Observation of the presidential and parliamentary elections in North Macedonia (24 April and 8 May 2024)
Election observation report
| Doc. 16013
| 21 June 2024
- Author(s):
- Ad hoc Committee of the Bureau
- Rapporteur :
- Mr Alfred HEER,
Switzerland, ALDE
1 Introduction
1. In anticipation of the observation
of the presidential and the parliamentary elections to be held in
North Macedonia and subject to receiving an invitation, the Bureau
of the Parliamentary Assembly, at its meeting on 22 January 2024,
decided to set up an ad hoc committee composed of 20 members (SOC-6; EPP/CD-6; ALDE-4; EC/DA-3; UEL-1),
as well as the two co-rapporteurs of the Monitoring Committee, and
to conduct a pre-electoral mission. On 26 January, the Bureau approved
the list of members of the ad hoc committee to observe these elections
and appointed Mr Alfred Heer (Switzerland, ALDE) as its chairperson.
On 7 March the Bureau approved an updated list (Appendix 1).
2. On 14 February 2024, the President of the Assembly of the
Republic of North Macedonia, Mr Jovan Mitreski, announced that the
regularly scheduled presidential election would be held on 24 April,
with a potential second round on 8 May, concurrently with the parliamentary
elections. On 15 February 2024, he invited the Parliamentary Assembly
(PACE) to observe the presidential and the parliamentary elections
to be held on 24 April and 8 May.
3. PACE observed these elections while North Macedonia is engaged
in a post-monitoring dialogue with the Assembly. In its
Resolution 2304 (2019) “Post-monitoring dialogue with North Macedonia”, the
Assembly resolved to assess, in its next report, the progress made
in particular in the following areas which are relevant for the
elections:
- the further consolidation
of the sustainability and functioning of democratic institutions;
- the independence of the judiciary, notably the strengthening
of the independence and accountability of judges and prosecutors.
- the fight against corruption, in line with the recommendations
issued by the GRECO, in particular with respect to high-level corruption
cases and non-selective implementation of laws and policies;
- the consolidation of its electoral framework, in line
with the recommendations of the Venice Commission and the Parliamentary
Assembly election observation mission reports;
- the pursuance of inclusive policies aiming at securing
the rights of minorities, in the spirit of the Ohrid Framework Agreement,
including for the Roma community.
4. In line with the co-operation agreement signed between the
Assembly and the Venice Commission on 4 October 2004, a representative
of the Venice Commission was invited to join the ad hoc committee
as legal adviser.
5. A pre-electoral mission took place on 26 and 27 March 2024
in Skopje. Its programme is contained in Appendix 2 and its statement
in Appendix 3.
6. For the presidential election, the PACE ad hoc committee (PACE
delegation) worked from 22 to 25 April 2024. It operated as part
of an International Election Observation Mission (IEOM) together
with the electoral observation mission of the Office for Democratic
Institutions and Human Rights of the Organisation for Security and
Cooperation in Europe (OSCE/ODIHR). The programme of the meetings
is set out in Appendix 4.
7. The IEOM concluded that the presidential election campaign
was competitive and that fundamental freedoms including media freedom
were respected, but that important areas of the presidential contest, including
campaign rules, access to the media, and allocation of State funding,
are not regulated, undermining the key principle of legal certainty.
The joint press release is set out in Appendix 5.
8. For the parliamentary elections and the second round of the
presidential election, the PACE delegation worked from 6 to 9 May
2024. It operated once more as part of an IEOM, this time together
with a delegation from the OSCE Parliamentary Assembly (OSCE-PA),
a delegation from the European Parliament (EP) and the electoral
observation mission of the ODIHR. The programme of the meetings
is set out in Appendix 6.
9. The IEOM concluded that the parliamentary elections and the
second round of the presidential election were competitive and that
an extensive and pluralistic campaign helped voters to make an informed
choice, but that the process was marred by negative rhetoric with
nationalistic slogans, as well as shortcomings in the legislation
and insufficient oversight of campaign finances. The joint press
release is set out in Appendix 7.
2 Political
context
10. The last presidential election
was held on 21 April 2019 and, following a run-off on 5 May, was
won by Stevo Pendarovski, endorsed by SDSM. The most recent parliamentary
elections were held on 15 July 2020, before the official end of
the sitting parliament’s term, and resulted in the formation of
a coalition government led by SDSM and the Besa Movement.
11. The political landscape is dominated by two parties, the Social
Democratic Union of Macedonia (SDSM) and the Internal Macedonian
Revolutionary Organization – Democratic Party for Macedonian National
Unity (VMRO-DPMNE), which have led alternating governing coalitions
since independence. In January 2024, in accordance with the law
and the Pržino Agreement and following the coalition agreement between
the SDSM and the Democratic Union for Integration (BDI/DUI), a caretaker
government led by Talat Xhaferi, the country’s first ethnic-Albanian
prime minister, was established to organise the elections. This
is the first time since 2006 that a parliament has completed its
full term.
12. The pre-electoral political environment remained calm. However,
entrenched political fragmentation and ethnic divisions have hindered
the passage of reforms related to election legislation and of necessary
reforms in public administration and the judiciary, as well as the
implementation of anti-corruption efforts also required by the European
Union (EU) for accession. Most IEOM interlocutors referred to a
generalised atmosphere of disaffection with the political establishment,
due to perceptions of political influence in institutional appointments,
long-standing inefficiencies within the public administration, and
high-profile corruption cases.
13. The Constitution provides for equality of men and women, and
the 2006 Law on Equal Opportunities for Women and Men requires equal
gender representation at all levels of public administration and
public life. The outgoing parliament included 51 women (42.5%).
Women hold 4 of the 20 ministerial positions (20%). Only 2 of the
80 municipal mayors (2.5%) are women. Of the 62 registered parties
that participated in the parliamentary race independently or as
part of coalitions, only 6 have women leaders (9.6%). This underrepresentation
in various elected and appointed positions, coupled with instances
of pressure and online attacks on female politicians, indicates
that efforts by the authorities and political parties to address
the enduring gender stereotypes impeding women’s participation in
politics have been insufficient. The Constitution guarantees the
protection of ethnic, cultural, linguistic and religious identity
of all communities. However, Roma and Turks are under-represented
in some aspects of public life.
3 Electoral system
and legal framework
14. The President is directly elected
for a five-year term from a single nationwide constituency. If no candidate
receives more than half the votes of all registered voters, a second
round is held two weeks later between the two top candidates. In
the second round, the candidate with the highest tally is elected,
unless the turnout falls below 40%, in which case the entire election
process is repeated without a legally-determined deadline for so
doing. The turnout requirement in the second round could lead to
cycles of repeated elections, which was previously criticised by
the Venice Commission and the ODIHR.
15. The presidential election is regulated by the 1991 Constitution,
the 2006 Electoral Code, the 2004 Law on Financing of Political
Parties, the 2019 Law on Prevention of Corruption and Conflicts
of Interest, the Criminal Code, and subsidiary acts by the State
Election Commission (SEC). The legal framework for the parliamentary
and presidential elections establishes the basis for holding democratic
elections.
16. The Electoral Code was last amended on 7 March and 1 April
2024, after the elections had been announced, which undermines legal
certainty. The changes, which resulted from negotiations between
the ruling parties and the opposition, were adopted by means of
an expedited process, without public debate. Although they incorporated
some previous ODIHR recommendations and technical proposals from
the SEC, they largely disregarded recommendations made by the inter-agency
working group in November 2023, which had been driving electoral
reform discussions since May of that year. Many IEOM interlocutors
criticised the lack of transparency in the adoption process and
its failure to address long-standing shortcomings of the election-related
legislation.
17. The amendments, inter alia,
eliminate the requirement for citizens to possess a valid ID document
in order to retain their inclusion in the voter register, revise
certain campaign finance regulations, enhance data protection in
relation to voter registration, specify deadlines for resolving
election disputes and, for these elections, permitted the use of
certain expired identity documents for voter verification. However,
a number of previous Venice Commission and ODIHR recommendations
remain unaddressed, including that the Electoral Code be systematically
revised to eliminate gaps and inconsistencies, ensure equal access
to the media in election campaigns, increase the accountability
and integrity of campaign financing, and enhance regulations on
the misuse of administrative resources. The increase in the required
number of signatures in support of independent candidacies is significant
and would have required meaningful public debate and consultations with
stakeholders.
18. The unicameral parliament, comprising 120 to 123 members (MPs),
is directly elected for a four-year term, under a proportional representation
system from closed lists. Of these, 20 MPs are elected from each
of the 6 in-country districts. Up to three MPs can be elected from
a single electoral district abroad. The number of seats open for
election depends on a threshold calculated on the basis of the previous
election results, with no correlation to voter turnout, which is
not in line with the principle of equality of the vote. The Electoral
Code permits that the number of voters in a given in-country district
deviate from the average number of voters per district by no more
than 5%. The number of registered voters in three districts exceeds
this threshold but district boundaries were not adjusted ahead of
the parliamentary elections, contrary to the law and international
good practice.
19. Some rules on the elections fall short of international good
practice, including the voting rights of persons with disabilities,
the disproportionate restrictions on candidacy rights based on criminal
charges, and the requirements to disclose ethnic affiliation to
register as a candidate. Other aspects of parliamentary elections remain
underregulated. Key aspects of the presidential election are also
not regulated, including some campaign rules, access to the media
and the distribution of State funding, undermining legal certainty.
Certain SEC instructions adopted or reinstated for these elections
interpret the law in a manner that is restrictively narrow.
20. A number of previous Venice Commission and ODIHR recommendations
remain unaddressed, including on the need for systematic revision
of the Electoral Code to eliminate gaps and inconsistencies to provide
legal certainty. Many IEOM interlocutors, including those from State
institutions and civil society organisations, criticised the lack
of transparency in the adoption process and its failure to address
long-standing shortcomings of the election-related legislation,
and emphasised the necessity for comprehensive legal reform.
4 Election administration,
voter lists and registration of candidates
21. The elections were administered
by a three-level administration comprising the State Election Commission
(SEC), 80 Municipal Election Commissions (MECs), and 3 391 Election
Boards (EBs). Out-of-country voting was conducted in 31 diplomatic
and consular offices in 22 countries. Early voting was held on 7 May
for homebound voters, those in penal institutions, and institutional
care facilities.
22. The SEC consists of seven members, nominated by political
parties and appointed by the parliament for a five-year mandate.
During the pre-electoral period, the SEC held regular sessions that
were open to the public and broadcast online, but it did not consistently
provide public notice of its sessions, and sometimes announced them
less than an hour in advance, including the session for the official
announcement of preliminary results of the first round of the presidential
election and post-election complaints. Moreover, not all session
minutes and decisions were published online as legally required,
which limited transparency. Many IEOM interlocutors, including some
MEC members, noted that the SEC adopted some instructions and decisions
late, and the guidance provided on key issues such as election-day
dispute resolution, election-day instructions and voter identification
was inadequate.
23. MECs are comprised of five members, appointed from State and
municipal administration employees for five-year terms. EBs consist
of three permanent members, appointed for four years from among
State and municipal employees and public servants, as well as two
temporary members nominated by political parties. While there had
been a significant turnover in membership of MECs and EBs prior
to the first election day of the presidential election, their composition
remained largely unchanged before the parliamentary elections.
24. The election administration managed the technical preparations
efficiently, met all legal deadlines and maintained public confidence
in its technical capacity. However, persistent staff shortages in
various SEC departments and the absence of a SEC secretary general
since 2021, coupled with reduced funding, led to delays in several
elements of the preparations, mainly prior to the 24 April election
day. These delays affected the replacement of MEC and EB members,
the provision of instructions to MECs and EBs, logistical arrangements
for transporting election materials, and the launch of the voter
education campaign. The composition of most MECs fulfils the legal
criteria for gender (overall 49% of the MEC members are women) and
ethnic representation. However, only two of the seven SEC members
are women (29%), falling short of the required quota.
25. Ahead of the first round of the presidential election, the
SEC developed and implemented a comprehensive training programme
for lower-level election bodies and representatives from media,
political parties, and civil society organisations. Training activities
continued for EB chairpersons and their substitutes between the
two election days, also incorporating discussion on lessons learned
from the 24 April election day.
26. Due to administrative challenges in the procurement process
and the delayed approval of educational materials by the commission,
the SEC launched its broadcast media, leaflet, and online voter
education campaign ten days before the 24 April election day, two
weeks later than planned. The voter education campaign primarily
featured general messages encouraging participation. After the first
election day, additional video spots were introduced, and covered
the parallel conduct of voting processes for the two elections,
ballot validity and prohibited activities during voting. The educational
materials were mainly in Macedonian, with subtitles in Albanian,
and occasionally also in Romani, Serbian, Turkish, and Vlach languages.
27. Positively, the SEC made various voter information materials
available in accessible formats, published polling station accessibility
data online, established a dedicated helpline for voters with hearing
impairments, and provided assistive tools, such as ballot templates
on election day. Election-day press conferences and SEC sessions
between the two election days were interpreted into sign language.
However, EBs were not trained on how to use assistive tools, and
key information in accessible formats, including voter registration data,
remained limited. No additional efforts were made to improve accessibility
of electoral premises, including polling stations, between the two
election days.
28. Citizens over the age of 18 years are eligible to vote. Despite
previous recommendations, persons deprived of legal capacity by
a final court decision are disenfranchised.
29. The registration system for in-country voting is passive and
continuous, based on data from the civil and population registers.
The March 2024 legal amendments eliminated the requirement that
voters possess a valid identification document to be registered
as voters, thus removing an administrative obstacle that had previously limited
the constitutional right of otherwise eligible voters. As IDs are
still necessary to vote, for these elections, as an additional temporary
measure to diminish the negative effects of the delays in issuing
ID documents invalidated due to the country’s name change, voters
with IDs that expired within nine months prior to the elections
were allowed to use them for identification at the polling station.
30. The law does not provide for the voter register to be updated
between the two rounds of the presidential election. The SEC informed
the IEOM that the 1 148 citizens who turned 18 between the two rounds
had been added to the voter lists for the parliamentary elections,
but not for the second-round of the presidential election. These
citizens were only allowed to vote in the presidential run-off if
they submitted formal complaints at the MECs or SEC and obtained
decisions from these bodies. For the parliamentary elections, the
voter register included 1 815 350 voters, including 96 010 registered
abroad; for the presidential run-off, the register listed 1 814
317 voters, among them 95 116 abroad.
31. IEOM interlocutors generally did not raise concerns about
the inclusiveness of the voter register. However, some pointed to
the significant number of citizens residing abroad who remain on
the register as they maintain an official residence in-country,
which, should these voters choose not to participate in the election, may
impact threshold requirements for the presidential run-off, for
signature collection in support of independent candidates as well
as for constituency delineation. Moreover, persistent shortcomings
in the residential address registration and civil registration systems
continue to diminish data accuracy. Previous recommendations to
ensure data accuracy, harmonise all relevant databases and to audit
the voter register remained unaddressed ahead of the elections.
32. Citizens who are registered voters and over the age of 40
by election day, with at least 10 years of residency in the country
over the past 15 years, may stand for president. The residency requirement
appears to be overly restrictive.
33. The nomination of a presidential candidate must be supported
either by the signatures of 30 MPs or at least 10 000 voters. In
line with the law, voters were permitted to sign in support of more
than one candidate. Fifteen prospective presidential candidates
officially notified the SEC of their intention to collect supporting signatures
from voters, seven of whom received the required number of signatures.
34. Candidate nomination for the presidential election ended on
19 March. The SEC verified the registration documents against the
established criteria within the legal deadline and provided contestants
with a 48-hour window to address any identified omissions or shortcomings.
In an inclusive process, the SEC registered seven presidential candidates,
including two women. Two candidates were ethnic Albanians. Six candidates
were supported by groups of voters and one by members of parliament.
According to the law, candidates supported by voters are officially
independent. However, in practice, all presidential candidates were
endorsed by political parties, most used party symbols on the ballot
and, following their registration, were subjected by the SEC and other
authorities to the same regulations that apply to political parties.
35. The registered presidential candidates were Stevo Pendarovski,
endorsed by SDSM-led coalition (Coalition “For a European Future”);
Gordana Siljanovska Davkova endorsed by VMRO-DPMNE-led coalition (“Your
Macedonia” Coalition); Stevco Jakimovski endorsed by GROM-led coalition
(Coalition “Brave for Macedonia”); Bujar Osmani, endorsed by the
BDI/DUI-led coalition (“European Front”); Biljana Vankovska-Cvetkovska
endorsed by the Left; Arben Taravari, endorsed by VLEN/VREDI; Maksim
Dimitrievski, endorsed by I KNOW – Movement for Our Macedonia (ZNAM).
36. Parliamentary candidates must be eligible voters of at least
18 years of age on election day. The law retains a blanket restriction
on candidacy rights in the parliamentary elections for those sentenced
to imprisonment, irrespective of the gravity of the offense, and
without individualised assessment of the case.
37. Parliamentary candidates may be nominated by political parties,
pre-electoral coalitions, or stand independently. Independent candidacies
were to be supported by the signatures of 1 000 voters. In line
with the law, voters were permitted to sign in support of more than
one candidate list. The law mandates a minimum representation of
40% of each gender on every candidate list, stipulating that one
candidate of the less represented gender must be included among
every three consecutive candidates, with at least one additional candidate
of this gender for every ten candidates. At odds with international
good practice, the law requires that parliamentary candidates disclose
their ethnic identity in order to register.
38. Candidate nomination for the parliamentary elections concluded
on 2 April 2024. The SEC checked the candidate registration documents
and provided contestants with 48 hours to address any omissions
or shortcomings identified. While the SEC complied with the legal
deadlines in all cases, it reported difficulties in meeting these
deadlines in some instances, which it attributed to the delayed
provision of personal and criminal record data by State authorities.
39. In an inclusive process, the SEC registered 1 680 parliamentary
candidates nominated by 12 political parties and 5 coalitions. It
rejected the registration of nine candidate lists for failing to
comply with the legal requirements, such as the submission deadline,
gender quota, the number of candidates, or for missing requisite
documents. Three political parties appealed to the Administrative
Court, which upheld the respective SEC decisions. All registered
candidate lists met the gender requirements. Women comprised 43%
of all parliamentary candidates. However, women only headed 21 of
the 84 lists (25%), and women candidates were often placed in the
lowest positions allowed by the law. Of the registered candidates,
14% fell within the age range of 18 to 29 years.
40. As far as the out-of-country voting is concerned, the PACE
delegation received information on instances where individuals possessing
valid documents were excluded from the voter list, necessitating
convoluted administrative procedures for rectification. Furthermore,
technical errors concerning residential addresses impeded the registration
of citizens who own property in North Macedonia. Insufficient clarity
regarding the timing of voting at diplomatic and consular missions
compounded the challenges, particularly for those facing long distances
and workday constraints.
41. The voter registration process in diplomatic and consular
missions globally commenced on 14 February 2024 but encountered
issues due to outdated and incomplete instructions. Moreover, confusion
regarding passport issuance or renewal further complicated citizen
engagement. Efforts to inform the diaspora about the elections were
deemed inadequate, with delayed announcements from official channels.
5 Election campaign
and its financing
42. The presidential campaign commenced
on 4 April 2024 and concluded on 22 April 2024. The parliamentary
campaign commenced on 18 April and concluded on 6 May. Therefore
the two campaigns overlapped. The law does not stipulate the official
start of the campaign period for the second round of the presidential
election. In practice, both presidential candidates resumed their
campaigns one day after the first election day, prior to the official
announcement of a run-off. For the parliamentary and presidential
elections, the rules on the distribution of campaign funding, media
time, and resources factor the representation of political parties
in the parliament, advantaging the four main parliamentary parties,
and limiting the opportunities for all candidates to campaign equally.
43. The campaign was competitive, and fundamental freedoms were
respected. Political parties, as well as parliamentary and presidential
candidates, held large-scale rallies, campaigned door-to-door and
disseminated flyers, posters, billboards and digital content. Prominent
themes of the campaign included the economy, countering corruption,
EU accession, the country’s foreign policy, and potential constitutional
changes. Between the two election days, parties also focused on
local issues, such as infrastructure and regional development. As
the campaign progressed, the tone became increasingly negative,
with ad hominem attacks and
occasional threats. Instances of discriminatory rhetoric were observed
throughout the campaign period, including the use of nationalistic
slogans, and in some cases conflating the perceived actions of political
parties with ethnic communities.
44. The campaigns featured few women political figures overall.
Issues related to gender equality were largely neglected in the
campaign discourse, except by the presidential candidate endorsed
by the VMRO-DPMNE-led coalition. In most other events, references
to women pertained to their roles within the family, reflecting
long-standing gender stereotypes and discrimination against non-traditional
families. Youth issues received limited attention in the campaign,
primarily focusing on the emigration of young people.
45. The Electoral Code contains some regulations aimed at preventing
the misuse of administrative resources prior to elections. Several
IEOM interlocutors raised allegations and concerns about vote buying
in vulnerable communities, including the Roma and Turks, as well
as pressure on voters, mainly public sector employees. The law prohibits
the launching of public development projects, extraordinary budgetary disbursements,
and employment procedures using budgetary funds after the elections
are called. The inauguration of public projects is prohibited starting
20 days before the campaign period. Despite these regulations aimed
at preventing the misuse of administrative resources prior to elections,
several local public infrastructure projects were announced or inaugurated
by mayors, government officials, and MP candidates throughout the
campaign period. Some IEOM interlocutors claimed that many public
employment and procurement procedures had been initiated shortly
prior to the respective ban taking effect.
46. Ethnic Albanian parties featured prominently in the campaign.
In addition to the two presidential candidates in the first round,
eight ethnic Albanian political parties participated in the parliamentary
race as part of the coalitions led by BDI/DUI and VLEN/VREDI. BDI/DUI
entered a coalition with other ethnic minority parties, including
Bosniacs, Roma and Turks. One Albanian party, the European Citizen
Movement, ran independently. One political party, AVAJA, focusing
on Roma representation, registered candidate lists in four districts.
Campaign messages were mostly presented in Macedonian and Albanian,
with Bosnian, Romani, Serbian, Turkish, and Vlach languages used
in some cases. Several ethnic minority party representatives felt that
the distribution of State campaign funds according to a formula
based on parties’ representation in parliament hampered their ability
to campaign on an equal footing.
47. Campaigning on social networks is not regulated. Most campaign
messages promoted candidates and programmes in a neutral tone, with
the tone becoming increasingly negative with the official start
of the parliamentary campaign and remaining so between the two election
days. Campaign content included videos, photographs, descriptions
of meetings and speeches. Although many contestants used claims
of disinformation as part of their campaign tactics, these were
mainly claims of candidates misrepresenting their accomplishments
or support and did not allege disinformation targeted at critical
election processes such as voter information. There were no organised
State efforts to identify and address disinformation or manipulative content
during the pre-electoral period.
48. Overall, deficiencies and inconsistencies in the legal framework,
limited financial and human resources for the oversight bodies,
the limited information exchange between these institutions, as
well as the narrow interpretation of the law by the relevant institutions
diminished the effectiveness of campaign finance oversight. Key
election stakeholders, including from the oversight institutions,
did not have full confidence in the effectiveness of campaign finance
monitoring and accountability for the misuse of administrative resources
in the campaign.
49. Political parties that received at least 1% of the votes in
the previous parliamentary or local elections are eligible for public
funding, which may also be used for parliamentary and presidential
campaigns, without any legally specified limits. While there is
no direct public funding allocated for election campaigns, the State directly
reimburses media outlets registered with the SEC for campaign advertisements.
The formula for these reimbursements favours the largest ruling
and opposition coalitions in the parliament, disadvantaging small and
non-parliamentary parties.
50. Parliamentary campaigns may also be financed through monetary
and in-kind donations, and loans. Individual citizens can donate
up to EUR 3 000, while legal entities may contribute up to EUR 30 000
per campaign. Donations can also be made even after the final results
are announced, a practice that some considered as increasing the
potential for clientelism. For these elections, the funding reported
by parliamentary contestants as received from donations was significantly
lower than the funds allocated for campaign reimbursement by the
State. By law, the expenditure limit is set at MKD 110 per election
and per registered voter in an electoral district. Third party campaigning
and paid political advertisements on social networking platforms
are not explicitly regulated.
51. Electoral contestants in both parliamentary and presidential
elections are required to compile three interim campaign finance
reports, two in advance of the elections and a third after the elections.
Despite previous recommendations, these reports cannot be submitted
electronically and are not audited. All contestant reports must
also be sent to the State Audit Office (SAO), the State Commission
for the Prevention of Corruption (SCPC) and the SEC, which are obliged
to publish them on their websites. A final financial report must
be submitted to the SAO within 60 days after the election results
are announced, with an audit to be completed within a further 60
days. Some parliamentary contestants did not submit their interim
reports in a timely manner or in the required format. Pursuant to
the March 2024 legal amendments, interim reports are no longer required
to include information on campaign expenditures, but only cover
contributions. Moreover, the instructions provided by the Ministry
of Finance for interim and final financial reporting excluded requirements for
information important for financial oversight, leading to political
parties submitting non-uniform or incomplete interim reports, and
reducing transparency and accountability.
52. The SCPC can initiate investigations into alleged violations
of campaign finance rules either ex officio, including
based on unofficial reports, or upon receipt of a formal complaint,
and must issue a resolution within five days. Since the announcement
of the elections, the SCPC initiated 42 cases based on unofficial
reports and 3 ex officio, applying
a general deadline of 60 days, rather than the legally determined
five days, which was only applied to one formal complaint. Due to
financial constraints and unlike in previous elections, the SCPC
did not deploy field monitors to identify the potential misuse of
administrative resources and campaign spending, nor did it inspect
contestants’ bank accounts during the campaign, failing to cross-check
reported campaign expenditures with actual spending.
6 Media environment
53. The media landscape is diverse,
with 40 television and 58 radio stations, 22 print media outlets,
and over 200 online portals. Although television is the main source
of information, online portals have had an increasingly significant
influence on the media environment, in particular during elections.
While the environment is generally conducive to media freedom, the
quality of journalism is negatively affected by political fragmentation
and ethnic divisions, intense competition among numerous media outlets
in a constrained market, and unfavourable working conditions of
journalists. The November 2022 amendments to the Law on Civil Liability
for Insult and Defamation, along with the February 2023 amendments
to the Criminal Code, introduced additional safeguards for journalists.
However, online attacks, including those against women, and isolated
incidents of physical assault against journalists remain a concern.
54. Changes to the Law on Media and the Law on Audio and Audio-visual
Media Services in March 2024 extended public subsidies to include
print media and lifted the ban on state-funded advertisements in
private media for public interest campaigns. Although the stated
aim of the changes was to support media sustainability, many IEOM
interlocutors criticised them as likely to increase political influence
over the media. Many interlocutors highlighted the need for further
reforms in the media sector to enhance the viability of outlets,
regulate online media, and further align the legal framework with
the EU acquis with respect
to strengthening the independence and capacity of the media regulator
and the public broadcaster.
55. The Electoral Code requires that all media outlets, including
online news portals, provide fair and balanced election coverage.
The public broadcaster is obliged to air free political promotion,
whereas other types of media are entitled to offer paid political
advertisements. Many IEOM interlocutors were critical of the fact
that the State pays directly for all media coverage which they perceive
as entrenching media dependence on State funds.
56. Many IEOM interlocutors asserted that a significant number
of the news portals which registered for campaign advertising were
created just before the elections in order to receive State funds
during election campaigns and, in some cases, to channel these funds
to political parties.
57. The public broadcaster National Broadcasting Service (MRT)
is funded almost entirely from the State budget. Its news coverage
is subject to stringent regulations during the campaign period.
The obligation to adhere to strict time allocations constrains editorial
freedom and provides disproportionately more time to larger parties.
58. The Agency for Audio and Audio-visual Media Services (AAVMS)
is mandated with overseeing compliance with media regulations. During
the campaign periods for both the presidential and parliamentary elections,
it submitted periodic reports to the SEC based on its media monitoring,
and also published its findings online.
59. Although online media is largely unregulated, a co-ordination
body consisting of representatives of the AAVMS and civil society
organisations has been created to register and publish related notifications,
but this body lacks enforcement powers. The AAVMS also developed
a voluntary code of conduct in the online sphere.
60. The election-related coverage in broadcast media was overall
balanced and neutral in tone. The MRT covered all parliamentary
contestants in line with the legal provisions establishing a framework
for allocating time to political parties in elections, which privileges
those already holding seats in parliament. Broadcasters focused
on the major parties and coalitions, with SDSM, VMRO-DPMNE, BDI/DUI,
and VLEN/VREDI receiving most prime-time coverage overall. The coalitions
led by SDSM and VMRO-DPMNE dominated private broadcasters (24% and
27% of coverage each), both largely in neutral tone.
61. The media provided extensive coverage of the parliamentary
and presidential campaigns. There were several televised debates
featuring contestants running for the major coalitions in the parliamentary
elections, as well as three debates between the two candidates in
the presidential run-off, which gave voters the ability to make
an informed choice.
62. Some of the legal amendments introduced in March 2024 included
changes aimed at improving the accessibility of electoral news to
persons with disabilities. Broadcasters were obliged to adjust one
edition of their newscasts and one piece of election-related content
per day to accommodate persons with sensory impairments. Positively,
in line with the law, national public and private broadcasters supplemented
parts of their prime-time content with subtitles or sign language
throughout the electoral campaign.
7 Complaints and
appeals
63. Regulations on mechanisms for
election dispute resolution are in place, but some prior recommendations,
including those related to limited standing and restrictive deadlines,
remain unaddressed. The SEC has the mandate to decide on the majority
of complaints, and its decisions can be appealed to the Administrative
Court. Deadlines for filing and reviewing complaints are overly
short and appear insufficient for preparing meaningful applications
and issuing decisions. The regulation of election dispute resolution
contains numerous ambiguities and gaps, including with respect to
conflicting deadlines, and parallel avenues for submission. The
legal standing of voters to file complaints remains limited to cases
regarding voter lists and their individual voting rights. The right
to appeal election results is limited to the representatives of
those that signed in support of the candidates. Moreover, before
the second election day, the SEC had still not aligned its instructions
on election dispute resolution with recent changes to the Electoral
Code.
64. The SEC reported that it did not receive any complaints before
the first round of the presidential election. On the first election
day, it reported receiving 362 complaints, all of which related
to the right to vote. The SEC did not ensure effective legal remedy
for complaints submitted on election day, with approximately half
of the complaints submitted on the 24 April election day remaining
unresolved by the close of the polls. Between the two election days,
the SEC received 245 additional complaints on voter registration.
Of 610 voter registration complaints received by the SEC in the
period between 24 April and 8 May, less than 50% (274) were decided by
the 8 May election day (168 were granted, 106 were rejected), and
only 39 of these were examined in a public session.
65. The Administrative Court reviewed two appeals related to the
registration of voters and four to the registration of parliamentary
candidate lists by the SEC. The appeals about voter registration
were granted, while those on candidate registration were denied
as unfounded, as the Court considered that the applicants failed
to convincingly demonstrate that the contested decisions by the
SEC violated their rights or the law. The court also upheld an SCPC
decision on the violation of the ban on employment ahead of the
first-round election day, after two rounds of revisions. The Administrative
Court generally complied with the short deadlines but in two cases
its procedural approach lacked consistency. Moreover, at odds with
the legal provisions, it failed to publish its decisions on voter
registration on election day and did not conduct public sessions
for these cases despite being required to do so by law. The Court
decided on election-related disputes in panels of three judges,
although the law prescribes five-judge panels for such cases.
66. The basic court in Tetovo handled two requests for party leadership
registration from the two factions of the Alliance of Albanians;
a decision was made after recusals of three judges, allegedly due
to political pressure. The Constitutional Court received two petitions:
one challenging the AAVMS guidelines on the distribution of media
airtime among presidential candidates, and another questioning the
constitutionality of the Electoral Code with respect to campaign
conditions for candidates nominated by groups of voters, without affiliation
to political parties, which the appellants claimed to be discriminatory.
The Constitutional Court did not review the petitions in a timely
manner; one was reviewed and rejected after the challenged provisions
had already been implemented, while the second was not examined
before the 8 May election day, which the Court attributed to the
lack of expedited deadlines for constitutional review.
67. Many IEOM interlocutors voiced doubts about the fairness of
adjudication of election-related complaints, citing the potential
for political influence, possible interruptions in inter-agency
co-operation, a backlog of unresolved disputes, as well as the perceived
potential for corruption within the judiciary and law enforcement agencies.
8 Election observation
68. The Electoral Code allows for
citizen and international observation and entitles registered contestants
to appoint authorised representatives to follow the entire election
process, and all levels of the election administration, contributing
to transparency. The SEC accredited 2 citizen and 6 international
observer groups ahead of the parliamentary elections, along with
an additional 383 citizen and 241 international observers from organisations
accredited before the first round of the presidential election,
thus raising the total number to 1 303 citizen and 771 international
observers. Although the legislation does not explicitly regulate
the validity of accreditations issued before presidential election
for run-offs, in practice, the SEC has interpreted that these would
remain valid through the completion of the entire electoral process.
69. Citizen observer activities were generally minimal prior to
the first round of the presidential election, as well as between
the two election days. Most IEOM interlocutors attributed this to
a lack of funding and a shift in the orientation of activities.
9 Election Days
70. On 24 April the PACE delegation
split into 9 teams and on 8 May it split into 12 teams. The areas
where PACE members observed the opening, voting and counting included
Skopje and its surroundings and the regions of Tetovo, Shipkovo,
Gostivar, Kumanovo and Ohrid.
71. Moreover, the previous day, a PACE team had observed the voting
in the Idrizovo prison, which is the biggest prison in North Macedonia,
holding 60% of the persons in prison in the country (1 187 sentenced persons
were detained in Idrizovo in 2021). On 28 February 2024, the parliament
extended the state of emergency in Idrizovo, initially introduced
in June 2023, for another six months. This decision was called to address
the volatile security situation. PACE observers noted that the elections
were efficiently organised in Idrizovo. The delegation thanks the
authorities for having facilitated access to the prison.
72. Election days were generally calm and peaceful. Campaign silence
regulations were mostly upheld, including across media platforms.
The law is silent on the applicability of campaign silence regulations
on social networks. Several party leaders and candidates posted
messages online urging citizens to cast their votes on election
day, at times including campaign messages.
73. The IEOM assessed the opening of the polls positively at 70
of the 123 polling stations observed. EB members were largely familiar
with the procedures and maintained transparency. However, some procedures were
not consistently followed: in 24 instances, opening protocols were
not completed and signed before voting began; in 10 cases, ballot
boxes were not properly sealed; and in 4 cases, the serial number
of security seals was not recorded in the logbook. EB members also
encountered difficulties in configuring the biometric voter identification
devices in 11 instances, although most polling stations opened with
minimal delays of no more than 15 minutes.
74. The administration of the voting process was assessed positively
by IEOM observers in 99% of the 1 340 polling stations observed.
Contributing to the positive assessments was the implementation
of important procedural safeguards, such as voter identification,
stamping of ballot papers by EBs and signing of voter lists, at
99% of the polling stations observed. However, the legal requirement
for EBs to inform voters about voting procedures, important to reduce
the number of invalid ballots, was not followed in approximately
41% of the polling stations. Some PACE teams saw in some polling
stations attempts to influence voters to vote only for the parliamentary
elections and not for the presidential one. The biometric voter
identification devices were operational in nearly all instances,
but in 24% of the observations not every voter could be successfully identified
by fingerprint scanning. PACE observers raised the issue of personal
data protection, linked to the voters’ photos appearing on the voter
lists and also to the potential access of the authorities to the
fingerprints data. The secrecy of the vote was generally upheld
although in a few reported cases (19 observations) the polling station
layout compromised vote secrecy. Group or family voting was observed
in 4% of the polling stations (39 instances). While not against
the law, in 4% (41 instances), persons other than EB members were observed
to be tracking voters who had voted, which may be an indication
of pressure on voters. In 18 instances, ballot boxes were not properly
sealed. PACE observers also raised the issue of the dimensions of the
ballot boxes, which sometimes proved to be too small for a large
number of ballots, in particular when these were multilingual hence
larger.
75. Representatives from political parties or candidates were
present in 86% of the polling stations, contributing to transparency.
PACE observers noticed that some of them were reluctant to tell
which party they represented. Citizen or international observers
were present in 7% of observations. In more than 99% of the polling
stations, all authorised persons present had a clear view of the
process and almost all EBs fully co-operated with IEOM observers.
Women constituted 49% of the EB members and accounted for 60% of
polling station chairpersons. Some 46% of the observed polling stations
did not provide for independent access for persons with physical
disabilities, and the layout was unsuitable for such voters in 22%
of stations. Almost all polling stations had a tactile ballot guide
for voters with visual impairments.
76. IEOM assessed the counting process negatively in 16 of the
106 polling stations observed due to errors and omissions in the
procedures. Observers attributed this to an insufficient understanding
of procedures by EB members, as well as efforts to hasten the process.
Procedural errors included not following the prescribed order of
procedures in 53 cases, failing to count the number of voters who
signed the voter list in 24 cases, and not invalidating unused ballot
papers before opening ballot boxes in 28 cases. The transparency
of the process was compromised in instances where those present
did not have a clear view of the procedures in 10 cases, where EB
chairpersons did not consistently display ballots during the count
in 35 cases or displayed them in such a way that the markings were
not visible in 16 cases. IEOM observers reported from 26 counts
that the EBs had difficulties in filling in the final protocols,
and in 19 polling stations the EB members pre-signed the results
protocols before finishing the count. Further, in 14 instances,
persons other than EB members were allowed to participate in the
count.
77. Results tabulation was positively evaluated by IEOM observers
as efficient and smooth in 64 of the 66 MECs observed. Still, despite
additional training on the filling of results protocols before election
day, numerous mistakes and discrepancies, primarily arithmetical
errors requiring corrections before tabulation, were observed in
49 cases. IEOM observers noted that in 24 cases, the EBs completed
the results protocols at MEC premises immediately before submitting
them for tabulation. In 9 instances, inadequate MEC premises, mainly
due to insufficient space to accommodate all EBs waiting for their
materials to be processed, led to overcrowding and hampered transparency.
The SEC published partial results from polling stations online on an
ongoing basis and held two press conferences on election night to
announce the preliminary results for the presidential run-off and
parliamentary elections.
78. On election day, the SEC received some 490 complaints related
to voter registration. Of these, 283 were fully resolved by the
close of the polls: 199 were granted, 68 were rejected, and 16 were
considered inadmissible; 195 complaints remained unresolved. The
SEC did not publish any of the decisions on the matters reviewed,
impacting transparency. Overall, the handling of election-day related
complaints did not ensure access to effective legal remedies.
79. The results are as follows:
Presidential election – 24 April
2024 (first round)
Total number of voters on the Voter Register: 1 814 317
Total number of voters who voted: 905 622
Total number of unused ballots: 908 720
Total number of valid ballots: 881 040
Total number of invalid ballots: 24 560
Turnout: 49.91%
Results:
|
1.
|
Gordana Siljanovska-Davkova
|
363 085
|
40.09%
|
|
2.
|
Stevo Pendarovski
|
180 499
|
19.93%
|
|
3.
|
Bujar Osmani – Democratic
Union for Integration
|
120 811
|
13.34%
|
|
4.
|
Maksim Dimitrievski –
“For Our Macedonia”
|
83 855
|
9.26%
|
|
5.
|
Arben Taravari – Alliance
for Albanians
|
83 337
|
9.20%
|
|
6.
|
Biljana Vankovska – Levica
|
41 331
|
4.56%
|
|
7.
|
Stevčo Jakimovski – “Citizen
Option for Macedonia”
|
8 121
|
0.90%
|
Presidential election – final
results – 8 May 2024 (second round)
Total number of voters on the Voter Register: 1 814 317
Total number of voters who voted: 861 218
Total number of unused ballots: 953 121
Total number of valid ballots: 812 899
Total number of invalid ballots: 48 289
Turnout: 47.47%
Results:
|
1.
|
Gordana SiljanovskaDavkova
|
561 000
|
65.14%
|
|
2.
|
Stevo Pendarovski
|
251 899
|
29.25%
|
Parliamentary elections – 8 May
2024
Total number of voters on the Voter Register: 1 815 350
Total number of voters who voted: 1 006 436
Total number of valid ballots: 878 980
Total number of invalid ballots: 27 451
Turnout: 55.44%
Results:
|
VMRO Coalition “Your
Macedonia” (Hristijan Mickoski)
|
43.36%
|
58 seats
(436 407 votes)
|
|
“For a European Future”
(Dimitar Kovačevski)
|
15.35%
|
18 seats (154 447
votes)
|
|
“European Front” (Ali
Ahmeti)
|
13.68%
|
18 seats (137 690
votes)
|
|
VLEN (Bilall Kasami)
|
10.63%
|
14 seats (106 937
votes)
|
|
Levica (Dimitar Apasiev)
|
6.82%
|
6 seats
(68 637 votes)
|
|
ZNAM (Maksim Dimitrievski)
|
5.59%
|
6 seats
(56 232 votes)
|
10 Conclusions and recommendations
80. The IEOM concluded that the
parliamentary and presidential elections were competitive, and fundamental
freedoms were respected, although the process remains insufficiently
regulated. The election legislation provides a suitable framework
for holding democratic elections, but persisting inconsistencies,
gaps, and ambiguities compromised legal certainty and merit revision.
The extensive and pluralistic campaign coverage in the media gave
voters the opportunity to make an informed choice, but negative
rhetoric and nationalistic slogans marred an otherwise stable pre-election
period. With the notable exception of one presidential candidate
in the run-off (which eventually won the election), campaigns featured
few women political figures overall. Transparency and accountability
of campaign finances were weakened by the minimal finance reporting
obligations and the limited capacity of the oversight bodies, including
for monitoring the misuse of administrative resources. Authorities,
including the State Election Commission and the Constitutional Court,
did not always adequately address election-related complaints in
a timely and transparent manner, limiting the effectiveness of legal
remedies. The elections were organised effectively, but the frequent allegations
of vote-buying in the run-up to the elections affected confidence
in the process. In the polling stations observed, the voting process
was orderly, transparent and assessed positively; however, in several instances,
election boards did not fully adhere to the prescribed procedures
during the vote count.
81. Key themes of the parliamentary and presidential run-off campaigns
included the economy, anti-corruption efforts, EU accession and
the constitutional reform. The tone of campaigning, including online, became
progressively negative ahead of the first round of the presidential
election, and remained so in both parliamentary and presidential
campaigns.
82. In the run-up to the elections, most IEOM interlocutors referred
to a generalised atmosphere of disaffection with the political establishment,
citing a lack of will by both the government and opposition to address
long-standing calls for comprehensive reforms, a perceived political
influence in institutional appointments, long-standing inefficiencies
within public administration, and recent high-profile corruption cases.
83. Following the presidential election Ms Gordana Siljanovska-Davkova
won 65,41% of the votes (while her challenger and incumbent President
Mr Stevo Pendarovski gathered 29,25% of the vote). She became the
first woman holding this position in the country. The parliamentary
elections enabled the opposition VMRO Coalition “Your Macedonia”
(led by Hristijan Mickoski) to win 58 seats out of 120 (43.36% of
the votes) while the ruling coalition “For a European Future” (led
by Dimitar Kovačevski) won 18 seats (15.35%). In addition, the following parties
and coalition reached the parliament: “European Front” (Ali Ahmeti)
(13.68% of the votes, 18 seats); VLEN (Bilall Kasami) (10.63%, 14
seats); Levica (Dimitar Apasiev) (6.82%, 6 seats) and ZNAM (Maksim Dimitrievski)
(5.59%, 6 seats).
84. The PACE delegation notes that the voters opted for a political
alternation, both for the presidential and the parliamentary elections,
in a peaceful and democratic manner. It also recalls that these
elections were for the first time since 2006 held after the full-term
completion of the parliament.
85. The legal framework for the parliamentary and presidential
elections establishes the basis for holding democratic elections;
however, some provisions do not comply with international standards,
and persisting inconsistencies, gaps and ambiguous formulations
undermine legal certainty and merit further revision. The law maintains
residency criteria for presidential candidates which appear to be
overly restrictive, running counter to international commitments
and standards.
86. Regrettably, the Electoral Code was recently amended through
expedited processes lacking transparency and public consultation.
Although the changes incorporated some previous ODIHR recommendations
and technical proposals from the SEC, they largely disregarded recommendations
of the inter-agency working group tasked with electoral reform.
A number of key recommendations from the Venice Commission and the
ODIHR remain unaddressed, including those to systematically revise
the Electoral Code, to ensure equal access to the media in election
campaigns and to increase accountability and integrity of campaign
financing.
87. The election administration met all legal deadlines and enjoyed
public confidence in its technical capacity. The training for lower-level
election bodies was observed to be generally comprehensive and incorporated
lessons learned from the first-round presidential election day.
The outreach scope and topics covered by the SEC’s voter education
material remained limited.
88. As a temporary measure to mitigate delays caused by the late
issuance of new ID documents, voters with documents expired up to
nine months before the elections were allowed to use them for identification
on election day. Persistent shortcomings in the residential address
system and civil registration, which diminished data accuracy, were
noted.
89. For the parliamentary race, the law mandates a minimum of
40% representation of either gender on each candidate list. While
PACE delegation welcomes that all registered candidate lists met
the gender requirements, women (comprising 43% of all parliamentary
candidates) were often placed in the lowest positions allowed by
the law, and women candidates headed only 25% of the lists. The
political parties appeared to make little effort to engage women
voters. Issues related to gender equality were largely absent from
campaign discourse.
90. The campaigns were competitive and fundamental freedoms were
respected. Regulation of access to campaign spaces, the media, and
of the funding of political parties advantages the four main parliamentary political
parties over other contestants. Ethnic Albanian parties featured
prominently in the campaign. However, representatives of some ethnic
minority parties raised concerns that the distribution of State
campaign funds according to a formula based on parties’ representation
in parliament hampered their ability to campaign on an equal footing.
91. The formula for distribution of State funds for campaigning
disadvantaged smaller and non-parliamentary parties. Only 11 of
the 17 parliamentary contestants submitted interim campaign finance
reports in a timely manner and in the required format. Reporting
requirements for interim reports excluded detailed information on
contributions and did not require reporting on expenditures, reducing
transparency and accountability. The minimal campaign finance reporting
requirements, deficiencies and inconsistencies in the legal framework,
as well as limited resources and capacities of the oversight bodies,
including for monitoring and preventing the misuse of administrative
resources, significantly diminished transparency and accountability.
92. The media environment is generally free. The public broadcaster
covered the major parliamentary and presidential contestants in
line with the formula for allocating time to political parties in
elections, which privileges the largest parliamentary parties. Private
media presented adequate information on all candidates overall,
with some channels favoring specific candidate lists. There were
several televised debates featuring contestants running for the
major coalitions in the parliamentary elections, as well as three
debates between the two candidates in the presidential run-off,
contributing to the ability of voters to make an informed choice. Most
IEOM interlocutors emphasised the need for further reforms in the
media sector to enhance the viability of outlets, regulate online
media, and further align the legal framework with the EU acquis.
93. The legal framework does not sufficiently ensure access to
legal redress; in practice, the SEC did not provide effective legal
remedy for complaints submitted on the 24 April election day, leaving
approximately half of these unresolved by the close of the polls.
Further, the majority of its decisions on complaints did not provide the
reasoning, and many decisions referenced outdated legal acts and
incorrect legal remedies for appeals. The Administrative Court complied
with the short deadlines for deciding on appeals. The Constitutional
Court did not review in a timely manner the two election-related
petitions it had received. Many IEOM interlocutors expressed minimal
trust in the adjudication of election-related complaints, citing
inefficiency of the judiciary and the election administration.
94. The PACE delegation noted that election days were generally
calm and peaceful. While the election campaigns were unfortunately
tarnished by harsh rhetoric, this did not affect the general atmosphere
on election days, which remained calm and without significant incidents.
IEOM observers assessed voting procedures positively in the vast
majority of the 1 340 polling stations observed, with procedural
safeguards such as voter identification, stamping of ballot papers
by EBs and signing of voter lists conducted in line with legal provisions,
at almost all polling stations.
95. However, some instances of group and family voting were observed.
In some cases, while not against the law, the tracking of voters
was also noted. The legal requirement for EBs to inform voters about
voting procedures, which is important to reduce the number of invalid
ballots, was not followed in almost half of the polling stations.
The counting process was assessed as negative in 16 of the 106 polling
stations observed, primarily due to procedural errors and omissions
in the counting procedures and important safeguards, in some cases
impacting transparency. Tabulation was generally evaluated as efficient;
however, limited space and overcrowding limited transparency in
some cases and three out of four observations noted mistakes or discrepancies
in polling station results protocols.
96. The PACE delegation was informed that many voters who live
abroad were unable to vote for MPs to represent them in parliament.
The voter registration process in diplomatic and consular missions
encountered issues due to outdated and incomplete instructions.
Moreover, confusion regarding passport issuance or renewal further
complicated citizen engagement. Efforts to inform the diaspora about
the elections were deemed inadequate, with delayed announcements
from official channels.
97. Based on these findings, the PACE delegation particularly
encourages the authorities of North Macedonia to:
- implement all recommendations
made by the Venice Commission and the ODIHR, including those to systematically
revise the Electoral Code in a transparent, inclusive and timely
manner, to eliminate gaps and inconsistencies, to ensure equal access
to the media in election campaigns and to increase accountability
and integrity of campaign financing;
- update and audit the residential address system and civil
registration and deal with their persistent shortcomings, which
diminish the accuracy of the voter lists:
- eliminate the 40% voter turnout requirement for the second
round of presidential elections in order to avoid the risk of cycles
of failed elections;
- alleviate the residency criteria for presidential candidates;
- suppress the requirement to disclose ethnic affiliation
to register as a candidate for the parliamentary elections;
- strengthen the legal framework related to campaign funding
and reinforce the resources and capacities of the oversight bodies
in charge of monitoring and preventing the misuse of administrative
resources in order to enhance transparency and accountability;
- review the formula for distribution of State funds for
campaigning so that smaller and non-parliamentary parties are not
disadvantaged;
- make further reforms in the media sector to enhance the
viability of outlets, regulate online media, and further align the
legal framework with the EU acquis;
- work towards the suppression of any hindrance encountered
by the disabled during the voting process;
- improve the legal system of addressing complaints regarding
all steps of the electoral process in order to increase general
trust in the judiciary system;
- take appropriate measures to increase the role played
by women in the country’s political life, and in particular their
representation in elected and appointed positions;
- ensure a better observation of the procedures by the members
of the election boards, particularly during the vote counting, and
further develop the training of the electoral administration;
- concerning the authentication of voters and the protection
of their personal data, review the current practices in light of
the “Guidelines on the protection of individuals with regard to
the processing of personal data for the purposes of voter registration
and authentication” adopted by the Consultative Committee of the
Convention for the protection of individuals with regard to automatic
processing of personal data (ETS No. 108).
- increase efforts for voters education in respect to all
steps of the electoral process;
- take measures to improve the organisation of the out-of-country
voting;
98. The Assembly recommends to the authorities of North Macedonia
to show strong and genuine political will to address all shortcomings
and issues noticed during this elections observation and highlighted
throughout this report and particularly in its conclusions, in the
spirit of the Fourth Summit where Heads of States and Government
of the Council of Europe member States adopted the Reykjavik Principles
of Democracy to secure and strengthen democracy and good governance
and “encourage democratic participation at national, regional and
local levels through free and fair elections”.
99. PACE stands ready to contribute to the accomplishment of this
process within the framework of the Assembly’s post-monitoring procedure
and in close co-operation with the Venice Commission.
Appendix 1 – Composition of the ad hoc committee
Based on the proposals by the political groups
of the Assembly, the ad hoc committee was composed as follows (* members
of the pre-election delegation, ** members of the presidential election
delegation, *** members of the presidential 2nd tour
and parliamentary election delegation):
Chairperson: Mr Alfred HEER, Switzerland
Socialists, Democrats and Greens Group
(SOC)
- Mr Jone BLIKRA, Norway
**
- Mr Pierre-Alain FRIDEZ, Switzerland ** ***
- Mr Yunus EMRE, Türkiye **
- Mr Antonio GUTIERREZ-LIMONES, Spain **
- Ms Klotilda BUSHKA, Albania **
- Mr Stefan SCHENNACH, Austria* ***
Group of the European People’s Party (EPP/CD)
- Mr Corneliu-Mugurel
COZMANCIUC, Romania **
- Mr Cristian-Augustin NICULESCU-ȚÂGÂRLAȘ, Romania **
- Mr Chris SAID, Malta * **
- Mr Branislav BORENOVIĆ, Bosnia and Herzegovina ** ***
- Mr Christian BUCHMANN, Austria ***
- Mr Jan Filip LIBICKI, Poland ***
- Mr Georgios STAMATIS, Greece ***
Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for
Europe (ALDE)
- Mr Alfred HEER, Switzerland
* ** ***
- Ms Liliana TANGUY, France ** ***
- Ms Yevheniia KRAVCHUK, Ukraine **
- Mr Arminas LYDEKA, Lithuania **
- Mr Mehmet AKALIN, Türkiye ***
- Ms Denisa NEAGU, Romania ***
European Conservatives Group and Democratic
Alliance (EC-DA)
- Mr Armen GEVORGYAN,
Armenia ** ***
- Mr Jose Maria SANCHEZ GARCIA, Spain ** ***
- Mr Simone BILLI, Italy ***
Group of the Unified European Left (UEL)
- Ms Sevilay ÇELENK ÖZEN,
Türkiye * ** ***
Co-rapporteurs AS/MON (ex officio)
- Ms Sibel ARSLAN, Switzerland
(SOC) * ** ***
- Mr Joseph O’REILLY, Ireland (EPP/CD) * ***
Venice Commission
- Ms Florence GANOUX,
Expert ** ***
- Mr Michael JANSSEN, Administrator, Venice Commission **
***
Accompanying person
- Mr Turgunaliev MAKSAT,
accompanying Mr Libicki ***
Secretariat
- Mr Bogdan TORCĂTORIU,
Senior Elections Officer, Secretary of the ad hoc committee, Elections Division
- Ms Carine ROLLER-KAUFMAN, Assistant, Elections Division
Appendix 2 – Programme of the pre-electoral
delegation of the Parliamentary Assembly
Tuesday, 26 March 2024
9:00-10:00: Delegation meeting with introductory words by:
- Mr Alfred Heer, Head of the
PACE Delegation
- Mr Oleg Soldatov, Head of the Council of Europe Programme
Office in Skopje
- Mr Joseph O’Reilly and Ms Sibel Arslan, co-rapporteurs
of the Monitoring committee
- Presentation of the programme by the Secretariat
10:15-11:15: Meeting with members of the diplomatic corps:
- Ms Barbara Gruber, Deputy Ambassador
(Austria)
- Mr Lucien Aegerter, Deputy Head of Mission (Switzerland)
- Mr Muhammed Çelikkaya, Deputy Ambassador (Türkiye)
- Ambassador David Geer, Head of the EU Delegation
11:30-12:30: Meeting with Ms Jillian Stirk, Head of the OSCE/ODIHR
Election Observation Mission, Mr Marcell Nagy, Deputy Head of Mission
and members of the core team:
- Ms Noemi
Arcidiacono, Political Analyst
- Ms Marcela Maskova, Election Analyst
- Ms Elena Kovalyova, Legal Analyst
14:00-15:00: Meeting with representatives of the civil society:
- Human Rights Institute: Ms Kristina
Doda
- NGO Civil: Ms Xhabir Derala
- Helsinki Committee: Ms Tona Kareva-Taleska
- Centre for Research and Policy Making (CRPM): Ms Marija
Risteska
15:15-16:15: Meeting with representatives of the media (part
1):
- Macedonian Institute for
Media (MIM): Ms Vesna Nikodinoska
- Media Development Center: Mr Dejan Georgievski
- Macedonian Association of Journalists (MAN): Ms Ivona
Talevska
- Media Information Agency (MIA): Ms Elizabeta V. Najdeski
16:30-17:30: Meeting with representatives of the media (part
2):
- National Broadcasting Service
(MRT): Mr Zoran Bogatinov, Editor
- Telma TV: Ms Snezana Lupevska, Editor in Chief
- MKD.MK portal: Mr Alaksandar Damovski, Editor in Chief
- AlsatTV: Ms Fatlume Dervishi, political journalist
Wednesday, 27 March 2024
09:30-10:00: Meeting with H.E. Mr Stevo Pendarovski, President
of North Macedonia and candidate
10:15-10:45: Meeting with H.E. Mr Jovan Mitreski, President
of the Assembly of North Macedonia
- Mr Darko Kaevski, Head of the Delegation of North Macedonia
to the PACE
- Ms Cvetanka Ivanova, Secretary General of the Assembly
of North Macedonia
- Mr Risto Taleski, special advisor in the Cabinet
- Ms Marija Stefanova, member of the Secretariat
10:50-11:20: Meeting with Mr Dimitar Kovachevski, president
of SDSM
11:30-12:00: Meeting with Mr Hristijan Mickoski, president
of VMRO-DPMNE and Ms Gordana Siljanovska-Davkova, candidate to the
presidency. Also present: Mr Nikola Micevski, MP, Mr Aleksandar
Nikoloski, MP
12:30-13:00: Meeting with Mr Aleksandar Dashtevski, President
of the State Election Commission, and members of the Commission
14:30-15.00: Meeting with Mr Zijadin Sela, Alliance for Albanians
15:10-15:40: Meeting with Mr Afrim Gashi, president of Alternative,
Mr Bilal Kasami, President of the BESA Movement, Mr Izet Mexhiti,
President of the Democratic Movement, and Mr Arben Taravari, candidate
to the presidency
16:00-16:30: Meeting with Mr Ali Ahmeti, president of DUI
and Mr Bujar Osmani, Minister of Foreign Affairs, candidate to the
presidency
17:15: Delegation meeting (preparation of a statement)
19:00: Working dinner hosted by Mr Darko Kaevski, Head of
the Delegation of North Macedonia to the PACE
Appendix 3 – Statement of the pre-electoral
delegation of the Parliamentary Assembly
In Skopje, PACE
pre-electoral delegation hopes that the reshuffling of political
scene in North Macedonia before the elections will not negatively
affect the campaign
A pre-electoral delegation of the Parliamentary Assembly of
the Council of Europe (PACE), concluding a visit to North Macedonia
(25-28 March 2024), noted that the period ahead of the elections
has been stable and elections are expected to meet democratic standards.
It also understood that the political environment, already strongly
polarized, is still very dynamic and shifting, and called on all
stakeholders to ensure that the campaign will run smoothly until
the election day.
The six-member cross-party delegation*, led by Alfred Heer
(Switzerland, ALDE), conducted its assessment in Skopje and met
with the Speaker of the Assembly of North Macedonia, candidates
for the Presidency, party leaders and representatives, the President
and members of the State Election Commission (SEC), journalists and
civil society groups, members of the diplomatic corps, fellow international
observers from the ODIHR, and members of the North Macedonia delegation
to PACE.
The delegation noted that almost all political forces in North
Macedonia are in favour of the European integration of the country
and hopes that a solution will be found to the remaining obstacles.
The delegation was informed that a series of long-standing
ODIHR recommendations have not been addressed, including recommendations
to harmonise the Electoral Code, to stipulate clear tenure and appointment
procedures for State Election Commissioners, and to provide effective
remedies for electoral disputes.
The delegation was pleased to hear about the general confidence
in the overall professionalism of the SEC but noted a lesser degree
of trust in the lower election management bodies.
The delegation noted with satisfaction a general level of
trust in the accuracy of the voter register and the methods of voter
registration. However, it received information that the overall
numbers of voters may be inflated due to citizens who remain in
the register despite residing abroad. It also noted with concern
that those citizens turning 18 between the 1st and the 2nd rounds
of the presidential election would be deprived of the right to vote
for the 2nd round of the presidential election.
The delegation learned that parties and candidates can campaign
freely. While hate speech is not considered to be a major electoral
issue, the delegation heard about cases of personal attacks and
intimidation attempts against representatives of civil society,
culminating with incitations to violence and even death threats.
The delegation strongly condemns such practices, which are unacceptable
in a European democracy, and expresses hope that the competent authorities
will urgently take strong measures against the perpetrators of such
threats.
The delegation noted that, while so far there have been no
signs of massive misuse of state resources, concerns exist that
this might still occur during the electoral campaign. It also heard
about possible pressure on public employees as well as on inmates
in prisons.
The formula for the distribution of political advertising
in media and in public spaces is seen by some as privileging the
larger and more established parties rather than providing fair access
to all contestants, including smaller parties.
The delegation also took note of concerns on certain aspects
of the electoral process, including the electoral legal framework
(bringing last-minute amendments to the Electoral Code, while clearly
necessary for better conduct of the electoral process, is contrary
to the recommendations of the Venice Commission) as well as the rather
weak regulation of campaign financing rules (particularly concerning
a multitude of web portals seemingly created recently with the only
goal of obtaining public funding for parties).
The delegation acknowledges that addressing some of these
issues before election day may be challenging, but it strongly urges
action on those that can still be rectified.
PACE – which represents parliamentarians from 46 European
nations – is observing elections in North Macedonia within the framework
of its post-monitoring dialogue with the country. A full-fledged
PACE delegation of 22 members, accompanied by legal experts from
the Venice Commission, will travel to the country to observe the
vote on 24 April 2024 in the framework of an International Election
Observation Mission together with the ODIHR, then on 8th of May when
delegations from the OSCE Parliamentary Assembly and from the European
Parliament should also join. PACE will debate its conclusions in
due course.
* Composition of the delegation:
- Alfred Heer, Switzerland, Alliance of Liberals and Democrats
for Europe (ALDE)
- Stefan Schennach, Austria, Group of Socialists, Democrats
and Greens (SOC)
- Chris Said, Malta, Group of European People's Parties
(EPP/CD)
- Sevilay Çelenk Özen, Turkey, Group of the United European
Left (UEL)
- Sibel Arslan, Switzerland (SOC), co-rapporteur of the
Monitoring Committee
- Joseph O'Reilly, Ireland (EPP/CD), co-rapporteur of the
Monitoring Committee
Appendix 4 – Programme of the meetings of
the International Electoral Observation Mission – presidential election
(24 April 2024)
Monday, 22 April 2024
9:00-10:00: PACE delegation meeting
- Welcome by Mr Alfred Heer, Head of Delegation
- Presentation by Ms Sibel Arslan, co-rapporteur of the
Monitoring Committee
- Presentation by Ms Florence Ganoux, expert of the Venice
Commission
- Presentation of the programme by the Secretariat
10:15-12:30: Briefing by the ODIHR Election Observation Mission
(part 1):
- Welcome and overview
of the EOM's work: Ms Jillian Stirk, Head of Mission
- Political overview, the Contestants and the Election Campaign:
Ms Noemi Arcidiacono, Political Analyst
- Legal Framework, Electoral System and Electoral Dispute
Resolution: Ms Elena Kovalyova, Legal Analyst
- Campaign Finance: Mr Radivoje Grujić, Campaign Finance
Analyst
- Election Administration, Voter and Candidate Registration:
Ms Marcela Mašková, Election Analyst
- Media Landscape: Mr Laurens Teule, Media Analyst
14:00-15:00: Meeting with representatives of civil society
and media associations:
- Media
Development Center: Mr Dejan Georgievski, Director
- Macedonian Association of Journalists (MAN): Ms Ivona
Talevska, President
- Association of Journalists of Macedonia (ZNM): Mr Milan
Spirovski, Project Researcher
- Institute of Communication Studies: Mr Bojan Georgievski
15:15-16:15: Meeting with representatives of the media:
- Telma TV: Ms Snezana Lupevska,
Editor in Chief
- MKD.MK portal: Mr Aleksandar Damovski, Editor in Chief
- AlsatTV: Mr Nazim Rashidi, Editor
- Kanal 5 TV: Mr Jovan Gjorgovski
- Fokus weekly: Mr Vlatko Stojanovski, Editor in Chief
- Plus info: Mr Branko Geroski, Editor in Chief
16:30-17:15: Meeting with the representative of the incumbent
President and Candidate Mr Stevo Pendarovski, Mr Aleksandar Spasov
18:30-19:15: Meeting with Mr Arben Taravari, Candidate
Tuesday, 23 April 2024
9:00-9:45: Meeting with Mr Bujar Osmani, Candidate
9:45-10:30: Meeting with Ms Gordana Siljanovska-Davkova, Candidate
10:30-11:15: Meeting with Mr Maksim Acevski, Chief State Auditor,
State Audit Office, Mr Zoran Bogoevski, Vice President, State Commission
for the Prevention of Corruption, and Mr Servet Demiri, member,
and Ms Katerina Zajkova, Head of Unit for Monitoring the Financing
of Political Parties and Election Campaigns and Corruption in Public Procurement
11:15-12:00: Meeting with Mr Aleksandar Dashtevski, President
of the State Election Commission, Ms Ditmire Shehu, Vice-president
of the State Election Commission; Ms Radica Risteska, Mr Boban Stojanoski,
Mr Boris Kondarko and Mr Abdush Demiri, members of the State Election
Commission
12:00-12:50: Briefing by the ODIHR Election Observation Mission
(part 2) – Election Day Procedures:
- Ms Marcela Mašková, Election Analyst
- STO Reporting and Forms: Andreas Roth, Statistical Analyst
12:50-13:10: Briefing by the ODIHR Long-Term Observers (LTO1
and LTO2)
13:10: Meeting with drivers and linguistic assistants
Wednesday, 24 April 2024 – Election Day
7:00-22:00: Observation of the opening of the polling stations,
of the vote, of the closing of the polling stations and of the counting
of ballots
Thursday, 25 April 2024
8:00-9:00: PACE delegation meeting (debriefing)
15:00: Joint Press Conference
Appendix 5 – Press release of the International
Election Observation Mission
North Macedonia’s
presidential election competitive and overall well run, but marked
by legal gaps and negative rhetoric, international observers say
SKOPJE, 25 April 2024 – North Macedonia’s presidential election
campaign was competitive and fundamental freedoms including media
freedom were respected, but important areas of the presidential
contest that included campaign rules, access to the media, and allocation
of state funding are not regulated, undermining the key principle
of legal certainty, international observers said in a statement today.
The joint observation mission from the OSCE Office for Democratic
Institutions and Human Rights (ODIHR) and the Parliamentary Assembly
of the Council of Europe (PACE) found that while the legal framework
creates the basis for democratic elections, numerous gaps remain.
At the same time, the link between political party affiliation on
the one hand and campaign funds and media opportunities on the other
resulted in an advantage for candidates associated with the main
parties in parliament.
“This was a competitive election that took place in a peaceful
and democratic atmosphere,” said Jillian Stirk, who headed ODIHR’s
election observation mission. “However, the increasingly negative
rhetoric was regrettable and reflected broader political fragmentation
and ethnic division. At the same time, gaps in the election law
and the hasty approval of legal changes did not address the long-standing
need for legal reforms. Greater political will is needed to overcome
these shortcomings.”
Some 1.8 million citizens were registered to vote in yesterday’s
election. Despite the organization of two elections at the same
time, ongoing staff shortages and a lack of funding, the election
administration met all legal deadlines and generally enjoyed public
trust. Observers assessed election day positively overall, and noted
that voting procedures were largely respected.
As election day approached, the campaign became increasingly
negative both online and offline, including personal attacks and
occasional threats. Observers noted that some public infrastructure
projects were announced by officials after the election date was
set, potentially leading to the misuse of public resources in connection
with the campaign.
“The presidential election was well organized and candidates
could express themselves freely during the campaign, thus allowing
voters to make an informed choice,” said Alfred Heer, who headed
the PACE delegation. “While the election campaign was unfortunately
tarnished by harsh rhetoric, this did not affect the general atmosphere
on election day, which remained calm and without significant incidents.”
While the recent legal changes improved some parts of the
campaign finance framework, they failed to improve systemic shortcomings
that together with limited resources for oversight bodies and other
deficiencies significantly limited the effectiveness of campaign
finance oversight. A lack of full confidence was noted in the effectiveness
of campaign finance monitoring and accountability.
While North Macedonia has a diverse media landscape and media
freedom is generally respected, online news media is largely unregulated,
underlining the need for further reform. The public broadcaster
covered all presidential candidates in line with legal requirements,
and private media presented adequate information on the presidential
candidates overall. However, a significant number of online news
portals appeared to be created for the sole purpose of receiving
state funds during election campaigns and, in some cases, channelling
these funds to political parties.
The international election observation to the first round
of the presidential election in North Macedonia totalled 234 observers
from 33 countries, made up of 216 ODIHR experts, long-term, and
short-term observers, and 18 from PACE.
For more information, please contact:
Appendix 6 – Programme of the meetings of
the International Electoral Observation Mission – presidential election
(2nd round) and parliamentary elections
(8 May 2024)
Monday 6 May 2024
9:00-10:00: PACE delegation meeting
- Welcome by the Head of the delegation, Mr Alfred Heer
- Intervention by the co-rapporteur: Ms Sibel Arslan and
Mr Joseph O’Reilly
- Presentation by Ms Florence Ganoux, member of the Venice
Commission
- Practical information from the secretariat
10:00-10:20: Welcome and introductory remarks
- Mr Nikoloz Samkharadze, Special
Co-ordinator and Leader of the short-term OSCE observer mission
- Mr Alfred Heer, Head of the PACE Delegation
- Mr Leopoldo López Gil, Head of the European Parliament
Delegation
- Ms Carina Ödebrink, Head of the OSCE PA Delegation
10:20-11:00: Introduction on the Country by the International
Community
- Dr Susan Penksa,
Deputy Head of the OSCE Mission to Skopje
- Ambassador David Geer, Head of the Delegation of the European
Union to the Republic of North Macedonia
11:15-13:15: Briefing by the ODIHR Election Observation Mission
- Welcome and overview of the
EOM's work – Ms Jillian Stirk, Head of Mission
- Political overview, the Contestants and the Election Campaign
– Ms Noemi Arcidiacono, Political Analyst
- Legal Framework, Electoral System and Electoral Dispute
Resolution – Ms Elena Kovalyova, Legal Analyst
- Campaign Finance – Mr Radivoje Grujić, Campaign Finance
Analyst
- Election Administration, Voter and Candidate Registration
– Ms Marcela Mašková, Election Analyst
- Media Landscape – Mr Laurens Teule, Media Analyst
- Security Overview – Mr Peter Marron, Security Expert
15:00-16:30: Elections and Political Context
- CIVIL – Center for Freedom,
President, Mr Xhabir Deralla
- Roma Foundation for Democracy, Executive Director, Mr
Selvije Mustafi, and Mr Arif Ademi
- Macedonian Center for International Cooperation, Ms Valentina
Velichkovska, Director of Citizens Resource Center
- European Policy Institute Skopje, Director, Ms Simonida
Kacarska
16:45-18:45: Parties/candidates contesting the elections
- “VLEN” coalition, Mr Bekim Sali
- “For a European Future” coalition, SDSM International
Secretary, Mr Bojan Marichikj
- “European Front” coalition, DUI, Mr Arbër Ademi
- “Your Macedonia” coalition, Vice-president of VMRO-DPMNE,
Mr Timcho Mucunski
- “ZNAM” party, Leader, Mr Boban Karapejovski
Tuesday, 7 May 2024
08:30-09:30: Presidential Candidates – 1st part
- Mr Aleksandar Spasov – Representative
of Mr Stevo Pendarovski
09:30-11:00: Campaign and Election Coverage Panel
- National Broadcasting Service
(MRT), Political Editor, Mr Zoran Bogatinov
- Telma TV, Editor in Chief, Ms Snezana Lupevska
- MKD.MK, Editor in Chief, Mr Aleksandar Damovski
- Macedonian Association of Journalists, President, Ms Ivona
Talevska
- Association of Journalists of Macedonia, Project Resercher,
Mr Milan Spirovski
- Agency for Audio and Audio-visual Media Services, Head
of the Programme Affairs Department, Ms Emilia Janevska
11:15-12:15: Election administration
- Mr Aleksandar Dashtevski, Chairman, State Election Commission
- Mr Zoran Bogoevski, Vice-President, State Commission for
the Prevention of Corruption
- Mr Servet Demiri, member of the State Commission for the
Prevention of Corruption
- Mr Aleksandar Popovski, Secretary General, State Audit
Office of the Republic of North Macedonia
- Ms Katerina Caloska Aleksovska, Assistant Auditor General,
State Audit Office of the Republic of North Macedonia
12:15-12:45: Presidential Candidates – 2nd part
- Gordana Siljanovska-Davkova
12:45-13:30: ODIHR EOM Briefing continuation
- Election Day Procedures – Ms
Marcela Mašková, Election Analyst
- STO Reporting and Forms – Mr Andreas Roth, Statistical
Analyst
- Security overview – Mr Peter Marron, Security Expert
- Regional briefing for Skopje Teams by Skopje ODIHR LTOs
– Mr Matti Heinonen, Ms Maja Bjelic, Mr Bernhard Zimburg, Mr Gunn
Benjaminsen
14:00: Meeting with E-Day drivers and interpreters
Wednesday, 8 May 2024
All day: Election Day – Observation in polling stations
Thursday, 9 May 2024
08:00-09:00: Debriefing for PACE Delegation
15:00-16:15: Press conference
Appendix 7 – Press release of the International
Election Observation Mission
North Macedonia’s
elections were competitive and voters well informed, although the
process remains insufficiently regulated: international observers
SKOPJE, 9 May 2024 – North Macedonia’s presidential run-off
and parliamentary elections were competitive and an extensive and
pluralistic campaign helped voters to make an informed choice, but
marred by negative rhetoric with nationalistic slogans, as well
as shortcomings in the legislation and insufficient oversight of campaign
finances, international observers said in a statement today.
The elections took place against a background of voter dissatisfaction
with the political establishment, and a general sense that both
the government and opposition lacked the will to address long-standing
calls for comprehensive reforms. The joint observation mission from
the OSCE Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights (ODIHR),
the OSCE Parliamentary Assembly (OSCE PA), the Parliamentary Assembly
of the Council of Europe (PACE), and the European Parliament (EP)
found that while the legal framework creates the basis for democratic
elections, many gaps and inconsistencies remain, making further
reform essential.
“Election day was calm and peaceful, proceeding in a constructive
atmosphere, despite the strong political polarization and fragmentation
in North Macedonia,” said Nikoloz Samkharadze, Special Co-ordinator
and leader of the short-term observer mission. “It is my sincere
hope for the people of this country that the newly elected leadership
will effectively tackle the key challenges facing the nation and
bring North Macedonia ever closer to its declared goal of EU membership.”
The tone of campaigning, including online, became progressively
negative ahead of the first round of the presidential election,
and this did not improve during the presidential run-off and parliamentary
campaigns. Allegations of vote buying increased before election
day, involving all major political parties, which highlights the
need for greater efforts to address these concerns.
The method for distributing state funds for campaigning and
media time disadvantaged smaller parties and those without any representation
in parliament. At the same time, the transparency and accountability
of campaign finances were weakened by the minimal campaign finance
reporting requirements, as well as the limited resources and capacities
given to oversight bodies.
“North Macedonia has failed to implement a number of important
recommendations made by the Council of Europe’s Venice Commission
and ODIHR,” said Alfred Heer, who headed the PACE delegation. “Many
voters who live abroad were unable to vote for an MP to represent
them in parliament, and the 40% voter turnout requirement for the
second round of presidential elections also needs urgent reform
to avoid the risk of cycles of failed elections.”
With the notable exception of one presidential candidate in
the second round, observers noted that political parties featured
few women speakers at campaign events, and parties appeared to make
little effort to engage women voters. All registered candidate lists
were in line with the law to have a minimum of 40% representation of
women. However, they were often placed in the lowest possible positions.
“North Macedonia has made progress in advancing gender equality
in political and public life, as demonstrated in these elections
in which women comprised 43% of parliamentary candidates,” stressed
Carina Ödebrink, who headed the OSCE PA delegation. “Nonetheless,
continued political engagement and reforms are imperative to increase
representation of women in elected and appointed positions, and
to address the concerns and needs of women voters.”
Some 1.8 million citizens were registered to vote in yesterday’s
elections. Public confidence in the election administration was
generally high, and training for election officials was comprehensive,
although voter education remained limited. Election day was generally
calm and observers assessed it positively overall. Voting procedures
were largely respected, but in a number of cases election boards
did not fully keep to procedures during the vote count.
“We would like to praise a job done by the very dedicated
women and men of the electoral boards, who demonstrated how well
trained they were,” said Leopoldo Lopez Gil, head of the EP delegation.
“They contributed to the orderly and calm running of the electoral
process and set an example of civic engagement.”
North Macedonia’s media landscape is diverse and media freedom
largely respected. Throughout the campaign period, media generally
covered all candidates, with some channels favouring specific candidate lists.
Televised debates helped inform voters ahead of election day. At
the same time, the need for further reforms in the media sector
was noted.
“These elections were competitive and well run, particularly
given the challenge of organizing two different elections at the
same time,” said Jillian Stirk, who headed ODIHR’s election observation
mission. “But the negative rhetoric and increasingly nationalistic
undertones of some parties and candidates was extremely worrying,
and the campaign would have benefited from more detailed oversight.
We hope that going forward, North Macedonia will continue to strengthen
its democracy, and ODIHR remains ready to provide support for these
efforts.”
The international election observation to the second round
of the presidential election and the parliamentary elections in
North Macedonia totalled 344 observers from 42 countries, made up
of 238 ODIHR-deployed experts, long-term, and short-term observers,
72 from the OSCE PA, 23 from PACE, and 11 from the EP.
For more information, please contact: