Ethiopia heads for one of 'least competitive' elections

Africa
By AFP | May 01, 2026

 Traffic and pedestrians fill a street in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia Thursday, Nov. 3, 2022. [AFP]

Ethiopia holds a general election on June 1, with Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed all but guaranteed of victory despite multiple armed conflicts and the economic impact of the Middle East war.

Who will win?

Abiy has been in power since 2018 and his Prosperity Party (PP) won a landslide -- 485 of the 502 contested seats -- at the last general election in 2021.

That ballot was partially disrupted by the devastating civil war between the central government and the leaders of the Tigray region that claimed an estimated 600,000 lives.

Abiy was initially feted for improving civil liberties and earned a Nobel Peace Prize for restoring relations with Eritrea.

But his government has returned to a familiar authoritarianism, cracking down on opponents, rights groups and journalists.

Abiy has focused on gradually liberalising the heavily controlled economy in the hope of attracting investment and has projected double-digit growth this year.

But Ethiopia's heavy reliance on oil imports means it has been among the worst hit by Israeli-US war against Iran.

That is unlikely to prevent another landslide, and the ruling party has barely bothered with campaigning, policy announcements or even slogans.

Abiy has not even confirmed he is running, although few doubt he will return to power.

"This election going to be among the least competitive since multi-party democracy was introduced (in 1991)," Abel Abate Demissie of the Chatham House think tank told AFP.

What's the security situation?

The most populous regions, Oromia and Amhara, are experiencing long-running insurgencies and voting has already been cancelled in 30 of Amhara's 137 constituencies.

Amhara militant group, the Fano, warned voters in March that it would consider anyone participating in the election "as complicit and fight against you".

Despite the presence of some 500,000 federal soldiers and 30,000 police, "opportunities for spoilers abound", said the Washington-based Africa Center for Strategic Studies in a recent report.

The national election authority has said voting will not take place in Tigray, where one million people are still displaced from the civil war, and the dominant regional party, the Tigray People's Liberation Front, remains at odds with the government.

Is anyone else running?

There are 23 parties registered for the election but most are close to the PP.

"Many of the formidable opposition are reluctant to engage in elections. Some of them are in the bush and others in exile," said Abel from Chatham House.

Ethiopia has never experienced truly free elections. In 2015, for instance, the ruling coalition won all the seats.

The organisation is demanding.

A budget of 10 billion birr ($64 million) has been allocated to organise the vote across some 49,000 polling stations in a country that covers over 1.1 million square kilometres (425,000 square miles).

In any case, the result is "pretty clear and it is likely (to be) another landslide for the incumbent", said Abel.

Share this story
.
RECOMMENDED NEWS