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Mali elects on the national level a head of state – the president – and a legislature. The president is elected for a five-year term by the people. The National Assembly (Assemblée Nationale) has 160 members, elected for a five-year term, 147 members elected in single-seat constituencies and 13 members elected by Malians living abroad.
Mali has a multi-party system, with numerous parties in which no one party often has a chance of gaining power alone, and parties must work with each other to form coalition governments.
On 12 November 2015, the National Assembly voted in favour of a gender parity law requiring at least thirty percent of elected or appointed officials to be women.[1] The law was ratified the following month as Law 2015-052 of 18 December 2015.[2]
| Candidate | Party | First round | Second round | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Votes | % | Votes | % | |||
| Ibrahim Boubacar Keïta | Rally for Mali | 1,331,132 | 41.70 | 1,791,926 | 67.16 | |
| Soumaïla Cissé | Union for the Republic and Democracy | 567,679 | 17.78 | 876,124 | 32.84 | |
| Aliou Boubacar Diallo | Democratic Alliance for Peace | 256,404 | 8.03 | |||
| Cheick Modibo Diarra | CMD | 236,025 | 7.39 | |||
| Housseini Amion Guindo | Convergence for the Development of Mali | 124,506 | 3.90 | |||
| Oumar Mariko | African Solidarity for Democracy and Independence | 74,300 | 2.33 | |||
| Modibo Kone | Mali Kanu Movement | 72,941 | 2.29 | |||
| Choguel Kokalla Maïga | Patriotic Movement for Renewal | 68,970 | 2.16 | |||
| Harouna Sankare | Harouna Movement | 57,406 | 1.80 | |||
| Mamadou Sidibé | Party for the Restoration of Malian Values | 54,274 | 1.70 | |||
| Modibo Sidibé | Alternative Forces for Renewal and Emergence | 45,453 | 1.42 | |||
| Kalfa Sanogo | Alliance for Democracy in Mali (unofficial) | 38,892 | 1.22 | |||
| Mamadou Igor Diarra | 36,124 | 1.13 | ||||
| Modibo Kadjoke | Alliance for Mali | 30,479 | 0.95 | |||
| lMoussa Sinko Coulibaly | Independent | 30,232 | 0.95 | |||
| Adama Kane | Independent | 26,084 | 0.82 | |||
| Daba Diawara | Party for Independence, Democracy and Solidarity | 22,991 | 0.72 | |||
| Mountaga Tall | National Congress for Democratic Initiative | 20,312 | 0.64 | |||
| Dramane Dembélé | Alliance for Democracy in Mali | 18,737 | 0.59 | |||
| Mohamed Aly Bathily | Association for Mali | 17,712 | 0.55 | |||
| Hamadoun Touré | Independent | 17,087 | 0.54 | |||
| Yeah Samake | Party for Civic and Patriotic Action | 16,632 | 0.52 | |||
| Mamadou Traore | MIRIA | 15,502 | 0.49 | |||
| Madame Djeneba N'diaye | Independent | 12,275 | 0.38 | |||
| Total | 3,192,149 | 100.00 | 2,668,050 | 100.00 | ||
| Valid votes | 3,192,149 | 93.44 | 2,668,050 | 96.89 | ||
| Invalid/blank votes | 224,069 | 6.56 | 85,648 | 3.11 | ||
| Total votes | 3,416,218 | 100.00 | 2,753,698 | 100.00 | ||
| Registered voters/turnout | 8,000,462 | 42.70 | 8,000,462 | 34.42 | ||
| Source: Constitutional Court | ||||||
Parties formed different alliances in different constituencies, making it impossible to determine a national set of vote figures.[3] The election continued a decades-long trend of turnout being under 40% in the country, and the first-round elections were marred by violence in the north and center of the country.[4] The Voice of America reported voter turnout of only 12% in Bamako because of concerns about COVID-19, violence, and voter indifference.[5]