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Timor-Leste presidential elections

Timor-Leste goes to the polls on Monday to elect a new president. After a profoundly troubled history, this small and still impoverished country the election should, happily, be relatively unproblematic.
The elections have so far seen limited conflict, with a Fretilin-PD disturbance in Dili’s outer west reportedly leaving some homes burned. Election rallies have otherwise been noisy but not dangerous.
Competition for the presidency is strong, in some areas fierce, and the outcome will have reverberations for the country’s future beyond the president’s largely ceremonial role. After being all but guaranteed that the Fretilin presidential candidate, Franciso ‘Lu-Olo’ Gueterres, would win the presidency outright in the first electoral round, there is now an even chance the vote will go to a run-off round.
Lu-Olo has been supported for the presidency by the founder of co-governing party, CNRT, for president and former prime minter, Xanana Gusmao. Many in CNRT have been unhappy with Gusmao dismissing his own party member’ candidacy for the presidency.
Gusmao’s support for Lu-Olo follows his support two years ago for Fretilin’s Rui de Araujo as prime minister, when Gusmao stepped down from the post. Gusmao supporting a Fretilin candidate for the presidency after the prime ministership has added insult to injury for the CNRT membership, a consequence of which is that some CNRT members and supporters might stay away from the non-compulsory vote.
Lu-Olo’s main rival is Democratic Party (PD) candidate Antonio da Conceicao, who is also supported by the Popular Liberation Party (PLP) of President Taur Matan Ruak. Working against Conceicao, PD’s key founder, Fernando ‘Lasama’ de Araujo, died of natural causes two years ago, so PD’s support base may have fallen a little.
Conceicao could, however, be a lightning rod for wider anti-Fretilin sentiment. The PLP, meanwhile, has been running a strong anti-corruption campaign and, without regular public opinion polling, seems to be receiving some support for that.
The real question will be, after CNRT joined with Fretilin to form a government of national unity, if PD and PLP can form a continuing alliance, and perhaps have smaller parties such as Fretilin break-away Mudanca gravitate around them. If so, while it is expected that Lu-Olo will be elected president, if not immediately then in the run-off, at least the country will have a viable Opposition.
A viable Opposition will been necessary if Timor-Leste is not to become a dominant party state, in which the outcomes of elections are effectively known in advance. Political competition, though in some respects divisive, will be critical if the country is to maintain a sense of public accountability.
With such accountability, Timor-Leste may avoid the myriad problems, such as corruption and financial mismanagement, which have ultimately beset so many other newly independent nations. Without such accountability such problems, which have already surfaced, may become worse.