Botswana faces key democratic challenges � Afrobarometer

UDC members
UDC members

Although Botswana has successfully institutionalised many of the rules and procedures of electoral democracy, the country still faces several key democratic challenges.

This is according to the Afrobarometer report titled: “Botswana’s democratic consolidation: What will it take?” dated January 2016 complied by Rorisang Lekalake. “One of its longstanding weaknesses has been low levels of civic engagement. Voter turnout as a proportion of the eligible population has failed to exceed 50 percent in seven of the country’s 11 elections, and voter apathy is a particular challenge among the nation’s youth. The country’s Independent Electoral Commission (IEC) has struggled to increase voter registration since its creation in 1997. Weak electoral participation is exacerbated by the absence of a strong civil society sector to promote civic education and participation between elections,” reads the report

The report says political opposition in Botswana has also been relatively weak, and opposition parties have struggled to present themselves as an alternative to the ruling Botswana Democratic Party (BDP), which subtitled its 2004 election manifesto, “There is still no alternative.” “According to the June/July 2014 Afrobarometer survey, however, a plurality (44 percent) of Batswana agree (vs 38 percent who disagree) that the opposition does provide a viable alternative to the ruling party.  “Furthermore, the combined strength of the Umbrella for Democratic Change  coalition resulted in a highly competitive election in October 2014. For the first time in the country’s history, the BDP won less than a two-thirds majority of parliamentary seats in contention, and its share of the popular vote dipped below half.”

Editor's Comment
Boko should stop the fighting and start the delivering

With his theme of 'Delivering on Our Promise, One Step at a Time', he sought to project an image of a focused, determined leader building a new ‘Rome’. Sadly, parts of his speech were not about laying bricks, but about settling old scores.It is deeply worrying that a head of government would use such a pivotal national address to launch another bitter broadside against the media and his political detractors. His portrayal of the...

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