Akashian presidential election, 2010: Difference between revisions

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The MPP put forward [[Keiko Nakayama]] as its candidate, guaranteeing an exciting presidential election. Keiko had served as [[Cabinet of Akashi#Members|Minister of Public Welfare]] under [[Ran Tsukuda]] and [[Anna Carbone]], making her one of Akashi's most renowned {{wpl|conservative socialism|conservative socialists}}. Her flamboyant image and appeal among leftist voters, who respected her ministerial record, made her a formidable challenger for the SP's [[Kyōichi Hirayama]].
The MPP put forward [[Keiko Nakayama]] as its candidate, guaranteeing an exciting presidential election. Keiko had served as [[Cabinet of Akashi#Members|Minister of Public Welfare]] under [[Ran Tsukuda]] and [[Anna Carbone]], making her one of Akashi's most renowned {{wpl|conservative socialism|conservative socialists}}. Her flamboyant image and appeal among leftist voters, who respected her ministerial record, made her a formidable challenger for the SP's [[Kyōichi Hirayama]].


The first round saw Kyōichi win a plurality with 31,4% of the vote, and Keiko almost 5% behind with 26,4%. Since the [[Akashian general election, 2010|simultaneous general election]] had returned a "red wave", voters looked forward to a dramatic showdown between Kyōichi and Keiko in the second round. Since the 1990s, Akashi had seen a pattern of {{wpl|cohabitation (government)|cohabitation}} ([[Shinobu Furukawa|communist prime minister]] and [[Emi Hanamura|conservative president]], [[Anna Carbone|conservative prime minister]] and [[Kōsaku Ayuzawa|socialist president]]), which boosted Keiko's chances of pulling off a victory.
The first round saw Kyōichi win a plurality with 28,7% of the vote, and Keiko only 0,1% behind. Since the [[Akashian general election, 2010|simultaneous general election]] had returned a "red wave", voters looked forward to a dramatic showdown between Kyōichi and Keiko in the second round. Since the 1990s, Akashi had seen a pattern of {{wpl|cohabitation (government)|cohabitation}} ([[Shinobu Furukawa|communist prime minister]] and [[Emi Hanamura|conservative president]], [[Anna Carbone|conservative prime minister]] and [[Kōsaku Ayuzawa|socialist president]]), which boosted Keiko's chances of pulling off a victory.


The second round became the narrowest ever result for an Akashian presidential election: both candidates won almost exactly 50% of the vote, and Kyōichi defeated Keiko by only 4.413 votes. The second round map reflected the narrow result: Keiko won majorities in 4 [[Akashi#Administrative divisions|provinces]], with Kyōichi only winning a majority in [[Kobi]]. Keiko later reflected that winning [[Kobi]] would've carried her to victory, but she felt its voters were wary of risking a vote for a conservative socialist since the [[neoliberal conspiracy]] was still in living memory.
The second round became the narrowest ever result for an Akashian presidential election: both candidates won almost exactly 50% of the vote, and Kyōichi defeated Keiko by only 4.413 votes. The second round map reflected the narrow result: Keiko won majorities in 4 [[Akashi#Administrative divisions|provinces]], with Kyōichi only winning a majority in [[Kobi]]. Keiko later reflected that winning [[Kobi]] would've carried her to victory, but she felt its voters were wary of risking a vote for a conservative socialist since the [[neoliberal conspiracy]] was still in living memory.
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|style="text-align:left"|[[Kyōichi Hirayama]]
|style="text-align:left"|[[Kyōichi Hirayama]]
|style="text-align:left"|{{A-SP}}
|style="text-align:left"|{{A-SP}}
|2.372.758
|2.168.731
|31,4%
|28,7%
|3.679.730
|3.679.730
|50,0%
|50,0%
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|style="text-align:left"|[[Keiko Nakayama]]
|style="text-align:left"|[[Keiko Nakayama]]
|style="text-align:left"|{{A-MPP}}
|style="text-align:left"|{{A-MPP}}
|2.025.157
|2.161.175
|26,8%
|28,6%
|3.675.317
|3.675.317
|50,0%
|50,0%
Line 84: Line 84:
|style="text-align:left"|Chiho Akagi
|style="text-align:left"|Chiho Akagi
|style="text-align:left"|{{A-FP}}
|style="text-align:left"|{{A-FP}}
|884.117
|906.787
|11,7%
|12,0%
|colspan=2 rowspan=5 style="background:#E9E9E9"|  
|colspan=2 rowspan=5 style="background:#E9E9E9"|  
|-
|-
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|style="text-align:left"|Satoko Narisawa
|style="text-align:left"|Satoko Narisawa
|style="text-align:left"|{{A-CP}}
|style="text-align:left"|{{A-CP}}
|785.882
|793.438
|10,4%
|10,5%
|-
|-
|style="background:{{A-URP/meta/color}}"|
|style="background:{{A-URP/meta/color}}"|
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|style="text-align:left"|Hilduara
|style="text-align:left"|Hilduara
|style="text-align:left"|{{wpl|Independent politician|Independent}}
|style="text-align:left"|{{wpl|Independent politician|Independent}}
|340.045
|377.828
|4,5%
|5,0%
|-
|-
!colspan="7"|
!colspan="7"|

Revision as of 20:31, 22 August 2021

Akashian presidential election, 2010

← 2005 26 June 2010 (first round)
3 July 2010 (second round)
2015 →
Turnout90,0% (first round)
87,6% (second round)
  KyōichiHirayama.jpg KeikoNakayama(small).jpg
Candidate Kyōichi Hirayama Keiko Nakayama
Party SP MPP
Popular vote 3.679.730 3.675.317
Percentage 50,0% 50,0%

Akashi-election-president-2010.png
Most voted candidate by province (second round)

President before election

Kōsaku Ayuzawa
SP

President after election

Kyōichi Hirayama
SP

A presidential election was held in Akashi on 26 June and 3 July 2010.

Incumbent Kōsaku Ayuzawa's decision to retire after 2 terms left the presidential election wide open. It had the most packed field at 7 candidates, including the Socialist Party and National Union, separate Moderate People's Party and United Reform Party candidates, the Communist Party and Future Party, and an independent Goth candidate.

The MPP put forward Keiko Nakayama as its candidate, guaranteeing an exciting presidential election. Keiko had served as Minister of Public Welfare under Ran Tsukuda and Anna Carbone, making her one of Akashi's most renowned conservative socialists. Her flamboyant image and appeal among leftist voters, who respected her ministerial record, made her a formidable challenger for the SP's Kyōichi Hirayama.

The first round saw Kyōichi win a plurality with 28,7% of the vote, and Keiko only 0,1% behind. Since the simultaneous general election had returned a "red wave", voters looked forward to a dramatic showdown between Kyōichi and Keiko in the second round. Since the 1990s, Akashi had seen a pattern of cohabitation (communist prime minister and conservative president, conservative prime minister and socialist president), which boosted Keiko's chances of pulling off a victory.

The second round became the narrowest ever result for an Akashian presidential election: both candidates won almost exactly 50% of the vote, and Kyōichi defeated Keiko by only 4.413 votes. The second round map reflected the narrow result: Keiko won majorities in 4 provinces, with Kyōichi only winning a majority in Kobi. Keiko later reflected that winning Kobi would've carried her to victory, but she felt its voters were wary of risking a vote for a conservative socialist since the neoliberal conspiracy was still in living memory.

Result

Presidential election, 26 June and 3 July 2010
Candidate Party 1st round 2nd round
Votes % Votes %
Kyōichi Hirayama Socialist Party 2.168.731 28,7% 3.679.730 50,0%
Keiko Nakayama Moderate People's Party 2.161.175 28,6% 3.675.317 50,0%
Chiho Akagi Future Party 906.787 12,0%
Satoko Narisawa Communist Party 793.438 10,5%
Wittigis United Reform Party 672.533 8,9%
Shirō Kasai National Union 476.063 6,3%
Hilduara Independent 377.828 5,0%
Total 7.556.555 100% 7.355.047 100%
Registered voters and turnout 8.396.173 90,0% 87,6%