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The Provisional Electoral Council (French: Conseil Électoral Provisoire, French pronunciation: [kɔ̃sɛj əlɛktɔʁal pʁɔvizwaʁ], CEP; Haitian Creole: Konsèy Elektoral Pwovizwa) is the electoral commission of Haiti. The CEP is responsible for presidential elections and parliamentary elections, and is Haiti's main and only legal election ...
Presidential elections were held in Haiti on 20 November 2016 after having been postponed several times. [1] The elections were overseen by the Provisional Electoral Council (CEP), [2] and were held using the two-round system, with a second round scheduled for 29 January 2017 if no candidate received an absolute majority of the votes in the first round (50% plus one vote).
Haiti's transitional presidential council - a separate body which has been acting as the government since it was installed in April - established the electoral council in a meeting.
Coalition pour la Convention de la Reconstruction de la Réconciliation des Citoyens Haitiens: 1,711: 0.11: Fresnel Larosliere: Mouvement pour l'Instauration de la Démocratie en Haiti: 1,698: 0.11: Newton Louis St Juste: Fwon Revolisyone pou Entegrasyon Mas Yo: 1,677: 0.11: Jean Wiener Theagene: Parti pour la Rénovation d'Haiti: 1,543: 0.10 ...
The United States has meanwhile pledged $200 million in support, Canada around $60 million and France close to $4 million. The U.N. spokesman said less than $11 million has so far been deposited ...
The former head of Haiti’s provisional electoral council, Pierre-Louis Opont, is the latest victim of the country’s kidnapping scourge, his abduction occurring less than 10 days after his wife ...
In January 2015, after a series of disputed, unconstitutional, electoral commissions named by President Martelly were rejected by the Parliament, a Provisional Electoral Council was created to plan the presidential and parliamentary elections later in 2015. [5] [6]
Plateforme Vérité (English: Truth Platform) was a Haitian political party co-founded by former president René Préval. [1] After the 2015-16 legislative elections, Vérité emerged as the second largest party behind only the PHTK, [2] winning 17 seats in the Chamber of Deputies [3] and three in the Senate.