Voters standing outside a polling station in East Africa for an article about Somalia one-person one-vote election

Somalis vote in the first one-person one-vote local election since 1969

For the first time in more than five decades, Somali citizens cast direct ballots in local government elections, marking a historic step toward representative democracy in a country that has spent much of the post-1969 C.E. era navigating civil conflict, clan-based power arrangements, and indirect electoral systems. The November 2024 C.E. district council elections gave ordinary Somalis a direct say in who governs their communities — something a generation of voters had never experienced.

At a glance

  • Somalia one-person one-vote election: District council elections held in November 2024 C.E. marked the first direct popular vote in Somalia since the government of Siad Barre held elections in 1969 C.E. — before decades of authoritarian rule and civil war.
  • Voter participation: Millions of registered Somali voters were eligible to cast ballots across multiple federal member states, with election commissions working to verify identities and prevent fraud in a country with limited civil registration infrastructure.
  • Women’s representation: Somali electoral law included a 30% quota for women in district council seats, a provision advocates fought for across years of constitutional negotiations.

Why this moment matters

Somalia has been working toward a functioning federal democracy for years, but progress has often been measured in cautious steps. National elections in 2021 C.E. and 2022 C.E. were still conducted through an indirect clan-delegate system, in which community elders selected lawmakers rather than voters choosing directly.

The shift to direct voting at the local level is significant precisely because local government is where democratic legitimacy is most immediate. District councils control decisions about basic services, land disputes, and community security. When those councils are chosen by the people they serve — rather than appointed or selected through back-channel processes — the relationship between government and citizen changes.

International observers and Somali civil society groups had long pushed for the one-person, one-vote model as essential to building durable democratic norms. The 2024 C.E. elections represented the first concrete realization of that goal at any level of Somali government since independence-era institutions collapsed.

A country that has been rebuilding from within

Somalia’s path since the early 1990s C.E. has been one of the most difficult in the world. The collapse of the central state in 1991 C.E. triggered a civil war that killed hundreds of thousands and displaced millions more. Al-Shabaab, the militant group affiliated with al-Qaeda, still controls significant territory in southern and central Somalia and has actively sought to disrupt democratic processes.

Holding elections under those conditions is not an abstraction — it is a physical and logistical challenge that requires security coordination, public trust, and political will across competing factions. The fact that district council voting proceeded in multiple regions is a reflection of that hard-won stabilization work, much of it driven by Somali institutions rather than foreign actors.

The role of Somali women’s organizations and civil society networks deserves specific attention. Groups working on voter education, candidate training for women, and election monitoring operated in contexts where doing so carries real personal risk. Their contribution to making these elections possible is part of the story that rarely travels far outside the country.

What comes next — and what remains hard

Direct elections at the district level do not resolve Somalia’s deeper structural challenges. Al-Shabaab violence, contested boundaries between federal member states, and disputes over resource distribution all remain live tensions. The 2024 C.E. elections were also limited in geographic scope — not every region of the country participated equally, and some areas remained inaccessible.

The goal of extending one-person, one-vote elections to national parliamentary races — long promised but repeatedly delayed — has still not been achieved. Observers note that the credibility of district council results, and how fairly the quota system for women is implemented in practice, will shape public confidence in the broader democratic project.

Still, the significance of an ordinary Somali citizen walking to a polling station and casting a ballot for their local representative — something that had not happened since 1969 C.E. — should not be understated. Democratic legitimacy is built in exactly these kinds of moments, accumulated over time, one election at a time.

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