General elections were held in Bolivia on 9 July 1978.[3] The elections were the first held since 1966, with several military coups taking place during the late 1960s and early 1970s.[3] Although Juan Pereda of the Nationalist Union of the People won the presidential elections according to official statements, more votes were cast than there were registered voters.[4] After examining a number of allegations of fraud and other irregularities, the National Electoral Court decided to annul the results on 19 July.[5][6] The following day, Pereda was installed as President following a military coup. Pereda himself was overthrown by yet another military coup in November, which saw General David Padilla assume the presidency.[7]Fresh elections were held the following year, with Padilla transferring power to his democratically elected successor, Wálter Guevara.
Campaign
Several alliances were formed for the elections:[8]
The official results were inconsistent; the reported total number of votes cast was 1,971,968, around 50,000 more than the number of registered voters (1,921,556), giving a turnout of 102.6%. However, the total of votes cast for each party and invalid votes was 1,990,671, nearly 20,000 higher than the reported total and representing a turnout of 103.6%.[9]
^Coalition consisting of more than 11 parties including MNRI, MIR, PCB, MPLN, VO, and PS-A.
^On its ballot, the MNRP presented its leader, Jaime Arellano, as Pereda's running mate instead of Alfredo Franco Guachalla.
^The MNRP presented Juan Pereda as their candidate on a separate ballot from the UNP, resulting in different vote totals. Pereda won 986,140 votes (50.90%) on the UNP ballot and 40,905 (2.11%) votes on the MNRP ballot.
^René Bernal Escalante did not accept this candidacy, but nonetheless received votes.
^The PRO presented René Bernal Escalante as their candidate on a separate ballot from the PDC, resulting in different vote totals. Bernal won 167,131 votes (8.63%) on the PDC-PRB ballot and 1,171 votes (0.06%) on the PRO ballot.
^"Bolivia's Presidential Election Annulled— Court Responds to Fraud Charges, Orders New Vote". Los Angeles Times. AP. 20 July 1978. p. I-4. LA PAZ, Bolivia (AP)— The National Election Court annulled Bolvia's July 9 presidential election Wednesday night and called for another vote within 180 days.
^Morales, Waltraud Q (2003). A Brief History of Bolivia. New York: Facts On File. p. 195.