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After Taylor left Liberia in 2003, the National Transitional Government (NTG), headed by Liberian businessman Gyude Bryant and supported by United Nations peacekeeping troops, was established and ruled until a new administration was democratically elected and installed. With the assistance of the UN, presidential elections were held in late 2005, and Ellen Johnson Sirleaf of the Unity Party (UP) defeated former football star George Weah of the Congress for Democratic Change (CDC) in the second round of polling. She became the first woman to be elected head of state in Africa. Sirleaf focused on rebuilding the country’s economy and infrastructure, both of which had been devastated by decades of conflict and instability. Liberia made progress, as it erased all of its considerable debt by the end of 2010 and Sirleaf secured millions of dollars of foreign investment in the country. She also worked to promote unity and reconciliation within the country. To that end, a Truth and Reconciliation Commission was established in 2006. Sirleaf also addressed the culture of corruption that had been rampant for some time: she fired the entire staff of the Ministry of Finance and promised to investigate and prosecute anyone responsible for graft.
In December 2007 Bryant, the former NTG head, was arrested for failing to appear in court to face corruption charges stemming from his time as leader of the transitional government; he was accused of embezzling more than $1 million, a charge that he vehemently denied. Bryant was found not guilty in 2009. In October 2008 Taylor’s son, Charles (Chuckie) Taylor, Jr., was convicted in a U.S. court on charges of torture and related war crimes; he was sentenced in January 2009 to 97 years in prison.
2011 elections
The run-up to Liberia’s next round of presidential and legislative elections, scheduled for October 11, 2011, was eventful. Four proposed changes to the constitution, three of which would have bearing on the upcoming elections, were put to a referendum in August 2011 but did not garner enough votes to pass. The failure of one of the proposals, which would have reduced the residency requirement of presidential and vice presidential candidates from 10 to 5 years, led to a small opposition group challenging in court the eligibility of several of the candidates, including Sirleaf, who because of Liberia’s civil war had not resided in the country for the requisite 10 years. The challenge led to the Supreme Court briefly suspending campaigning activities by the candidates. On October 5, 2011, the Supreme Court dismissed the challenge, noting that the writers of the 1986 constitution could not have anticipated that years of conflict would force many Liberians to live outside the country. Two days later another preelection controversy arose when Sirleaf won the Nobel Peace Prize. Other candidates complained that the Nobel Committee was interfering with Liberian politics by awarding the prize so close to the election.
Sixteen candidates stood in the October 11, 2011, presidential election. Sirleaf and Winston Tubman, who was running with Weah as his vice presidential candidate on the CDC ticket, emerged as the two top candidates, winning almost 44 percent and 33 percent of the vote, respectively. As neither candidate was able to garner more than 50 percent of the votes, the two advanced to a runoff election scheduled for November 8. Despite the October poll’s being praised as free and fair by several international observation groups, some opposition parties, including the CDC, alleged that there were instances of voting irregularities. Less than a week before the runoff election, Tubman announced that he would not participate and asked his supporters to boycott the election. A further complication developed the day before the runoff election, when a CDC rally devolved into violence after police attempted to disperse the demonstrators, killing at least two people, injuring others, and alarming many that the country might be descending into a spate of election-related violence. The November 8 election proceeded as planned, though, and Sirleaf was reelected with more than 90 percent of the vote—although the voter turnout was significantly lower than that of the first round, as many Liberians had heeded Tubman’s call for a boycott or had stayed at home to avoid any chance of violence.
Sirleaf’s second term and the Ebola outbreak
Despite previous efforts to crack down on corruption, it remained a problem during Sirleaf’s second term as president. The lack of opportunity for Liberian youths and a lack of social policy to effectively address the problem were concerns. These and other issues facing Liberia were exacerbated in 2014 by the deadly outbreak of Ebola virus disease that also devastated the neighboring countries of Guinea and Sierra Leone. In Liberia the first deaths from the virus were noted in March 2014. By the time the country was declared free of the virus in June 2016, more than 4,800 Liberians had died from it, the country’s health care system was decimated, and the economy, which had previously shown impressive growth under Sirleaf, was shattered. Liberia’s economic situation had also been adversely affected by a drop in the global price of its top two commodities, rubber and iron ore, highlighting the country’s need to diversify its economy.
The year 2016 not only marked the end of the transmission of Ebola virus disease in Liberia. It was also noteworthy for the lifting of UN sanctions and embargoes that had been in place since Liberia’s civil conflict in the late 20th and early 21st centuries. Another milestone for the country also occurred that year: UN peacekeeping troops ceased being in charge of handling security concerns in Liberia, as had been the case since 2003. Full responsibility for such matters was handed back to Liberia’s army and police by the end of June. A reduced number of UN peacekeeping troops remained in the country.
2017 elections
As the October 2017 presidential and legislative elections approached, there was an air of uncertainty. After two terms as president, Sirleaf was constitutionally barred from another term and thus planned to step down after her successor was elected. Who was likely to succeed her, however, was unknown. The presidential field was wide, with 20 candidates vying for the post and none likely to obtain more than 50 percent of the tally during the first round of voting in order to avoid a runoff election. Some candidates emerged as potential front-runners: Liberia’s vice president, Joseph Boakai, succeeding Sirleaf as the flag bearer for the UP; former football great and perennial opposition candidate Weah, representing the Coalition for Democratic Change (CDC; formerly the Congress for Democratic Change); Charles Brumskine, representing the Liberty Party (LP); and Alex Cummings, a former business executive standing for the Alternative National Congress (ANC).
In the first round of the presidential election, held on October 10, 2017, Weah and Boakai emerged as the front-runners, taking about 38 percent and 29 percent of the vote, respectively, and both advanced to a second round. The runoff election was set for November 7. The credibility of the first round, however, was clouded when some political parties made allegations of fraud, incompetence, and interference. The most vocal critics of the election were Brumskine, who had placed third in the October 10 poll, and his LP. Their complaints, which they officially lodged with the electoral commission, were supported by some of the other parties, including the ruling UP. In addition, the UP accused Sirleaf of attempting to influence the election in favor of Weah, a charge which she vehemently denied and which further strained the already tense climate within the UP; in January 2018 she was expelled from the party over the claims. The complaints ultimately prevented the runoff election from being held as planned when, on November 6, 2017, the Supreme Court prohibited the electoral commission from holding the poll until the commission had finished investigating the LP’s allegations.
In late November, after finishing its investigation, the electoral commission officially rejected the LP’s allegations. The LP and UP then filed an appeal with the Supreme Court, arguing that the election should be rerun because the alleged instances of fraud and irregularities were so pervasive. On December 7 the court stated that there was not enough evidence of fraud to justify rerunning the first round of the presidential election and ordered the runoff election between Weah and Boakai to be held. Weah won the runoff election on December 26 with 61.5 percent of the vote. He was sworn in as president on January 22, 2018. Weah’s inauguration marked the first time since 1944 that power in Liberia was transferred between two democratically elected leaders.
2020 constitutional referendum and other developments under Weah
Following the completion of a constitutional review process that began in 2012 under President Sirleaf and included public consultations, eight proposed constitutional amendments emerged to be put to a referendum, which was held on December 8, 2020. The proposed amendments included one that would allow for dual citizenship and several that would reduce the number of years of terms in office for the president, vice president, and other positions. Weah and the CDC were proponents of the proposed amendments and urged Liberians to vote in support of them, while opposition parties asked their supporters to vote no or to boycott the referendum. Furthermore, some suggested that Weah would use the amended constitution as an excuse to justify seeking an additional term as president beyond the limit of two terms provided for in the current version of the constitution, though Weah’s administration denied that he would do so. Many also had concerns that there had not been enough outreach to Liberians to fully explain the proposed amendments as well as to provide information about how they could make their choice known on the ballot: about half the adult population was illiterate and would need to understand which symbols were being used on the ballot to indicate yes or no votes for each of the eight proposed amendments. These concerns were borne out when the electoral commission revealed that an inordinately high number of invalid ballots (including unmarked ballots) were cast; in seven of the eight referendum questions, there were more invalid ballots cast than valid ballots. This, coupled with a very low turnout of little more than one-third of registered voters, led to none of the proposed amendments receiving the required two-thirds majority to pass.
The issue of dual citizenship was revisited in 2022, when the country’s nationality law was amended to allow Liberians to keep their citizenship after acquiring citizenship in another country as well as to permit Liberian citizenship to be passed through mothers to their children (previously, it could be passed only through fathers). The changes were welcomed by Liberians in the diaspora, many of whom had fled the country during times of unrest.
Liberia’s economy, still recovering from the impact of the Ebola outbreak (2014–16), was hit by the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020. However, it showed growth in the three years that followed. It was not, however, enough to affect the daily lives of Liberians, and poverty remained widespread. Corruption also remained an ongoing problem in Liberia, in spite of Weah having campaigned on the promise to fight it and the efforts made to do so. In other sectors, Weah moved to make higher education more accessible, including implementing a policy of free tuition at public universities. His administration also oversaw some infrastructure development, such as the new construction or renovation of hospitals and other health care facilities and the pavement of roads. However, much remained to be done, and it was not clear whether the accomplishments of Weah’s administration would be enough to win him a second term.
2023 elections
Liberia held its next presidential election in 2023. Weah, once again the CDC candidate, faced the UP’s Boakai a second time, as well as 18 other candidates; Boakai and Weah were the clear front-runners. The two garnered the most votes in the first round, held on October 10, with Weah taking 43.83 percent and Boakai 43.44 percent, and the two advanced to a runoff election held on November 14. Boakai narrowly edged out Weah, taking 50.64 percent to Weah’s 49.36 percent, and, when Boakai’s victory had become clear, Weah conceded the race. Boakai was inaugurated on January 22, 2024.