Vegas Bob wrote:
Quote:
To our resident Historians (where are you DD?)
Not all that much an historian on Costa Rica elections but will share what I have learned about the process.
After the polling places close on Sunday the ballots at each polling place are counted manually and the results then transmitted electronically to the Tribunal Supremo de Elecciones (TSE). They add up all the numbers and announce the winner usually sometime early Sunday night.
It is important to understand that this pronouncement is not officially declaring the winner only announcing who has apparently won. The margin of the winner is usually large enough that the winner is apparent and the announcement can be made with reasonable certainty that it is correct. The ballots from the polling places are brought to the TSE in San Jose. The ballots, all of them, are then manually counted and an official pronouncement of the winner is made. This normally takes about 2 weeks. If no candidate received at least 40% of the vote a runoff election is held on the first Sunday of April between the top 2 vote getters.
This year there was not a wide enough margin to declare the unofficial winner on Sunday night so we will have to wait the two weeks to when the manual count is finished.
Hand-Solo wrote:Quote:
It is also funny Solis took most major areas in central valley (San Jose, Allejula, Heredia), but Arias swept the outskirts
The reason given for this is that the Partido Liberacion Nacional (PNL) is an old established political party with campaign workers firmly entrenched through out the country. They turned the vote out for Arias in the rural areas. The Partido Accion Cuidadane (PAC) only came about in 2002 when Solis broke away from the PNL and started the PAC. They do not have an established base of workers in the rural areas and therefore did not do well in those sections.
Osgood wrote:Quote:
with it being so, close a race,they could have another run-off in april..........
The only time a run off is held is when one candidate does not receive at least 40.0% of the vote. In this case both Arias and Solis are running above 40% so it would seem unlikely that neither will top 40% in the final tally. An interesting footnote. In the event of a dead heat both receiving the exact same amount of votes there would still not be a runoff if they were over the 40% threshold. Under CR law the winner would be the older candidate. In this case Arias is 65 Solis is 51 so Arias would be declared the winner.
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