Gender Quotas Database

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Lesotho

Lesotho

Southern Africa

Lesotho has a Bicameral parliament with legislated quotas for the single/lower house and at the sub-national level. 30 of 120 (25%) seats in the National Assembly are held by women.

At a glance

Structure of parliament Bicameral

Are there legislated quotas

For the Single / Lower house? Yes
For the Upper house? No
For the Sub-national level? Yes

Are there voluntary quotas?

Adopted by political parties? No
Is there additional information? Yes

Single / Lower House

National Assembly

Upper House

Senate

Quota at the Sub-National Level

Voluntary Political Party Quotas*

* Only political parties represented in parliament are included. When a country has legislated quotas in place, only political parties that have voluntary quotas that exceed the percentage/number of the national quota legislation are presented in this table.

Additional information

In 2005, the Lesotho Court of Appeal dismissed an appeal from an aspirant male ward councillor to declare the reservation of one-third of the local government seats for women as unconstitutional. The councillor argued that the all-women constituencies violated his constitutional right to contest the elections in a constituency of his choice. The Court dismissed the appeal and upheld the High Court’s ruling. It held that the amendment which provided for a temporary and rotating quota of electoral divisions reserved for women was indeed reasonably justifiable in Lesotho’s circumstances. They agreed with what Justice Peete in the High Court described as ‘an undisputable fact … that women in our society have long stood disadvantaged and marginalised socially, economically and even politically.’

Unhappy with this decision, political parties lobbied the Independent Electoral Commission (IEC) to initiate an amendment to the 2005 law. Thus, the Local Government Elections Act was amended ahead of the 2011 local government elections. The new system revoked the system of reserved seats at the constituency level and introduced the system of 30 per cent seats reserved for women, distributed between parties on a proportional representation basis (‘M’a-Tlali Mapetla 2009).

Sources

Legal Sources:

  • Constitution of Lesotho - Link
  • Parliamentary Election Law - Link
  • Local Government Election Act - Link

Other Sources:

 

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