Baba Sangara
JF-Expert Member
- Dec 16, 2007
- 293
- 154
Hotel Ivory
Crossing ethnic lines
I got a new theory to explain why voters of ethnic groups not close to Gbagbo set tribal loyalties aside and voted Gbagbo to a non insignificant extent.
Back in 2001, in Senegal, I had the chance to tag along with the incumbent PDS party (incumbent for a year after 26 year in opposition) campaigning in the interior of the country for the parliamentary elections that year.
Essentially, it worked like this, you get to a village that has already prepared ahead for the arrival and people have dressed up in their best boubous. A sound system is set up and then dance shows and theatre are mixed with political speeches, and there are gazillions of children. The whole thing goes on late into the night and is really a great party. Occassionally I was given the microphone and said a few words in French knowing that 98% of the audience only spoke the local wolof language. Still got very loud cheers just going on stage though think it was the Wow, its a toubab factor.
Then at 2-3 oclock in the night the party representatives get down to business with the village elders and discuss quite matter of factly how many bags of rice, cellphones, coverage of medical costs etc, that the PDS party will give to the village in return for its votes.
Incumbent advantage
So political campaigning in Africa is a lot of fun, but very expensive. And the incumbent has the big advantage of being able to use the resources of the state to do campaigning. From the villages perspective it makes a lot of sense to vote for the incumbent, they are likely to get more stuff from the incumbent, and they want to be on the winning side, and that is most likely the incumbent side. Paved roads have a tendency to be built more to villages that voted for the incumbent than the opposition.
Crossing ethnic lines
I got a new theory to explain why voters of ethnic groups not close to Gbagbo set tribal loyalties aside and voted Gbagbo to a non insignificant extent.
Back in 2001, in Senegal, I had the chance to tag along with the incumbent PDS party (incumbent for a year after 26 year in opposition) campaigning in the interior of the country for the parliamentary elections that year.
Essentially, it worked like this, you get to a village that has already prepared ahead for the arrival and people have dressed up in their best boubous. A sound system is set up and then dance shows and theatre are mixed with political speeches, and there are gazillions of children. The whole thing goes on late into the night and is really a great party. Occassionally I was given the microphone and said a few words in French knowing that 98% of the audience only spoke the local wolof language. Still got very loud cheers just going on stage though think it was the Wow, its a toubab factor.
Then at 2-3 oclock in the night the party representatives get down to business with the village elders and discuss quite matter of factly how many bags of rice, cellphones, coverage of medical costs etc, that the PDS party will give to the village in return for its votes.
Incumbent advantage
So political campaigning in Africa is a lot of fun, but very expensive. And the incumbent has the big advantage of being able to use the resources of the state to do campaigning. From the villages perspective it makes a lot of sense to vote for the incumbent, they are likely to get more stuff from the incumbent, and they want to be on the winning side, and that is most likely the incumbent side. Paved roads have a tendency to be built more to villages that voted for the incumbent than the opposition.