- Constituencies of Belize
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Belize's 6 districts are politically divided into 31 constituencies. Each constituency sends one representative to Belize's House of Representatives for 5-year terms. This election is known as the General Election. Each person (who is eligible to vote) votes for the candidate they would want to represent their constituency in Central Government. Each political party nominates a candidate, or Standard Bearer, for each constituency. The winner becomes the Area Representative of the constituency, while the loser generally remains the Standard Bearer of that constituency for his/her political party.
Contents
Division of constituencies
Belize's constituencies are divided in such a way that their voting population be as equal as possible to each other ensuring, theoretically, that resources are equally shared among the country's citizens, as required by the constitution. After the 2003 General Elections two additional constituencies were created from territory of existing constituencies in order to further ensure the equality of the voting populations among the constituencies. Coming out of January 2008(January 2008 Estimate), the most populous constituency (Stann Creek West) had a voting population of 7,085 while the least populous constituency (Fort George) had a voting population of 3,195.
New constituencies
In Belize's 2003 General Elections, 29 constituencies voted in their Area Representatives for Belize's House of Representatives. Since then it was noted that the difference in voting populations between the most and least populous constituencies was rather large (Cayo South then had 8,000 voters compared to Pickstock's 1000+). In 2004 a Task Force was appointed by the Elections and Boundaries Commission to study the matter. Their Final Report was submitted in October 2004. It is noted that the Elections and Boundaries Department has the right to occasionally reassess constituencies, usually after the latest census or population estimate.
Among several things that their report suggested, the expansion of the Cayo District's number of constituencies to six (from four) had the most impact. Later the following year (2005) the law was passed to create two additional constituencies within the boundaries of Cayo. The newly created constituencies are Belmopan, containing the capital city of that name, and Cayo North East, centered on Spanish Lookout.
These new constituencies held their first-ever election during the General Election in 2008.
List of Belize's constituencies by district
Below are the Districts and their respective constituencies:
Voting population by constituency
Below is a list of the voting population by constituency as of October 2007, sorted out by districts for ease of reference.
Note that these populations are for Belizean citizens who are eligible to vote and does not represent actual population. As of July 2007 the voting population of Belize is estimated at 148,026 while the total population is estimated at 301,300.
The Voter Age Population (VAP), i.e. all persons over the age of eighteen, is 161,677, or 53.66% of the total population. Of these, more than 91 percent are actually registered. Males slightly outnumber females in the population, though the gap is noticeable in the larger urban areas such as Belize City, home to 10 constituencies.
District Constituency Total Nationwide Rank District Rank Belize Albert 3072 30th 12th Belize Rural Central 4511 21st 4th Belize Rural North 4578 20th 3rd Belize Rural South 5159 13th 1st Caribbean Shores 4291 23rd 5th Collet 3637 26th 8th Fort George 3047 31st 13th Freetown 3452 27th 9th Lake Independence 4925 18th 2nd Mesopotamia 3170 28th 10th Pickstock 3166 29th 11th Port Loyola 3890 24th 6th Queen's Square 3862 25th 7th Cayo Belmopan 5667 5th 2nd Cayo Central 5923 3rd 1st Cayo North 5015 17th 5th Cayo North East 4413 22nd 6th Cayo South 5468 8th 4th Cayo West 5378 10th 3rd Corozal Corozal Bay 5100 16th 3rd Corozal North 5108 15th 2nd Corozal South East 5190 12th 1st Corozal South West 4869 19th 4th Orange Walk Orange Walk Central 5727 4th 2nd Orange Walk East 5443 9th 4th Orange Walk North 6011 2nd 1st Orange Walk South 5575 6th 3rd Stann Creek Dangriga 5114 14th 2nd Stann Creek West 6470 1st 1st Toledo Toledo East 5473 7th 1st Toledo West 5324 11th 2nd National 31 148,026 Avg. Voters per constituency 4775 Current Area Representatives
Main article: House of Representatives of BelizeHistory
Below is the chronological order for the creation of Belize's current constituencies.
- 1961
- The following became Belize's 18 original constituencies:
- Belize District: Albert, Belize Rural North, Belize Rural South, Collet, Fort George, Freetown, Mesopotamia, Pickstock
- Cayo District: Cayo North, Cayo South
- Corozal District: Corozal North, Corozal South
- Orange Walk District: Orange Walk North, Orange Walk South
- Stann Creek District: Stann Creek Town, Stann Creek Rural
- Toledo District: Toledo North, Toledo South
- The following became Belize's 18 original constituencies:
- 1984
- The following constituencies were created:
- Belize District: Caribbean Shores, Lake Independence, Queen's Square, Port Loyola
- Cayo District: Cayo Central, Cayo West
- Corozal District: Corozal Bay
- Orange Walk District: Orange Walk Central, Orange Walk East
- The following were altered:
- Corozal District: Corozal South was split into Corozal South East and Corozal South West
- Toledo District: Boundaries were altered and constituencies renamed to Toledo East and Toledo West
- The following were renamed:
- Stann Creek District: Stann Creek Town renamed Dangriga, Stann Creek Rural renamed Stann Creek West
- The following constituencies were created:
- 1993
- The following constituency was created:
- Belize District: Belize Rural Central
- The following constituency was created:
- 2005
- The following constituencies were created:
- Cayo District: Belmopan, Cayo North East
- The following constituencies were created:
References
- Belize Elections & Boundaries Department's Map of Belize's Constituencies
- Government of Belize's Official Website
- Boundary Re-districting
See also
Belize Capital: Belmopan History Pre-Columbian Belize · History (1506–1862) · Battle of St. George's Caye · British Honduras (1862-1981) · Belize Act 1981 · History (1981–present) · Guatemalan claim to Belizean territoryGeography Districts · Constituencies · Cities · Islands · Lakes · Mountains · Rivers · Climate · Geology · Flora · Fauna · Belize Barrier Reef · Maya ruinsPolitics Constitution · Monarchy · Governor-General · Prime Minister · National Assembly · Political parties · Elections · Foreign relations · Military · Local government · Human rights (LGBT rights)Economy Demographics Culture Portal · Index · Outline Articles on second-level administrative divisions of North American countries Belize · Canada · Costa Rica · Cuba · Dominican Republic · El Salvador · Guatemala · Haiti · Honduras · Mexico · Nicaragua · Panama · United States
Table of administrative country subdivisions by country Categories:- Political divisions in Belize
- Government of Belize
- Subdivisions of Belize
- Country subdivisions of the Americas
- Second-level administrative country subdivisions
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