Abstention
Abstention in Election Law
Deliberate refusal on the part of a voter to vote on election day. Abstention can be considered a political statement if a boycott is clearly called for by voters and/or encouraged by political parties. But abstention can also be the result of a lack of interest in an election that seems less important than others and does not succeed in mobilising the electorate.
Abstention (in Voting)
Abstention by a State in voting in an organ of an international organization
can give rise to signifi cant legal problems. 'At one time abstentions were apparently
counted as negative votes, thus, among other things, preventing unanimity. But now
it would seem that, fi rstly, abstention is not regarded as preventing unanimity, as is shown
by the provisions of many constitutional instruments; secondly, that abstinence is regarded
as a failure to vote, which means that the abstainer is not regarded as “present and voting”;
and, thirdly, that in the S.C. when under Article 27(3) of the Charter the concurring votes of
the permanent members are required for a decision, abstention on the part of a permanent
member is not regarded as the absence of a concurring vote': Amerasinghe , Principles of
International Law of International Organizations (2nd ed.), 150–151. The I.C.J. offered
an explanation for this tacit amendment to the clear wording of art. 27(3) in the Namibia
Advisory Opinion 1971 I.C.J. Rep. 16 at 22: 'However, the proceedings of the Security
Council extending over a long period supply abundant evidence that presidential rulings
and the positions taken by members of the Council, in particular its permanent members,
have consistently and uniformly interpreted the practice of voluntary abstention by a permanent
member as not constituting a bar to the adoption of resolutions. By abstaining,
a member does not signify objection to the approval of what is being proposed; in order
to prevent the adoption of a resolution requiring unanimity of the permanent members, a
permanent member has only to cast a negative vote.' The justifi cation for abstention being
treated as not equivalent to a veto does not apply so easily where a permanent member
is absent when a vote is taken ( see absence (in voting) ), and the validity of resolutions
adopted in the absence of a permanent member is not fi nally resolved. See Goodrich, Hambro , and Simons , Charter of the United Nations (3rd ed.), 231; Stone , Legal Controls
of International Confl ict (2nd imp. rev.), 204–212; Kelsen , Recent Trends in the Law of the
United Nations ( 1951 ), 927–936; de Arechaga , Voting and the Handling of Disputes in the
Security Council ( 1978 ).[1]
Description of Abstention
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See Also
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Notes
- The entry “abstention (in voting)” in the Parry and Grant Encyclopaedic Dictionary of International Law (currently, the Encyclopaedic Dictionary of International Law, 2009), Oxford University Press
Resources
See Also
- Election Law
- Electoral Laws
- Electoral Legislation