Parliamentary elections were held in the Seychelles in June 1957. The Seychelles Taxpayers and Producers Association (STPA) won three of the four seats. [1]
The 13-member Legislative Council consisted of the Governor, six officials (the Government Secretary, the Attorney General, the Treasurer and the Directors of Agriculture, Education and Medical Services), two appointed members and four elected members, elected from single-member constituencies. [2]
The right to vote was granted to all citizens over the age of 21 who could write their name, paid income tax on an annual income of SR 3,000 or more, and could prove that they had lived in the Seychelles for at least a year. [3] Only around 10% of the population were able to register. [3]
In two of the four seats, STPA candidates were unopposed; Helen Stevenson-Delhomme in North Mahé and Harry Savy in Praslin and La Digue.
Voter turnout in the contested seats was 59%. [3]
Constituency | Elected member | Party |
---|---|---|
Central Mahé | Ernest de Coulhac-Mazerieux | Independent |
North Mahé | Helen Stevenson-Delhomme | Seychelles Taxpayers and Producers Association |
Praslin and La Digue | Harry Savy | Seychelles Taxpayers and Producers Association |
South Mahé | Henri Gontier | Seychelles Taxpayers and Producers Association |
Source: Seychelles 1957 & 1958 |
Following the elections, D. Bailey and E. Stravens were appointed to the Council. [1]
The politics of Seychelles have historical roots in both one-party socialism and autocratic rule. Following independence from the United Kingdom in 1976, Seychelles was a sovereign republic until 1977, when the original President and leader of the Seychelles Democratic Party, James Mancham, was overthrown in a bloodless coup by the Prime Minister France-Albert René. René installed a single-party socialist state under the Seychelles People's Progressive Front in 1979 which remained in power until 1993, when multiparty elections took place for the first time since independence, after restoring the multi-party system in 1991. Modern day Seychelles governance takes place in a framework of a presidential republic, whereby the President of Seychelles is both head of state and head of government, and of a multi-party system. Executive power is exercised by the government. Legislative power is vested in both the government and the National Assembly.
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