Incumbent President
Nursultan Nazarbayev was elected for a fourth term in the
2011 Kazakh presidential election, winning over 95% of the vote. From there, he promised in continuing economic, political and social reforms. During that time, the Kazakh government had received criticism from the opposition in the country and internationally due to
Nur Otan's single-party control of the
Parliament which it gained in
2007. Minor parties made their eventual return to the lower-house
Mazhilis in
2012 although they were considered to be loyal to the authorities. Complaints of human rights abuses continued in the country as the Kazakh government was accused on cracking and shutting down independent media outlets and opposition groups that mostly covered the
Zhanaozen massacre where the police opened fire on striking oil workers, which resulted in deaths of 12 people. Despite the poor record of human rights and lack of improvements in democracy, Kazakhstan continued in having a huge economic growth thanks to its stabilized oil and gas industry. In December 2012, during an address to the nation, Nazarbayev unveiled the Kazakhstan 2050 Strategy economic plan which aimed to bring the country into the top 30 most developed nations by 2050. In 2013, Kazakhstan reached its highest annual GDP record with $236.6 billion, making it the biggest in
Central Asia and placing it 45th in the world. However, the economic growth became short-lived after on 11 February 2014, when the
Kazakh tenge lost its value by 19%, worse since 2009 after
Russia faced its
ruble currency value loss. Due to
international sanctions that were imposed on Russia, Kazakhstan's main trading partner, after the
annexation of Crimea in March 2014, trade between those two countries decreased by 24.6%. This sparked unusual public protests in the country which resulted in Nazarbayev's dismissal of the
government led by Prime Minister
Serik Akhmetov and the reappointment of
Karim Massimov to the post. As a result of the
oil price crash which began in September 2014, the Kazakh government resorted in cutting budget spending as the price of oil amounted to 25% of Kazakhstan's GDP. In an attempt to bolster economic growth, Nazarbayev in his presidential address on 11 November 2014 announced an economic stimulus plan named
Nurly Zhol, which would allocate $3 billion from the reserve fund a year to fund the program's various parts.
Calls for snap election On 14 February 2015, the
Assembly of People of Kazakhstan (QHA) unanimously voted on the initiative to move presidential elections forward from 2016 to 2015. One motivation was that a
snap election would help the development of the country; another one was that it is a disadvantage to hold both presidential and parliamentary elections in the same year, telling:"The President of the country,
Nursultan Nazarbayev, must be given a new mandate of national trust for the successful passage of the country in the period of global trials. At a new and difficult stage of global imbalances, it is necessary to trust Elbasy N. A. Nazarbayev so that the country does not stray from its strategic course and continues its path towards large-scale modernization of the country and advancement into the 30 most powerful states in the world."On 16 February, the decision made by QHA was supported by the ruling party
Nur Otan, as well as the parliamentary faction of the party in
Mazhilis, led by Nazarbayev's daughter
Dariga. Two other minor parties in the Mazhilis:
Ak Zhol Democratic Party (AJ) and
Communist People's Party of Kazakhstan (QKHP), also supported the idea of a snap presidential elections with QKHP secretary
Aiqyn Qongyrov announcing that the party would nominate its own candidate. Former 2011 presidential candidate
Mels Eleusizov and the head of the
Attan-Kazakhstan movement
Amantai Asylbek both expressed their desire to participate in the elections. The opposition
Nationwide Social Democratic Party announced that the party would make a decision on the participation and nomination of candidates only after Nazarbayev announces the decision on his intention to resign early and announces snap elections. On 18 February, the
Mazhilis unanimously asked President
Nursultan Nazarbayev to move the elections. That same day, the
Kazakhstan Alliance of Bloggers called for an abandonment of the elections and instead, proposed to hold a
referendum on the extension of the presidential term until 2022 in order to save money and "avoid serious reputational risks". The following day on 19 February, the
Senate took upon decision on whether to allow snap elections. In the first vote, 41 senators supported the proposal and with only one voting against it. However, after discussing a number of other issues on the agenda, Senate Chair
Kassym-Jomart Tokayev asked members to re-vote again on the decision, saying "something I didn't like there. It's technical. Let's re-vote. Let's re-vote. Someone voted very inattentively. It's just for the purity of the experiment, as they say." According to the results of the second vote, the senators unanimously supported the snap elections, with the first vote being explained as a technical error. Following the revote, Tokayev appealed to the
Constitutional Council with a request to give an official interpretation of the constitutional clause, which regulates the appointment of snap presidential elections. On 24 February, the
Constitutional Council adopted a normative resolution of the Constitution which following said:"It should be understood in such a way that the President of the Republic of Kazakhstan has the exclusive right to single-handedly call early presidential elections. The Constitution of the Republic does not provide for any conditions and restrictions when the Head of State makes a decision on the appointment of early presidential elections, when deciding on the appointment of such elections, the rule provided for in Paragraph 3 of Article 41 of the Constitution of the Republic of Kazakhstan on the inadmissibility of coincidence in terms of the election of the President of Kazakhstan with elections of the new composition of the Parliament of the Republic."That same day, President
Nursultan Nazarbayev signed the decree calling for snap elections, scheduling them for 26 April 2015. He announced it during a live broadcast on the
Khabar TV channel, noting that he would make a decision regarding his participation in the elections later. ==Candidates==