2024 River Gee County Senatorial By-election, Round 2
Party Candidate Votes %
LDP J. Nathaniel Williams 3,498 52.8%
UP Conmany B. Wesseh 3,123 47.2%
Total votes 6,621 100.0
Rejected ballots 211
LDP gain from LAP
2024 Montserrado County Senatorial By-election, Round 1
Party Candidate Votes %
CDC Geraldine Doe-Sheriff 33,874 35.5%
UP Clemenceau Blayon Urey 28,329 29.7%
APD Wilson Kargeor Tarpeh 15,555 16.3%
Independent Alhaji G.V. Kromah 6,729 7.0%
LP A. Darius Dillon Sr. 5,418 5.7%
Independent Grace Tee McGill Kpaan 2,224 2.3%
Independent Jacqueline Maudlyne Capehart 1,244 1.3%
FDP Jasper S. Fallah Ndaborlor 1,143 1.2%
Independent Daniel G. Johnson 668 0.7%
Independent Nathaniel Semoda Toe Jr. 278 0.3%
Total votes 95,462 100.0
Rejected ballots 2,199
2024 Montserrado Senatorial By-election, Round 2
Party Candidate Votes %
CDC Geraldine Doe-Sheriff 58,384 56.0%
UP Clemenceau Blayon Urey 45,864 44.0%
Total votes 104,246 100.0
Rejected ballots 1,552
CDC hold

References

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  1. ^ "Liberia: Lap Mourns Colleague's Death". Inquirer Newspaper. AllAfrica. November 15, 2008. Retrieved August 24, 2024.
  2. ^ "Liberia: Senate Notifies NEC". Inquirer Newspaper. AllAfrica. December 11, 2008. Retrieved August 24, 2024.
  3. ^ a b c "2005 Election Results". National Elections Commission. 2009. Retrieved August 24, 2024.
  4. ^ "Hon. Hannah G. Brent, Junior Senator of Montserrado County, Republic of Liberia". TLC Africa. 2009. Retrieved August 24, 2024.
  5. ^ "Liberia: NEC Prepares for Montserrado County Senatorial By-Election". The Informer. AllAfrica. September 17, 2009. Retrieved August 24, 2024.
  6. ^ a b c d e f "Liberia: By-Election Battle Begins -NEC Passes 10 Candidates". The Informer. AllAfrica. October 15, 2009. Retrieved August 24, 2024.
  7. ^ "Liberia: Chu-Chu Horton Rejects Senatorial Petition". The Informer. AllAfrica. September 29, 2009. Retrieved August 24, 2024.
  8. ^ "Liberia: LAP-LUP-UP Merger Decides Bye-Election Runner Today". The Informer. AllAfrica. September 22, 2009. Retrieved August 24, 2024.
  9. ^ "Liberia: NPP Joins Ranks With CDC - Pushes Doe-Sheriff for Senator". The Informer. AllAfrica. October 27, 2009. Retrieved August 24, 2024.
  10. ^ "Liberia: Wrangling Engulfs NPP - John T. Richardson Leaves; Urey Others Protest NPP Pledge to CDC". The Analyst. AllAfrica. October 28, 2009. Retrieved August 24, 2024.
  11. ^ "Liberia: Monrovia tests Elections Commission". ReliefWeb. November 10, 2009. Retrieved August 24, 2024.
  12. ^ "Liberia: LPP Backs Tarpeh's Senatorial Candidacy". The Informer. AllAfrica. October 14, 2009. Retrieved August 24, 2024.
  13. ^ "FINAL REPORT" (PDF). United States Agency for International Development. March 31, 2015. p. 15. Retrieved August 24, 2024.
  14. ^ a b "2005 Election Results". National Elections Commission. 2009. Retrieved August 24, 2024.
  15. ^ a b c "Liberia: It's Ellen Vs Weah With CDC's Threat of 'Severe Consequences'". New Democrat. AllAfrica. November 12, 2009. Retrieved August 24, 2024.
  16. ^ a b "Liberia: NEC Claims Mistake in Voters Registered". New Democrat. AllAfrica. November 11, 2009. Retrieved August 24, 2024.
  17. ^ Toe, Jerome (November 12, 2009). "Liberia: Up Leads, CDC Follows in Preliminary Election Results". The Informer. AllAfrica. Retrieved August 24, 2024.
  18. ^ "Liberia's Elections Commissioner Receives Threats". Voice of America. November 18, 2009. Retrieved August 24, 2024.
  19. ^ a b "2009 Election Results". National Elections Commission. 2009. Retrieved August 24, 2024.
  20. ^ "Liberia: NEC Corrects Mistakes". The Analyst. AllAfrica. November 19, 2009. Retrieved August 24, 2024.
  21. ^ "Liberia: Poorest Voters' Show". New Democrat. AllAfrica. November 25, 2009. Retrieved August 24, 2024.
  22. ^ "Liberia: Nec Officially Declares By-Elections Results". The Analyst. AllAfrica. November 26, 2009. Retrieved August 24, 2024.
  23. ^ Poquie, Festus (December 2, 2009). "Liberia: NEC, Weah At Odds". New Democrat. AllAfrica. Retrieved August 24, 2024.
  24. ^ "2009 Election Results". National Elections Commission. 2009. Retrieved August 24, 2024.