From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The National Democratic and Social Convention ( French: Convention national démocratique et sociale, CNDS), sometimes referred to as the National Convention for Social Democracy, is a political party in Chad.

History

The party nominated Adoum Moussa Seif as its candidate for the 1996 presidential elections; Seif finished seventh out of fifteen candidates with 3% of the vote. [1] In the parliamentary elections the following year the party won one seat in the National Assembly.

The CNDS supported incumbent President Idriss Déby in the 2001 presidential elections, [2] and retained its single seat in the 2002 parliamentary elections.

It contested the 2011 parliamentary elections as part of several alliances. A joint list with Action for Renewal of Chad (ART) won one seat, a joint list with the ART and Popular Party for Justice and Equality won another, while a joint list with the Movement for the Peace and Development of ChadRally for Democracy and Progress/Renewed won a third. [3]

References

  1. ^ Chad: 1996 Presidential election results EISA
  2. ^ Tom Lansford (2014) Political Handbook of the World 2014, CQ Press, p264
  3. ^ Chad: 2011 National Assembly election results EISA
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The National Democratic and Social Convention ( French: Convention national démocratique et sociale, CNDS), sometimes referred to as the National Convention for Social Democracy, is a political party in Chad.

History

The party nominated Adoum Moussa Seif as its candidate for the 1996 presidential elections; Seif finished seventh out of fifteen candidates with 3% of the vote. [1] In the parliamentary elections the following year the party won one seat in the National Assembly.

The CNDS supported incumbent President Idriss Déby in the 2001 presidential elections, [2] and retained its single seat in the 2002 parliamentary elections.

It contested the 2011 parliamentary elections as part of several alliances. A joint list with Action for Renewal of Chad (ART) won one seat, a joint list with the ART and Popular Party for Justice and Equality won another, while a joint list with the Movement for the Peace and Development of ChadRally for Democracy and Progress/Renewed won a third. [3]

References

  1. ^ Chad: 1996 Presidential election results EISA
  2. ^ Tom Lansford (2014) Political Handbook of the World 2014, CQ Press, p264
  3. ^ Chad: 2011 National Assembly election results EISA

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