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Belarusian presidential election, 2015

Belarusian presidential election, 2015
Belarus
← 2010 11 October 2015 2020 →
  Alexander Lukashenko crop.jpeg Tacciana Karatkievič.jpeg
Nominee Alexander Lukashenko Tatsiana Karatkevich
Party Independent BSDP(A)
Popular vote 5,102,478 271,426
Percentage 83.47% 4.44%

 
Nominee Sergei Gaidukevich Nikolai Ulakhovich
Party LDP BPP
Popular vote 201,945 102,131
Percentage 3.30% 1.67%

President before election

Alexander Lukashenko
Independent

Elected President

Alexander Lukashenko
Independent


Alexander Lukashenko
Independent

Alexander Lukashenko
Independent

Presidential elections were held in Belarus on 11 October 2015. Long-term president Alexander Lukashenko ran for his fifth term in office, having won every presidential election since independence in 1991. He was re-elected with 83.47% of the vote. The 'against all' option received more votes than any opposition candidate.

Prior to the vote, six incarcerated opposition figures were pardoned by Lukashenko. The move was welcomed by the OSCE electoral observer mission with the head of the delegation, Kent Härstedt, saying: "The recent release of political prisoners and a welcoming approach to observers were positive developments. However, the hope that this gave us for broader electoral progress was largely unfulfilled." The International Federation for Human Rights reported that it is likely that released political prisoners in Belarus still have many rights curtailed, such as inability to work for the government or run for public office, police visitations, and restriction of travel. Fewer protests occurred during this presidential election than during others, mostly due to unease over the Maidan protests in Ukraine two years prior. The government of Belarus exploited this unease by advocating stability over change, and even opposition leaders opposed protests.

A total of eight candidates attempted to register to run in the elections by collecting the required 100,000 signatures; incumbent President Alexander Lukashenko running as an independent, Belarusian Left Party "A Just World" chairman Sergey Kalyakin, Liberal Democratic Party chairman Sergei Gaidukevich, People's referendum member Tatsiana Karatkevich, United Civic Party chairman Anatoly Lebedko, economist Viktor Tereshchenko (who ran in the 2010 elections), unemployed teacher Zhanna Romanovskaya and Belarusian Patriotic Party chairman Nikolai Ulakhovich.


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