In 1996 SLPP returned to prominence, as its candidate
Ahmad Tejan Kabbah won the presidential election, receiving 59.5% of the popular vote in a second round against
John Karefa-Smart of the
United National People's Party (UNPP). In the
election held on 14 May 2002, the party won 69.9% of the popular vote and 83 out of 112 seats in the
House of Representatives, and its candidate in the presidential election, Kabbah, won 70.1% of the vote and was re-elected. At the SLPP's national convention in
Makeni on 3–4 September 2005, Vice-President
Solomon Berewa was selected by the SLPP as its leader and 2007 presidential candidate. He received 291 votes, while
Charles Margai received 34,
Julius Maada Bio received 33, and
J. B. Dauda received 28. In the
August 2007 election, the SLPP was defeated by the APC in the parliamentary election, winning 43 seats against 59 for the APC; the PMDC, a splinter party founded by
Charles Margai, attracted the support of some traditional SLPP voters, winning 10 seats. In the presidential election, the SLPP candidate, Berewa, took second place in the first round, winning 38.3% of the vote against 44.3% for the APC candidate,
Ernest Bai Koroma. A second round of the presidential election was held in September; Koroma prevailed with 54.6% of the vote against 45.4% for Berewa. The SLPP constitution requires its leader to resign if the party loses a national election; Berewa resigned as party leader on 17 October 2007, leaving
Alhaji Sulaiman Jah as acting leader. In 2011,
Julius Maada Bio became SLPP's nominee for the
2012 presidential election. He beat
Usman Boie Kamara, who came in second place. Bio was nominated as the SLPP candidate for president in the 2018 election, which he ultimately won.
Julius Maada Bio presidency (2018–present) In 2018, Sierra Leone held a general election. The presidential election, in which neither candidate reached the required threshold of 55%, went to a second round of voting, in which
Julius Maada Bio was elected with 51% of the vote against the candidate of then-ruling
All People's Congress (APC). On 4 April 2018, opposition candidate Julius Maada Bio of Sierra Leone People's Party (SLPP), was sworn in as Sierra Leone's new president. == Electoral history ==