According to the Central Election Commission (OSK) guidelines, campaigning kicked off at 18:00 local time on 10 December 2020. During the campaign period, all contesting political parties and candidates could organize and conduct rallies, processions, demonstrations and other pre-election events but were required to notify the OSK ten days before an event was held. The campaigning was to end on 9 January 2021 at 24:59 local time, to be followed by voting from 7:00 to 20:00 the following day. A closed primary took place from 1 to 3 October
in-person and online. However, due to apparent technical problems with the voting website, the primary election was extended for a day. According to the party, nearly 10,000 candidates participated in the primaries, with 662,687 people participating in the vote, for a total 84% of party members voting. On 18 November 2020, the Nur Otan revealed its primary results, which showed 78 out of 267 applicants being elected by secret electronic voting. Nine candidates were new party members who took part in the primaries, five were incumbent Mäjilis MPs, a third of the candidates were women, and 12 candidates were under the age of 35. The average age of the winning candidates was estimated to be 47. Twenty percent of candidates owned small or medium-sized businesses, 24.5% were economists, 11.5% lawyers and six candidates had higher education degrees.
20th Extraordinary Congress At the 20th Extraordinary Congress of Nur Otan held on 25 November 2020, party chairman Nursultan Nazarbayev said "we have proven that Nur Otan is a party of concrete deeds. During the pandemic, the Birgemiz Foundation provided assistance to more than two million people. For the party, the interests of ordinary people come first." The Nur Otan presented its party list of 126 people, 77 of them primary winners. One of the candidates on the list was Nazarbayev's daughter Dariga Nazarbayeva, making her first public appearance since being unexpectedly dismissed as the Senate Chair in May 2020. First Deputy Chairman of Nur Otan and former mayor (
äkim) of Almaty
Bauyrjan Baibek was appointed as the head of the party's campaign headquarters.
Program Nur Otan's five-year program
Path of Change: A Decent Life for All was presented at the extraordinary congress. On 20 November 2020, the Aq Zhol held its 16th Extraordinary Congress in Nur-Sultan where party chairman Azat Peruashev spoke about how the COVID-19 pandemic in Kazakhstan brought bureaucracy and corruption, social injustice and a gap between rich and poor, as well as
monopolization of power and the economy. He expressed a need for drastic change, and at the same time warned that further changes could lead to a crisis like those in Belarus, Kyrgyzstan and Ukraine. Peruashev also called for punishment for people committing
electoral fraud at the polling sites, which he described as an "illegal seizure of power." The party in its manifesto announced its support for transitioning Kazakhstan from a
presidential system to a
parliamentary republic and proposed limiting the interest rate on loans and mortgages, consumer goods, SMEs and for people most at risk, as well as adopting a bankruptcy law which would guarantee borrowers preservation of shelter and social benefits. Aq Jol presented its party list of 38 candidates for the Mäjilis.
People's Party of Kazakhstan The
Communist People's Party of Kazakhstan (QKHP) made a statement on Facebook about its confident readiness for "achieving social justice that will maintain the stability of the economy and social sphere during the global crisis and ensure the well-being of the citizens of Kazakhstan." The party held its
15th Extraordinary Congress on 11 November 2020 in Nur-Sultan where it was renamed the People's Party of Kazakhstan (QHP).
Parliamentary leader Aiqyn Qongyrov was elected as the party's chairman. The renaming of the QHP was approved by every delegate except for former Honorary Secretary and senior member
Vladislav Kosarev, although he did support the change in leadership. At the congress, the party also proposed giving to each family acres of land to building a house. One of the candidates in the QHP party list included Rimma Ötesbaeva, a Nur Otan party member and the head of a Special Monitoring Group of the
Mangystau Region who was bidding for seat in the regional
mäslihat. Ötesbaeva wrote on her Facebook page that she was not a member of the QHP and had never even thought of joining the party. She asked the QHP Chairman Aiqyn Qongyrov to be excluded from the party's list and the alleged membership. According to Ötesbaeva, the incident was eventually resolved. The QHP's party list ended up being registered with just 113 candidates due to lack of consent from the 11 candidates and one withdrawing its bid.
Auyl Chairman of the
"Auyl" People's Democratic Patriotic Party,
Äli Bektaev, welcomed the date for the elections stating advantage for parties to campaign because of more preparation time. At the 18th Auyl Extraordinary Congress which was held on 17 November 2020, the party announced its intention to enter the Parliament in order to raise political issues for rural areas. Bektaev at the congress said "in our election program, we propose to create a system of long-term crediting of agricultural producers with an annual payment of 2%. We believe that with such support it is possible to increase agricultural production." Auyl also called for monthly paid social benefits to all children under the age of 18. The party at the congress unveiled its list of deputy candidates for the Mäjilis which consisted of 19 people.
Nationwide Social Democratic Party On 18 September 2020, deputy chairman of the
Nationwide Social Democratic Party (JSDP) Aidar Alibaev said that the party would not boycott the elections. He emphasized the need for the party to win at least 30% of the vote. In October 2020, JSDP chairman
Ashat Rahymjanov called on the party to participate in the election. From there, he proposed the possibility of changing the electoral system from
proportional representation to
mixed-member or
majoritarian representation.
ADAL Shortly after the election date was set, the
Birlik supported the move stating that "it's important to hold elections within the time frame approved by law." On 5 November 2020, at the meeting of the political council, the party announced a name change to ADAL, which according to the party's chairman
Serik Sultangali, was decided by sociologists after polling took place on potential new names. It was re-registered on 11 November. On 19 November 2020, the ADAL revealed its manifesto and its approved list of 20 competing Mäjilis deputy candidates, who were public figures, journalists, ecologists, representatives of the agricultural sector, and authors of social projects. The party announced its five electoral program goals, which were a decent life for all citizens, entrepreneurship support, development of agriculture, improvement of regions, and a "state for the people". Adal presented its plans to abandon mandatory pension contributions, free education, free healthcare with increased pay for doctors, elimination of business restrictions as well as institution of bankruptcy. The party also raised questions about environmental problems by mentioning illegal landfills with solutions such as developing of environmental education, the conversion of heat supply and transformation of public transport to a cleaner gas alternative.
Unregistered parties and movements Protests and calls for boycott Several unregistered parties called for protests and boycotts over the election. A sanctioned rally was held in
Walikhanov Square in Almaty on 31 October 2020 by human rights activists, which was supported by
Democratic Choice of Kazakhstan (QDT) and
Köşe Party, demanding political reforms and an end to political persecutions. The unregistered
Democratic Party of Kazakhstan (QDP) held legal single-person picket protests throughout the country demanding the government to register other parties to take part in the election. The party held an authorized demonstration in Almaty on 14 November 2020 which called for boycott in the election, freedom for political prisoners, and a moratorium on land sales for foreigners. On 16 December 2020, at the
Independence Day, unsanctioned protests took place in Almaty by activists of
Oyan, Qazaqstan and the Democratic Party of Kazakhstan. The demonstrators gathered in the
Republic Square holding signs that read "Never forget
1986 and
2011", "Lives taken on December 16, votes to be taken on January 10", "Kazakhstan needs an upgrade!" and demanded the release of all political prisoners, fair elections, and the registration of all opposition parties. The Kazakh police responded to the situation by surrounding and dividing the protesters in groups to prevent them from marching to
Astana Square. No arrests were made and the protesters were eventually dispersed after three hours, with law enforcement reportedly following them. The opposition movement
Halyq Biligi (People's Rule) demanded the Kazakh authorities postpone the upcoming parliamentary elections at a news conference on 22 December 2020, citing the legislation that de facto prevents any alternative political force participating in the race. The movement representatives urged all Kazakhstani citizens to boycott the polls if the demands were not met by the Kazakh government as a way to de-legitimatize the elections.
Smart voting Prior before the announcement of the elections, talks arose among Kazakh activists on the possibility of using
Alexei Navalny's inspired
smart voting tactic to draw votes away from the ruling Nur Otan party. Advocates of "smart voting" recommended electors to vote for the opposition Nationwide Social Democratic Party (JSDP), noting that whether its stance of actually being an opposition to the government has no importance. Democratic Choice of Kazakhstan (QDT) leader Mukhtar Ablyazov spoke in favor of "smart voting". On 17 November 2020, he called on his supporters to vote for the JSDP, which he accused of being government-controlled, as a way to show evidence of electoral violations that would occur during ballot counting, prevent Nur Otan from possibly obtaining more than 50% of the vote, spark mass protests in the country similarly to those in Belarus and Kyrgyzstan and expose the JSDP as being a "fraudulent" party. After the announcement, many videos were shared through social media showing Kazakh citizens being permitted and intimidated from joining JSDP by the party's representatives. JSDP chairman Ashat Rahymjanov called Ablyazov's move as "provocation". After the party announced its withdrawal from the elections, Ablyazov accused of the JSDP's decision being carried out under Nazarbayev's orders and instead urged people to vote for the Aq Jol. In response, the Aq Jol suspended its acceptance of new members until after the elections to prevent alleged rumors that the party had increased its ranks because of Ablyazov's intentions. == Controversies ==