2023 Alaoyian Presidential Election: Difference between revisions

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{{Infobox election
{{Infobox election
| election_name      = 2023 Alaoyian Presidential Election
| election_name      = 2023 Alaoyian Presidential Election
| country            = [[West Arcadia]]
| country            = [[Alaoyi]]
| flag_image        = [[File:Alaoyi Red Flag.png|50px]]
| flag_image        = [[File:Alaoyi Red Flag.png|50px]]
| type              = presidential
| type              = presidential
Line 11: Line 11:
| registered = 143,370,001
| registered = 143,370,001
| turnout            = 78.1% (first round)<br>82.1% (second round)
| turnout            = 78.1% (first round)<br>82.1% (second round)
| election_date      = 19 November 2023 (first round)<br>3 December 2023 (second round)
| election_date      = 20 November 2023 (first round)<br>4 December 2023 (second round)
| map_image=  [[File:Alaoyi 2023 Election Map.png|400px]]
| map_image=  [[File:Alaoyi 2023 Election Map.png|400px]]
| image1            = File:Nicolas Sarkozy 20220927.jpg
| image1            = File:Nicolas Sarkozy 20220927.jpg
Line 46: Line 46:
}}
}}


The 2023 Alaoyian presidential election was the 9th quintannual presidential election, on 19 November. In addition to president, voters also elected members of the [[Alaoyian Senate|Senate]] and many local offices as well. As no candidate for president received more than half of the valid votes in the first round, a runoff election was held on 3 December. [[Durand Francois]] received a majority of votes cast in the second round, and therefore was elected as [[President of Alaoyi]].
The 2023 Alaoyian presidential election was the 9th quintannual presidential election, on 20 November. In addition to president, voters also elected members of the [[Alaoyian Senate|Senate]] and many local offices as well. As no candidate for president received more than half of the valid votes in the first round, a runoff election was held on 4 December. [[Durand Francois]] received a majority of votes cast in the second round, and therefore was elected as [[President of Alaoyi]].


Incumbent Democratic President [[Adriaan Breytenbach]] was ineligible to pursue a third term due to the term limits established by the Twenty-second Amendment. McCain secured the Republican nomination by March 2008, defeating former governors Mitt Romney, Mike Huckabee, and other challengers. The Democratic primaries were marked by a sharp contest between Obama and the initial front-runner, former First Lady and Senator Hillary Clinton, as well as other challengers that dropped out before most of the primaries were held, including Senators John Edwards and Obama's future running mate, Joe Biden. Clinton's victory in the New Hampshire primary made her the first woman to win a major party's presidential primary.[nb 1] After a long primary season, Obama secured the Democratic nomination in June 2008.
Incumbent [[Alaoyian Democratic Alliance|Democratic]] President [[Adriaan Breytenbach]] was ineligible to pursue a third term due to the term limits established in Alaoyi's constitution. The Democratic nomination thus went to the leader of the right-wing Democrats and former governor of [[Blinnoblair]], [[Alexander O'Haig]]. The [[Alaoyian Socialist Party|Socialist]] nomination went to the former mayor of and senator from [[Magada]]. Other major nominations included businessman [[Chris O'Riley]] of the [[National Populist Party (Alaoyi)|National Populist Party]], former ambassador [[Finch Matthews (Alaoyian politician)|Finch Matthews]] of the [[Alaoyian Republican Alliance|Republican Alliance]], and [[Joren Kleinlugtenbelt]] of the [[Alaoyian Farmer's Alliance|Farmer's Alliance]].


Early campaigning focused heavily on the Iraq War and Bush's unpopularity. McCain supported the war, as well as a troop surge that had begun in 2007, while Obama strongly opposed the war. Bush endorsed McCain, but the two did not campaign together, and Bush did not appear in person at the 2008 Republican National Convention. Obama campaigned on the theme that "Washington must change," while McCain emphasized his experience. The campaign was strongly affected by the onset of a major financial crisis, which peaked in September 2008. McCain's decision to suspend his campaign during the height of the financial crisis backfired as voters viewed his response as erratic.[4]
Early campaigning focused on Breytenbach, a relatively popular president, and his legacy. While Democratic nominee Alexander O'Haig was of Breytenbach's party, he was from a rival faction that disagreed with the more moderate Breytenbach on most major issues, while Durand was more in line with his views on foreign policy and decentralization. In contrast, O'Riley and Matthews attempted to portray themselves as outsiders seeking to clean up politics, while Joren Kleinlugtenbelt tried to portray himself a centrist. Later in the campaign, amidst a brief but not insignifigant economic downturn and high tensions with [[Inglaterra]] and [[Dilania]], the campaigns began to center around their response to the crisis and their foreign policy proposals.


Lula received the most votes in the first round, with 48.43% to Bolsonaro's 43.20%, being the first presidential candidate to obtain more votes than the incumbent president in Brazil. While Lula came close to winning in the first round, the difference between the two leading candidates was closer than what opinion polls had suggested, and right-wing parties made gains in the National Congress. Nevertheless, Lula's vote share was the second-best performance for the Workers' Party in the first round of a presidential election, behind only his own record of 48.61% in 2006. In the second round, Lula received 50.90% of the votes to Bolsonaro's 49.10%, the closest presidential election result in Brazil to date. Lula became the first person to secure a third presidential term, receiving the highest number of votes in a Brazilian election. At the same time, Bolsonaro became the first incumbent president to lose a bid for a second term since a 1997 constitutional amendment allowing consecutive re-election.
Durand received the most votes in the first round, with 32.3% to second place O'Riley's 19.7%, outperforming his expected numbers in part due to a lower than expected result for Finch Matthews, his primary rival among the Alaoyian left. Another surprise occurred when National Populist Chris O'Riley took more votes than Democrat Alexander O'Haig, the first time where the incumbent party did not make it to the second round of the election since the [[2003 Alaoyian President Election|2003 election]], when incumbent president and independent candidate [[Breasal Ó Conaill]] and Democratic Alliance candidate [[Mbat Mokaril]] O'Riley beat O'Haig by a margin of 90,000 votes out of 44.5 million cast for the two candidates, a margin of 19.7% for O'Riley versus 19.6% for O'Haig. Nevertheless, Durand's performance was the best-ever for a Socialist in the first round of a presidential election. In the second round, Durand received 53.1% of the vote to O'Riley's 46.9%, a comfortable margin exceeded only by Adriaan Breytenbach's electoral victory in the [[2013 Alaoyian Presidential Election|2013 election]]. Durand became the first former executive of a federal city to win election and the first ever [[Marchan]] president.


Obama won a decisive victory over McCain, winning the Electoral College and the popular vote by a sizable margin, including states that had not voted for the Democratic presidential candidate since 1976 (North Carolina) and 1964 (Indiana, Virginia, and Nebraska's 2nd congressional district). Obama received the largest share of the popular vote won by a Democrat since Lyndon B. Johnson in 1964 and was the first Democrat to win an outright majority of the popular vote since Jimmy Carter in 1976. Obama flipped nine states that had voted Republican in 2004: Colorado, Florida, Indiana, Iowa, Nevada, New Mexico, North Carolina, Ohio, and Virginia, as well as Nebraska's 2nd congressional district. This also marked the last time a Democrat carried Indiana and North Carolina in a presidential election.
International observers affirmed that the election was free and fair, with delegations from both [[The Furbish Islands]] and [[Greater Niagara]] praising the elections as an exercise in free democracy. This was the first election in Alaoyian history to feature no Ndibeanyan candidates, and the first election with multiple Diash Alaoyians as major candidates.
 
{{Alaoyi topics}}
{{Manala topics}}
[[Category:Manala]]
[[Category:Galia]]
[[Category: Alaoyi]]
[[Category: Alaoyian Elections]]

Latest revision as of 04:28, 22 January 2024

2023 Alaoyian Presidential Election
Alaoyi Red Flag.png
← 2018 20 November 2023 (first round)
4 December 2023 (second round)
2028 →
Registered143,370,001
Turnout78.1% (first round)
82.1% (second round)
  Nicolas Sarkozy 20220927.jpg DOOR STEP 2016-07-12 Denis Naughten (27644046983).jpg
Nominee Durand Francois Chris O'Riley
Party Socialist National Populist
Home state Magada Iomglas
Popular vote 62,502,295 55,204,476
Percentage 53.1% 46.9%

Alaoyi 2023 Election Map.png
     Entities won by Durand Francois      Entities won by Chris O'Riley

President before election

Adriaan Breytenbach
Democratic

Elected President

Durand Francois
Socialist

The 2023 Alaoyian presidential election was the 9th quintannual presidential election, on 20 November. In addition to president, voters also elected members of the Senate and many local offices as well. As no candidate for president received more than half of the valid votes in the first round, a runoff election was held on 4 December. Durand Francois received a majority of votes cast in the second round, and therefore was elected as President of Alaoyi.

Incumbent Democratic President Adriaan Breytenbach was ineligible to pursue a third term due to the term limits established in Alaoyi's constitution. The Democratic nomination thus went to the leader of the right-wing Democrats and former governor of Blinnoblair, Alexander O'Haig. The Socialist nomination went to the former mayor of and senator from Magada. Other major nominations included businessman Chris O'Riley of the National Populist Party, former ambassador Finch Matthews of the Republican Alliance, and Joren Kleinlugtenbelt of the Farmer's Alliance.

Early campaigning focused on Breytenbach, a relatively popular president, and his legacy. While Democratic nominee Alexander O'Haig was of Breytenbach's party, he was from a rival faction that disagreed with the more moderate Breytenbach on most major issues, while Durand was more in line with his views on foreign policy and decentralization. In contrast, O'Riley and Matthews attempted to portray themselves as outsiders seeking to clean up politics, while Joren Kleinlugtenbelt tried to portray himself a centrist. Later in the campaign, amidst a brief but not insignifigant economic downturn and high tensions with Inglaterra and Dilania, the campaigns began to center around their response to the crisis and their foreign policy proposals.

Durand received the most votes in the first round, with 32.3% to second place O'Riley's 19.7%, outperforming his expected numbers in part due to a lower than expected result for Finch Matthews, his primary rival among the Alaoyian left. Another surprise occurred when National Populist Chris O'Riley took more votes than Democrat Alexander O'Haig, the first time where the incumbent party did not make it to the second round of the election since the 2003 election, when incumbent president and independent candidate Breasal Ó Conaill and Democratic Alliance candidate Mbat Mokaril O'Riley beat O'Haig by a margin of 90,000 votes out of 44.5 million cast for the two candidates, a margin of 19.7% for O'Riley versus 19.6% for O'Haig. Nevertheless, Durand's performance was the best-ever for a Socialist in the first round of a presidential election. In the second round, Durand received 53.1% of the vote to O'Riley's 46.9%, a comfortable margin exceeded only by Adriaan Breytenbach's electoral victory in the 2013 election. Durand became the first former executive of a federal city to win election and the first ever Marchan president.

International observers affirmed that the election was free and fair, with delegations from both The Furbish Islands and Greater Niagara praising the elections as an exercise in free democracy. This was the first election in Alaoyian history to feature no Ndibeanyan candidates, and the first election with multiple Diash Alaoyians as major candidates.