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News release

In Senegal, context for postponed election is strong popular support for democracy, growing dissatisfaction with its workings

5 Feb 2024 Senegal
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News release
Key findings
  • More than eight in 10 Senegalese say they prefer democracy over any other political system (84%) and endorse fair, open, and honest elections as the best way to choose their leaders (82%) (Figure 1). o A similar majority (79%) want the president to be limited to a maximum of two terms in office.
  • Across 39 African countries surveyed in 2021/2023, Senegal registers the third-strongest support for democracy (84%), well above the continental average of 66% (Figure 2).
  • However, the proportion of Senegalese who say they are “fairly satisfied” or “very satisfied” with the way democracy works in the country has declined sharply, from 64% in 2014 to 48% (Figure 3).
  • More than half (53%) of citizens say the country is less democratic now than it was five years ago (Figure 4).
  • Three-fourths (76%) of Senegalese say their president must always obey the country’s laws and courts, even if he thinks they are wrong. But a majority (57%) say that in fact the president “often” or “always” ignores the laws and courts – more than quadruple the proportion who thought so in 2013 (13%) (Figure 5).

President Macky Sall’s move to postpone Senegal’s presidential election comes within the context of solid popular support for democracy but increasing dissatisfaction with the way the country’s democracy is working, Afrobarometer surveys show.

Sall announced Saturday that he has postponed the 25 February election indefinitely.

Afrobarometer survey findings show that most Senegalese endorse elections as the best way to choose their leaders. They also favour limiting their presidents to two terms, a limitation that Sall has promised to respect. Across 39 countries surveyed in 2021/2023, Senegal records the third-largest proportion of citizens who prefer democracy to any other political system.

But fewer than half of Senegalese say they are satisfied with the way democracy works in the country, a significant decline compared to 2014, and a majority think the country is less democratic than it was five years ago. While most citizens say their president must always obey the country’s laws and courts, a growing share say their president ignores them.