2017 Caldish general election: Difference between revisions
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The [[2012 Caldish general election|2012 general election]] saw the governing [[Liberty Party (Caldia)|Liberty Party]] and [[Centre Party (Caldia)|Centre Party]] coalition's lose its majority, together winning 190 seats. | The [[2012 Caldish general election|2012 general election]] saw the governing [[Liberty Party (Caldia)|Liberty Party]] and [[Centre Party (Caldia)|Centre Party]] coalition's lose its majority, together winning 190 seats. | ||
[[Alastrí Nic Ualtair ⁊ Ní Deoradh]] and [[Máel Coluim Mac Giolla Phádraig]] both indicated that they intended to continue their partnership. The two parties began talks with other smaller parties on the centre-right, namely the [[Caldish Democrats]] and the [[Green Party (Caldia)|Greens]]. After several weeks, both parties pledged their support for the continuation of the Liberty-Centre coalition. Nic Ualtair was re-elected as taoiseach in July and she formed her second government. | |||
The official opposition, the [[Social Democratic Party (Caldia)|Social Democratic Party]], won 129 seats. Other opposition parties included the [[Free Market Party]], [[Labour Party (Caldia)|Labour Party]], and the [[Caldish Independence Party]]. Two {{wp|Independent politican|Independents}} were also elected. | The official opposition, the [[Social Democratic Party (Caldia)|Social Democratic Party]], won 129 seats. Other opposition parties included the [[Free Market Party]], [[Labour Party (Caldia)|Labour Party]], and the [[Caldish Independence Party]]. Two {{wp|Independent politican|Independents}} were also elected. | ||
Nic Ualtair announced that she would be stepping down as taoiseach and Liberty Party leader prior to the 2017 election. [[Simi Ó Raghallaigh]] was elected as Liberty leader and became taoiseach following Nic Ualtair's resignation on 20 April 2017. | Nic Ualtair announced that she would be stepping down as taoiseach and Liberty Party leader prior to the 2017 election. [[Simi Ó Raghallaigh]] was elected as Liberty leader and became taoiseach following Nic Ualtair's resignation on 20 April 2017. |
Revision as of 21:42, 30 January 2022
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All 399 seats to the Comhthionól Náisiúnta 200 seats needed for a majority | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Turnout | 92.1% ( 1.28%) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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A general election was held in Caldia on 12 June 2017 to elect all 399 members of the Comhthionól Náisiúnta.
The election resulted in a narrow victory for the governing Liberty Party and Centre Party coalition, led by Simi Ó Raghallaigh. While The Liberty Party lost 9 seats, the Centre Party made gains and had its best ever performance. The smaller Caldish Democrats, which had been supporting the coalition government, also increased its seat count to 16. Together, the three parties had enough seats to form a majority government. The Social Democratic Party had its worst electoral performance in its history, winning only 20.23% of the vote and 117 seats. The Free Market Party saw its support collapse. Smaller parties saw a signficant increase in their support and historic showings. Three new parties entered the Comhthionól Náisiúnta for the first time.
Ó Raghallaigh was invited by King Kenneth IV to form a government and the new government was sworn in on 3 July 2017.
Background
The 2012 general election saw the governing Liberty Party and Centre Party coalition's lose its majority, together winning 190 seats.
Alastrí Nic Ualtair ⁊ Ní Deoradh and Máel Coluim Mac Giolla Phádraig both indicated that they intended to continue their partnership. The two parties began talks with other smaller parties on the centre-right, namely the Caldish Democrats and the Greens. After several weeks, both parties pledged their support for the continuation of the Liberty-Centre coalition. Nic Ualtair was re-elected as taoiseach in July and she formed her second government.
The official opposition, the Social Democratic Party, won 129 seats. Other opposition parties included the Free Market Party, Labour Party, and the Caldish Independence Party. Two Independents were also elected.
Nic Ualtair announced that she would be stepping down as taoiseach and Liberty Party leader prior to the 2017 election. Simi Ó Raghallaigh was elected as Liberty leader and became taoiseach following Nic Ualtair's resignation on 20 April 2017.
Electoral system
Of the 399 members of the Comhthionól, 200 are elected in multi-member constituencies and 199 are selected based on a party's vote share. The presiding officer is automatically re-elected if standing again, but the incumbent had retired meaning all 399 seats were contested.
Members are elected using mixed-member proportional representation. Caldia has 52 multi-member constituencies. Each consistency consists of three to five members. Members are selected using a version of single-transferable vote known as the Ní Dochartaigh method. Under this process, voters rank candidates by first and second preference. Unlike other methods of single transferable vote, they can only rank candidates in this order and cannot transfer their vote to more than one additional candidate.
The remaining members are allocated to parties who rank their candidates on an open list in which voters can rank candidates on their own. Voters can either support a party's top candidate or give their vote to another candidate on the list. This could allow a candidate to move up the list. For this to occur, a candidate must receive more than 25% of the total number of votes cast for the party. This allows for parties to retain significant control over candidates elected on the open list.
For a new party to become eligible, it had to register the support of 25,000 registered voters with the Caldish Electoral Board before 18 January. New parties are usually given more time to prepare, but the nature of the snap election reduced the time they had. For a new party to enter the Comhthionól it had to receive more than 2.5% of the national vote share win a seat in a multi-member constituency. Independents only require the support of 10,000 registered voters, making ballot access easier.