Akashian general election, 1982: Difference between revisions

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Ran formed a [[List of political parties in Akashi#Alignments|light blue]] coalition and secured outside support from the {{A-NCP}}, whose new leadership was more amenable to working with the centre-right. This gave the government a small majority of 10 seats.  
Ran formed a [[List of political parties in Akashi#Alignments|light blue]] coalition and secured outside support from the {{A-NCP}}, whose new leadership was more amenable to working with the centre-right. This gave the government a small majority of 10 seats.  


Although her government proved popular and effective, it was troubled by private tensions over cabinet posts, with crucial CNP allies such as the [[Morisaki family]] and [[Keiko Nakayama]] taking significant ministries to the annoyance of the smaller parties. The NDP, RP, UA, and LP, who had slogged through years in opposition during the 1970s, were rankled by the CNP's quick transformation and it gaining a disproportionate electoral reward in comparison.
Although her government proved popular and effective, it was troubled by private tensions over cabinet posts, with [[red rice group|crucial CNP allies]] taking significant ministries to the annoyance of the smaller parties. The NDP, RP, UA, and LP, who had slogged through years in opposition during the 1970s, were rankled by the CNP's quick transformation and it gaining a disproportionate electoral reward in comparison.


{{Akashian elections}}
{{Akashian elections}}


[[Category:Elections in Akashi]]
[[Category:Elections in Akashi]]

Latest revision as of 11:57, 26 June 2022

Akashian general election, 1982

← 1980 26 June 1982 1986 →

400 seats in the National Assembly
201 seats needed for a majority
Turnout92,0%
  First party Second party Third party
  RanTsukuda-small.jpg KagehisaUeki.jpg
Leader Ran Tsukuda Kagehisa Ueki Yoshihiro Sera
Party CNP SP CP
Last election 21 seats
9,0% PR
8,0% STV
21 seats
10,5% PR
12,0% STV
21 seats
10,0% PR
11,5% STV
Seats won 86 71 32
Seat change Increase 65 Increase 50 Increase 11
PR vote 865.200 669.088 484.512
% and swing 15,0%
Increase 6,0%
11,6%
Increase 1,1%
8,4%
Decrease 1,6%
STV vote 1.260.445 690.655 575.546
% and swing 21,9%
Increase 13,9%
12,0%
Steady
10,0%
Decrease 1,5%

  Fourth party Fifth party Sixth party
  Pat Saiki.jpg
Leader Tomohiko Saito Toshizaku Imai Hatsue Fukuda
Party GP NCP LP
Last election 19 seats
8,7% PR
7,5% STV
18 seats
10,2% PR
10,8% STV
15 seats
8,0% PR
7,9% STV
Seats won 31 28 27
Seat change Increase 12 Increase 10 Increase 12
PR vote 472.976 519.120 444.136
% and swing 8,2%
Decrease 0,5%
9,0%
Decrease 1,2%
7,7%
Decrease 0,3%
STV vote 402.882 587.057 379.860
% and swing 7,0%
Decrease 0,5%
10,2%
Decrease 0,6%
6,6%
Decrease 1,3%

Akashi-election-general-1982.png
Most voted party by province

Prime Minister before election

Þiudawulþus
Ind

Prime Minister after election

Ran Tsukuda
CNP

A general election was held in Akashi on 26 June 1982. The interim Þiudawulþus government passed a sweeping electoral reform beforehand, which doubled the size of the National Assembly, instituted a 3% electoral threshold, and restricted independents to running in constituencies.

Major changes had occurred during the troubled 12th Assembly. The most significant was the "kibi-yuru war" within the Conservative National Party, ending with the victory of the "soft" faction led by Ran Tsukuda in 1981. Ran launched a transformation of the CNP, purging hardliners and repositioning it as a centre-right party — in effect, moving it from the dark blue bloc to the light blue bloc. Her efforts to change the party's image extended to recruiting sanyoi candidates.

Ran became the main attraction of the election, as her promises of careful governance, economic revival, and constitutional renewal appealed to a public fed up with economic stagnation and political gridlock. The Socialist Party's campaign was weakened by its association with the "siege economy"; new leader Kagehisa Ueki's attempts to moderate its platform and express remorse for the "mistakes" of the 1970s brought the hostility of the Communist Party.

Results

General election, 26 June 1982
Akashi-election-gen-1982.svg
Party Party list Constituency Total
seats
+/-
PR % +/− STV % +/−
Conservative National Party 865.200 15,0% +6,0% 1.260.445 21,9% +13,9% 86 +65
Socialist Party 669.088 11,6% +1,1% 690.655 12,0% ±0,0% 71 +50
National Cooperative Party 519.120 9,0% -1,2% 587.057 10,2% -0,6% 28 +10
Communist Party 484.512 8,4% -1,6% 575.546 10,0% -1,5% 32 +11
Green Party 472.976 8,2% -0,5% 402.882 7,0% -0,5% 31 +12
Liberal Party 444.136 7,7% -0,3% 379.860 6,6% -1,3% 27 +12
National Democratic Party 432.600 7,5% -0,9% 362.594 6,3% -1,4% 25 +9
United Akashi 415.296 7,2% -0,6% 351.083 6,1% -2,1% 23 +7
Reform Party 403.760 7,0% -0,2% 345.327 6,0% -2,4% 22 +6
National Union 288.400 5,0% -1,9% 155.397 2,7% -2,1% 17 +3
Justice Party 213.416 3,7% +1,0% 143.886 2,5% +0,2% 12 +6
Social Credit Party 201.880 3,5% +0,3% 103.598 1,8% +0,4% 7 +4
Freedom League 184.576 3,2% +0,8% 120.865 2,1% +0,1% 8 +5
Akashi Renewal Party 173.040 3,0% +1,0% 115.109 2,0% +0,5% 7 +4
Independents N/A 161.153 2,8% -0,6% 4 -2
Total 5.767.997 100% 5.755.458 100% 400
Registered voters and turnout 6.269.562 92,0% 6.269.562 91,8%
Bloc strength
Bloc Parties Seats
Crimson bloc CP, SCP, GP 70
Pale crimson bloc SP, NU, JP 100
Light yellow bloc NCP 28
Light blue bloc LP, NDP, RP, UA, CNP 183
Dark blue bloc ARP, FL 15

The CNP won a plurality of votes and seats, the first centre-right party to do so since the Akashian Civil War. The SP finished second, with a deficit of only 15 seats. Nine other parties won between 12 and 32 seats, leading to speculation that the electoral reform was producing a two-party system.

The increased size of the National Assembly allowed every party to register gains, while the independents lost 2 seats. The CNP managed to finish first in the two most populous provinces, Kagi and Matō, but were overtaken by the LP in Takao, a somewhat surprising result given Ran's progressive conservatism and image were uniquely suited to Takao's tradition of paternalistic conservatism.

The light blue bloc became the largest, narrowly overtaking the crimsonpale crimson alignment. The defection of the CNP devastated the dark blue bloc, which saw its seats cut in half.

Ran formed a light blue coalition and secured outside support from the National Cooperative Party, whose new leadership was more amenable to working with the centre-right. This gave the government a small majority of 10 seats.

Although her government proved popular and effective, it was troubled by private tensions over cabinet posts, with crucial CNP allies taking significant ministries to the annoyance of the smaller parties. The NDP, RP, UA, and LP, who had slogged through years in opposition during the 1970s, were rankled by the CNP's quick transformation and it gaining a disproportionate electoral reward in comparison.