Morocco elections ‘are a test for conservatives’


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RABAT // Religious-based parties dominated Morocco’s urban areas in local elections, but trailed in total seats behind two parties with strong backing in the countryside, according to final results announced on Saturday.

The elections were seen as an important test of the popularity of the conservative government which came to power after the demonstrations of the 2011 Arab Spring and face new parliamentary elections next year.

The local and regional councils manage municipal affairs in conjunction with state-appointed officials and are being strengthened under a new government policy of regionalisation.

Some 30,000 local council seats and 700 regional council seats were contested by more than 140,000 candidates from at least 30 parties. The ministry reported a turnout of 53 per cent.

The Party for Justice and Development took the most seats in the regional councils with 25 per cent of the total, but fell short in the local councils, which are weighted towards rural areas.

The Party of Authenticity and Modernity took 6,655 seats of the local councils, 21 per cent, while the conservative Istiqlal (Independence) Party took 5,106 seats, or 16 per cent of the total.

The PJD is mainly strong in the cities among educated voters and took control of councils in the main cities of Casablanca, Tangiers, Rabat, Fez and Agadir with just under 16 per cent of seats – three times what it won in 2009 local contests.

The PAM was created in 2008 by one of the king’s counselors and it dominated local elections the following year.

It fared poorly, however, in the 2011 parliamentary elections amid calls for reform. Those elections were dominated by the PJD which went on to form a government.

Unlike their counterparts elsewhere around the region, Morocco’s religious parties have played down religious issues in their campaigns and preferred to focus on combatting corruption and unemployment.

* Associated Press