January 2023 Autuzian legislative election: Difference between revisions

Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 201: Line 201:
| {{wpl|Left-wing politics|Left-wing}}
| {{wpl|Left-wing politics|Left-wing}}
| [[Alècsis Raxhon]]
| [[Alècsis Raxhon]]
| style="text-align:centre;"|8.2%
| style="text-align:center;"|8.2%
| {{Composition bar|29|400|#00ff24}}
| {{Composition bar|29|400|#00ff24}}
| {{Composition bar|27|400|#00ff24}}
| {{Composition bar|27|400|#00ff24}}

Revision as of 00:07, 7 July 2023

January 2023 Autuzian legislative election

← 2020 23 January, 2023 2026 →

All 400 seats in the Tchambe
201 seats needed for a majority
Opinion polls
Registered9,227,590
Turnout77.81% (Decrease1.44%)
  First party Second party Third party
 
CatreneBurnot2.png
Jean-François_Portarrieu_02.jpg
Xavier_Roseren.jpg
Leader Catrene Burnot Djeråd Bådwin Rawoul Kinkin
Party Labour Liberal-Progressive National Party
Last election 138 102 39
Seats won 161 67 50
Seat change Increase 23 Decrease 35 Increase 11
Percentage 31.22% 18.91% 14.07%
Swing Increase 1.87% Decrease 5.3% Increase 3.04%

  Fourth party Fifth party Sixth party
 
ElwèCoëme.png
André_Villiers.jpg
Robin_Reda.jpg
Leader Elwè Coëme Andrêye Villiers Robiet Dwizink
Party Centre Party Communist-Left Right Unity
Last election 23 33 20
Seats won 37 25 21
Seat change Increase 14 Decrease 8 Increase 1
Percentage 10.59% 7.17% 5.84%
Swing Increase 4.1% Decrease 2.09% Increase 0.27%

  Seventh party Eighth party Ninth party
 
Geneviève_Darrieussecq_-_2017.jpg
Alexis_Izard.jpg
Monika_Gruetters_2009.jpg
Leader Djenvèle Darrieu Alècsis Raxhon Felisse Guiyåme
Party Eastward Ho! Greens Radical-Liberal
Last election 29 16
Seats won 14 13 12
Seat change New Decrease 16 Decrease 4
Percentage 4.08% 3.8% 3.31%
Swing New Decrease 4.37% Decrease 1.2%

Government before before election

Burnot I Cabinet
Labour-Communist Left-Greens-Centre

Government after election

Burnot II Cabinet
Labour-Centre-Greens

Legislative elections were held in Auzance on 23 January, 2023 for the Tchambe. The incumbent coalition, who had called the snap election amid legislative gridlock, received a vote of confidence. The councilist left-wing to far-left Labour party received significant gains, as did the right-wing populist National Party, as well as the social-democratic centre-left to left-wing Centre, and the centre-right Solarian democratic Right Unity. The main opposition, the centre-left Liberal-Progressives, suffered their largest defeat since 2012, while the Greens lost most of their gains from the previous cycle, reducing their scale in the resultant coalition government. The pro-Euclean liberal-conservative Eastward Ho! party entered the Tchambe for the first time. Labour Prime Minister Catrene Burnot was therefore re-elected.

The Labour-led left-wing coalition went to the public seeking an increased mandate, however the election was also partially motivated by the increasingly terse relationship between the Communist-Left caucus and the Labour leadership. The appointment of far-left leader Andrêye Villiers in March 2022 saw the second-largest governing party take a turn to the left, and the reshuffle of April 2022 saw the Communist-Left cabinet members mostly coming from the most orthodox-councilist caucus. Months of increasingly fractious negotiations eventually saw a Communist-Left attempt to pass an unapproved law to restrict private enterprise resulting in a public split in the legislature, with the remainder of the coalition voting with the opposition against it. The rejection of this law in early October 2022 resulted in the mass resignation of Communist-Left from the incumbent coalition, and Prime Minister Burnot - rather than returning to negotiations - chose to dissolve the Tchambe through a legislative vote and call a legislative election to renew her mandate.

The electoral campaign saw the Liberal-Progressives campaign on a centrist political platform - rather than a centre-left one, as they had in the last three - and openly co-operate with pro-Euclean Eastward Ho! as well as Right Unity, who collectively sought to target the vulnerability and instability of the coalition government. Premier Houbêrt Louxhî was antipathetic to the Liberal-Progressive campaign, himself on the left of the party - unlike its legislature's leadership - and as a result, both major parties targeted one another's instabilities and factions as a major theme of the campaign. The National Party played on the increasing populism of surrounding countries, and aimed to reach disillusioned social conservatives or moderates who traditionally voted Labour but disapproved of the Burnot government's progressive social reforms, particularly on self-ID and the "legal third gender", as well as public doubts on Auzance's perceived geopolitical closeness to the Euclean Community.

The result of the election saw Labour perform unexpectedly well, after initial fears in the governing coalition that no grouping would gain a mandate or even that the Liberal-Progressives would form government for the first time since their defeat in 2012; Labour got 161 of 400 seats, having gained 23, and thus formed government quickly with the Greens and Centre Party. The National Party saw significant gains for the first time since the 2000s, while the Liberal-Progressives saw their poorest result in a decade, defying expectations of significant gains. Despite remaining in government, the Greens lost over half of their seats, while the Centre Party nearly doubled their vote share, becoming the new second-largest party in the government. The pro-Euclean Eastward Ho! entered parliament for the first time, joining the Liberal-Progressive grouping.

Background

The electoral situation in the runup to the snap election was perilous; although the Labour party had been in government since 2012 consistently, the election of a Liberal-Progressive Premier in July 2018, resignation of Thereze Astruc in November 2019, and the inconclusive nature of the 2020 legislative election in July of that year all left Catrene Burnot's power diminished and heavily dispersed. Burnot, having initially headed the Labour-Green coalition Astruc led before her departure, was forced to agree to a grand coalition of all parties left of the Autuzian centreground (from the centre-left leftward), which allowed a significant diversity of opinion within her government. Despite this instability, Auzance's economic growth had remained very high during the Labour party's tenures, and its governments were therefore afforded a degree of popularity that proved consistent in the 2010s.

The coalition remained relatively stable until March 2022, when Communist-Left appointed new leader Andrêye Villiers from the far-left Council Nation faction. Villiers lobbied the government for a reshuffle, in which Communist-Left's new appointees were primarily from the Council Nation, while sources inside the government continued to suggest the détente between the far-left and mainstream left had been lost following Villiers' election. In contrast to Villiers' radicalism, Burnot had become known for being a conciliator, particularly to the centre - as a result, the far-left began to threaten abstentions on major legislation, and a trickle of resignations began in the early autumn.

In October 2022, Villiers lodged a law into the Tchambe, aiming to constrict the legislation around private enterprise - the limit of employees was to be halved, while private corporation tax rates would raise to levels "deliberately unsustainable for the average capitalist enterprise", as stated by a Communist-Left spokesman, with the hope that Prime Minister Burnot would renege or compromise. Burnot did the opposite - the rest of the coalition was whipped against the law, and it was defeated by a supermajority with the opposition and most of the government united on its removal. Villiers was incensed by the breakdown of negotiations, and he - along with the vast majority, but not all, of Communist-Left Cabinet ministers - resigned from the Cabinet two mornings after; the government, as such, no longer had a majority, falling to 190 out of 400 seats.

Catrene Burnot, on the following day, passed a trigger vote through the Tchambe to call an election by a two-thirds majority, receiving near-total unanimity in calling such an election, with the date set for 23 January of the following year.

Electoral system

Auzance's Tchambe has 400 members. 150 members are elected directly by the first past the post system of voting, while 200 other members are elected - should a party's vote share exceed the threshold of 3% of total votes - in what Auzance's Electoral Commission calls "corrective proportional representation", whereby seats are awarded to parties in a way that gets the party's share of all 350 ministers as close to its vote share of all parties above the threshold as possible. 50 seats are apportioned as bonus seats, whereby the largest two parties share the fifty based on the proportion of their votes above 20% (e.g. a party with 30%, and a party with 25%, would share them two-to-one); should the second party not exceed 20%, the first party receives all fifty (as happened in this election).

All Autuzian permanent residents and citizens over the age of 16 on election day have the right to vote, and are automatically registered. Voters cast their ballot either in the polling station on a ballot card, by proxy (with strict regulations over the number of, and identity of, the voters whose vote is proxied), or by post. Voting machines are not used in Autuzian elections. Prisoners whose sentences, should no form of parole be afforded, end before the end of a fixed term following the election are allowed to vote, while those incarcerated in libeprijhons (open prisons) are always allowed to vote. As 23 January, 2023 was a Monday, the day was a national holiday as per the Constitution.

Political parties

In the Tchambe prior to the election, eight parties had representation.

Name Ideology Position Leader 2020 seats October 2022
seats
Votes (%) Seats
Labour Democratic socialism Left-wing Catrene Burnot 29.3%
138 / 400
139 / 400
Liberal-Progressive Social liberalism Centre to centre-left Djeråd Bådwin 24.2%
102 / 400
100 / 400
National Party Right-wing populism Right-wing to Far-right Rawoul Kinkin 11%
39 / 400
40 / 400
Communist-Left Council communism Far-left Andrêye Villiers 9.3%
33 / 400
34 / 400
Greens Green socialism Left-wing Alècsis Raxhon 8.2%
29 / 400
27 / 400
Centre Party Social democracy Centre-left Elwè Coëme 6.5%
23 / 400
24 / 400
Right Unity Conservatism Centre-right Robiet Dwizink 5.6%
20 / 400
21 / 400
Radical-Liberal Classical liberalism Centre to right-wing Felisse Guiyåme 4.5%
16 / 400
14 / 400