Related documents
- Is amended by Electoral Commission (Amendment) (No. 2) Act, 2002
- Is amended by Electoral Commission (Amendment) Act, 2002
Uganda
Electoral Commission Act
Chapter 140
- Commenced on 2 May 1997
- [This is the version of this document as it was at 31 December 2000 to 29 November 2001.]
- [Note: This legislation was revised and consolidated as at 31 December 2000 and 31 December 2023 by the Law Reform Commission of Uganda. All subsequent amendments have been researched and applied by Laws.Africa for ULII.]
Part I – General
1. Interpretation
In this Act, unless the context otherwise requires—2. Commission to be a body corporate
The commission shall be a body corporate with perpetual succession and a common seal and may sue and be sued in its corporate name and may, subject to the provisions of the Constitution, do, enjoy or suffer anything that may be done, enjoyed or suffered by a body corporate.3. Oath of commissioners
4. Commissioners to work on a full-time basis
The members of the commission shall hold office on a full-time basis.5. Secretary and other staff of the commission
6. Terms of employment
If an officer in the service of the commission was immediately before his or her appointment to the service of the commission an officer in the public service, his or her service as an officer of the public service shall be counted as service with the commission for purposes of—7. Leave to serve under other Acts
8. Procedure of the commission
9. Funds and expenses of the commission
10. Seal of the commission
The commission shall have a seal which shall be in such form as the commission may determine and shall, subject to the provisions of any law, be applied in such circumstances as the commission may determine.11. Constituencies
Part II – Particular functions of the commission
12. Additional powers of the commission and regulation of ballot papers
13. Independence of the commission
Subject to the Constitution, the commission shall be independent and shall, in the performance of its functions, not be subject to the direction or control of any person or authority.14. Assignment of duties by the commission, etc.
15. Power of the commission to resolve complaints; Appeals
16. Power to accredit observers
17. Right of the commission to bring actions
For the purpose of performing its functions, the commission may bring an action before any court in Uganda and may seek from the court any remedy which may be available under the law.Part III – National register of voters and voters rolls
18. National voters register and voters rolls
19. Registration of voters
20. Electoral districts
21. Registrars
22. Assistant registrars and update officers
23. Duties of registrars and update officers
24. Inspection of constituency voters rolls, printing of the rolls and use of the printed rolls
25. Display of copies of the voters rolls; Objections to the rolls
26. Power to print and issue voters cards
27. Power to issue duplicate voters cards
28. Offence of buying or selling voters card
29. Offences relating to registration of voters
Part IV – Returning officers and other election officers
30. Appointment of returning officers, etc.
31. Appointment and duties of assistant returning officers
32. Replacement of an assistant returning officer
33. Polling stations and polling centres
34. Appointment of presiding officers
Part V – Boundary demarcation appeal tribunals
35. Publication of commissioner's decision on demarcation
The commissioner shall publish its decisions on demarcation of the boundaries on constituencies in the Gazette and media.36. Right of appeal
A person aggrieved by a decision of the commission in respect of a demarcation of a boundary of a constituency under article 63 of the Constitution, may appeal to the tribunal established under this Act within thirty days after the decision is published in the Gazette and media.37. Appeal tribunal
38. Qualifications for appointment to tribunal
39. Conditions of service of members of tribunal
40. Functions of tribunal
Upon hearing an appeal from a decision of the commission under article 64(2) of the Constitution, a tribunal may confirm, reverse or vary the decision of the commission or remit the decision to the commission for reconsideration.41. Procedures and powers of tribunal
42. Registrar and other staff
43. Witness allowance
Any person summoned by and appearing before a tribunal as a witness is entitled to be paid by way of reimbursement of his or her expenses such allowances as are payable to a witness appearing before the High Court in criminal proceedings.44. Immunity of witnesses
A witness before a tribunal shall have the same immunity and privileges as if he or she were a witness before the High Court.45. Appeal to the High Court
46. High Court decision final
The decision of the High Court on an appeal from the tribunal under this Part shall be final.Part VI – Miscellaneous
47. Application of the Act to referenda
The provisions of this Act shall, with necessary modifications, apply to referenda.48. Offence of hindering a person from registering or voting
49. Exemption from liability
A member of the commission or an employee of the commission or any other person performing any function of the commission under the direction of the commission shall not be personally liable to any civil proceedings for any act done in good faith in the performance of those functions.50. Special powers of the commission
51. Regulations
52. Amendment of the Schedule
The Minister may, by statutory instrument, with the approval of the Cabinet, amend the First Schedule to this Act.History of this document
31 December 2023
Consolidation
01 October 2002 amendment not yet applied
30 November 2001 amendment not yet applied
Amended by
Electoral Commission (Amendment) Act, 2002
31 December 2000 this version
Chapter 140
Revised Laws 2000
Consolidation
02 May 1997
Commenced
Cited documents 0
Documents citing this one 587
Gazette
349Judgment
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Omission of particulars in petition affidavit was irregular but not fatal without prejudice; bribery evidence justified nullifying the election.
Election law – election petitions – particulars in supporting affidavit – procedural irregularity versus prejudice; fair hearing – constitutionally guaranteed; appellate re-appraisal of evidence – scope and standards; bribery as illegal practice – one proved act sufficient to nullify election.
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Affidavits|Constitutional Law|Elections|Evidence Law|Burden of Proof|Evaluation of Evidence |
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Supreme Court dismissed appeal on electoral irregularities due to insufficient proof of substantial result effects.
Election law – Parliamentary elections – Non-compliance with electoral laws – Effects on election results – Evidential requirements for Declaration of Results forms.
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An illegal recount executed under a void court order cannot lawfully overturn the applicant's original election declaration.
Election law – Recount under section 55 PEA – chief magistrate must personally direct and conduct recount; order delegating judicial recount to Electoral Commission is nullity ab initio; recount conducted in defiance of High Court injunction and without certificate of recount void; initial returning officer declaration remains valid where recount illegal; non-service of petition is irregularity not automatically fatal to competence.
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Election petition dismissed for failure to prove invalid nomination or electoral offences substantially affecting the result.
Electoral law – nomination validity – verification by returning officer and Electoral Commission; election petition procedural objections – admissibility of affidavits and Illiterates Protection Act compliance; standard of proof in local government election petitions (s.61(3)) – balance of probabilities; proof required for bribery, intimidation, forgery and wrongful invalidation; substantial effect test for annulling elections.
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Failure to serve notice within seven days is a technical irregularity absent prejudice; Electoral Commission’s breaches annulled the election.
* Electoral law – service of Notice of Presentation of petition – requirement directory, not jurisdictional, where no prejudice. * Evidence – affidavits in election petitions – liberal approach to illiterate deponents; exclusion warranted for hearsay or matters beyond personal knowledge. * Electoral Commission duty – proper counting, certification and accounting of ballots; failure may substantially affect results. * Relief – where non‑compliance substantially affects result, election may be annulled and fresh election ordered. * Costs – where Commission’s failures cause annulment, Commission liable for costs.
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