2005 Sri Lankan presidential election

Presidential elections were held in Sri Lanka on 17 November 2005. Nominations were accepted on 7 September 2005 and electoral participation was 73.73%. Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa of the governing United People's Freedom Alliance was elected, receiving 50.3% of all votes cast.

2005 Sri Lankan presidential election

← 199917 November 20052010 →
Turnout73.73%
 
NomineeMahinda RajapaksaRanil Wickremesinghe
PartySLFPUNP
AllianceUPFAUNF
Popular vote4,887,1524,706,366
Percentage50.29%48.43%


President before election

Chandrika Kumaratunga
SLFP

Elected President

Mahinda Rajapaksa
SLFP

Presidential term controversy edit

At first, there was doubt whether the election would be held at all. President Chandrika Kumaratunga had called the 1999 election one year ahead of schedule; she argued that the extra year should be appended to her second term, and filed suit to do this. The Supreme Court of Sri Lanka rejected her claims and the election went ahead.

Campaign edit

Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa quickly emerged as the candidate for the Sri Lanka Freedom Party and Ranil Wickremesinghe for the United National Party. Both candidates tried to round up the support of minor parties. Rajapaksa needed to re-assemble the alliance with the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna that existed at the parliamentary level (the United People's Freedom Alliance). After he agreed to reject federalism and renegotiate the ceasefire with the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam, the JVP and the Jathika Hela Urumaya endorsed him.

After that, Wickremesinghe's only hope of victory was through the support of the island's ethnic minorities, given his generally more conciliatory stance on the ethnic issue. He secured the endorsement of the main Muslim party, the Sri Lanka Muslim Congress, and the Ceylon Workers' Congress representing the estate Tamils. He could not, however, obtain the backing of the main Sri Lankan Tamil party, the Tamil National Alliance. Any hopes for Wickremesinghe's victory were effectively dashed when the LTTE ordered Tamil voters, most of whom would likely have voted for him, to boycott the polls.

Economic issues also worked to Rajapaksa's favour. Sri Lanka had enjoyed strong growth under Wickremesinghe's free-market policies when he was prime minister from 2001 to 2004, but he had also pursued controversial privatizations which Rajapaksa promised to halt. Rajapaksa also promised a policy of economic nationalism.

Results edit

CandidatePartyVotes%
Mahinda RajapaksaSri Lanka Freedom Party4,887,15250.29
Ranil WickremesingheUnited National Party4,706,36648.43
Siritunga JayasuriyaUnited Socialist Party35,4250.36
A. A. SuraweeraNational Development Front31,2380.32
Victor HettigodaUnited Lanka People's Party14,4580.15
Chamil JayaneththiNew Left Front9,2960.10
Aruna de SoyzaRuhuna People's Party7,6850.08
Wimal GeeganageSri Lanka National Front6,6390.07
Anura de SilvaUnited Lalith Front6,3570.07
Ajith ArachchigeDemocratic Unity Alliance5,0820.05
Wije DiasSocialist Equality Party3,5000.04
Nelson PereraSri Lanka Progressive Front2,5250.03
Hewaheenipellage DharmadwajaUnited National Alternative Front1,3160.01
Total9,717,039100.00
Valid votes9,717,03998.88
Invalid/blank votes109,7391.12
Total votes9,826,778100.00
Registered voters/turnout13,327,16073.73
Source: Election Commission

District results edit

Districts won by Rajapaksa
Districts won by Wickremesinghe
Summary of the 2005 Sri Lankan presidential election by electoral district[1]
DistrictProvinceRajapaksaWickremesingheOthersTurnout
Votes%Votes%Votes%
ColomboWestern534,43147.96%569,62751.12%10,1920.92%76.75%
GampahaWestern596,69854.78%481,76444.23%10,8150.99%80.71%
KalutaraWestern341,69355.48%266,04343.20%8,1241.32%81.43%
KandyCentral315,67244.30%387,15054.33%9,7981.37%79.65%
MataleCentral120,53348.09%125,93750.25%4,1501.66%79.04%
Nuwara EliyaCentral99,55027.97%250,42870.37%5,8971.66%80.78%
GalleSouthern347,22358.41%23932040.26%7,9251.33%81.94%
MataraSouthern27941161.85%16582736.71%6,4841.44%80.96%
HambantotaSouthern202,91863.43%112,71235.23%4,2951.34%81.41%
JaffnaNorthern1,96725.00%5,52370.20%1,0344.8%1.21%
VanniNorthern17,19720.36%65,79877.89%2,8791.75%34.30%
BatticaloaEastern28,83618.87%121,51479.51%4,2651.62%48.51%
AmparaEastern122,32942.88%159,19855.81%6,6811.31%72.7%
TrincomaleeEastern55,68037.04%92,19761.33%4,5511.63%63.84%
KurunegalaNorth Western468,50752.56%418,80946.72%17,6390.72%80.51%
PuttalamNorth Western160,68648.14%169,26450.71%3,8331.15%71.68%
AnuradhapuraNorth Central231,04055.08%182,95642.62%5,4382.3%78.98%
PolonnaruwaNorth Central110,49952.61%97,14246.25%2,3891.14%80.43%
BadullaUva192,73445.18%226,58253.11%7,2831.71%81.29%
MonaragalaUva126,09456.94%92,24441.65%3,1121.41%81.16%
RatnapuraSabaragamuwa294,26053.01%252,83845.55%7,9761.44%83.89%
KegalleSabaragamuwa239,18451.02%223,48347.67%6,1061.31%81.19%
Total4,887,15250.29%4,706,36648.43%123,5211.28%73.73%

Maps edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Result of Presidential Election 2005 (District)" (PDF). Department of Elections, Sri Lanka. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2009-03-04. Retrieved 2010-09-03.