Partial general elections were held in Suriname in March and April 1870 to elect three of the nine elected members of the Colonial States.
Electoral system
The Colonial States consisted of nine elected members and four appointed by the Governor-General.[1] Elected members served six-year terms, with three members elected every two years. Following the first elections in 1866 to elect all nine members, three would serve until 1868, three until 1870 and three until 1872. The 1870 election was for the seats held by Daniel Benjamins [nl], G.J.A. Bosch Reitz [nl] and N.T.A. Arlaud [nl].
The elections were held using the two-round system, with suffrage restricted to men meeting certain criteria. Voters had multiple votes, and any candidate receiving a number of votes equivalent to over 50% of the valid ballots cast was elected in the first round. If not all seats were filled, a second round was held with twice the number of candidates as seats remaining, who were the candidates who received the most votes but failed to be elected in the first round.
Results
As there were 159 valid ballots cast, candidates required 80 votes to be elected in the first round.
Two candidates were elected in the first round, with a run-off taking place between the next two candidates for the third seat.
In August 1871 J.V. Bouguenon [nl] (who had been elected in 1866 and was up for re-election in 1872) was replaced by Johannes Cornelis Muller [nl], who took his place in October 1871.[2]
References
^Ngo Chun Luk & Hamied Ahmadali (July 2015). "Access to Electoral Rights: Suriname"(PDF). European University Institute. Archived(PDF) from the original on 2024-02-03. Retrieved 2024-02-04.