Although he had denied interest in politics during his football career, in mid-November 2004, Weah announced his intention to stand in the October 2005
presidential election, having previously been the subject of a petition urging him to run; he received a hero's welcome upon his arrival in
Monrovia in late November and was widely considered a favorite in the election. His eligibility was initially questioned due to debates over his citizenship (Weah having allegedly adopted French citizenship whilst at PSG; he has also lived in
Staten Island, New York for many years now) but he was officially confirmed on
13 August 2005 as the candidate for the
Congress for Democratic Change when the election commission published its final list. He won the most votes of any candidate in the first ballot on
11 October, but did not secure the required overall majority. A run-off vote took place on
8 November, pitting Weah against former World Bank employee and finance minister,
Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf, who won the vote and is now the first elected female president in Africa. Weah disputed the electoral process, but on
21 December 2005 he dropped his legal challenge.
http://today.reuters.com/news/newsArticle.aspx?type=worldNews&storyID=2005-12-21T135754Z_01_SPI150258_RTRUKOC_0_US-LIBERIA-WEAH.xml&archived=False
Much of Weah's politics are influenced by the recent
Second Liberian Civil War. Starting in 1999, the conflict came to a conclusion in 2003 when the United States stationed a
Marine Expeditionary Unit with 2300 Marines offshore while
Nigeria sent in
peacekeepers as part of an
Economic Community of West African States force, forcing President
Charles Taylor to resign on
August 11 2003 and flee into exile in
Nigeria. As a result, all of the candidates pushed for the politics of peace. During his campaign Weah repeatedly emphasized the need for UN's peace mission in his country, known as
UNMIL, to stay at least through the end of what would have been his first presidential term of office.
Weah's lack of experience and of a prestigious college degree weighed heavily against him during the campaign. Opponents believed that Weah could have been manipulated if elected. One positive aspect of Weah's lack of experience is the fact that he was not involved in Liberia's conflicts. Also, some saw little risk in Weah becoming
corrupt, as the football star is already quite wealthy.
Weah had also promised to bring low cost housing, electricity, running water, and better education to the countryside, where he himself lived for some time in the 1970s. He also called for the president's term in office to be reduced to four years from six.