1976 Central Shaneville Presidential election

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1976 Central Shanevlle presidential election
Central Shaneville flag.png
← 1972 12 November 1976 (1976-11-12) 1980 →

264 seats in the Central Shaneville Parliament (CSP)
133 seats needed for a majority
Turnout88%
  First party Second party Third party
  Tom Johnson CSV.jpg John M Perkins.jpg Louis Guille.jpg
Leader Tom Johnson John M Perkins Louis Guille
Party Democratic Liberal Progressive Conservative Party New Democratic Party
Leader since January 1974 May 1970 January 1970
Leader's seat The Valley Southern Bay Centrale
Last election 2,196,426 (26.9%) 2,399,268 (29.4%) 2,984,156 (36.6%)
Seats before 51 75 114
Seats won - - -
Seat change - - -
FPTP vote 0 0 0
Percentage 0.0% 0.0% 0.0%
Swing - - -

  Fourth party
  Harry Grocer.jpg
Leader Harry Grocer
Party Social Credit Workers' Party
Leader since November 1972
Leader's seat Northern Territory
Last election 583,823 (7.2%)
Seats before 23
Seats won -
Seat change -
FPTP vote 0
Percentage 0.0%
Swing -

President of Central Shaneville before election

Louis Guille
New Democratic Party

President of Central Shaneville

TBD
TBD

The 1976 Central Shaneville Presidential election was held on the 12 November 1976 - Louis Guille and the New Democratic Party were the incumbent president and party respectively.

Louis Guille and the NDP's first term as President and ruling minority party of Central Shaneville is a disappointment for them, the party's support has dropped from the high of 37% in 1972 to around 30% by the 1976 election as inflation and unemployment rise this is down to Guille's handling of the economy and his decision to go back and forth on campaign promises to cut the budget but increase government spending, and abolish several smaller government agencies where he felt they weren't needed - he seeks re-election in order to "redeem himself and the party."

John M Perkins once again runs for Presidency for the Conservatives following his strong 2nd place showing in 1972 - Harry Grocer was chosen to represent the Social Credit Party once again following his strong showing in 1972 whilst the Liberals ditched Steve McLaren, in favour of a popular deputy leader and politician, Tom Johnson - The Liberals candidate Tom Johnson is from a rural electoral district called The Valley, famous for its wine, but is now a shrinking rural district, losing population and jobs to the growing suburbs which is why not many politicians from this district had ever ran for a high ranked status like President.

The exit polls suggest a Liberal minority due to the New Democratic Party's failure of a first term, which could mean that Louis Guille will not be re-elected.

Exit Poll

The Exit Poll took place a week before the election and predicted the following:

Parties Seats Change
Progressive Conservative Party 0 -
Liberal Party 0 -
New Democratic Party 0 -
Social Credit Workers' Party 0 -
TBD

Results

After all electoral districts had been declared, the results were:

Party Leader MLs Votes
Of total Of total
Liberal Party Tom Johnson 0 0.0%
0 / 264
xxx 0.0%'
0.0%
Progressive Conservative Party John M Perkins 0 0.0%
0 / 264
xxx 0.0
0.0%
New Democratic Party Louis Guille
(Incumbent)
0 0.0%
0 / 264
xxx 0.0%
0.0%
Social Credit Workers' Party Harry Grocer 0 0.0%
0 / 264
xxx 0.0%
0.0%


Voting summary

Popular vote
Liberal Party
0.0%
Conservative Party
0.0%
New Democratic Party
0.0%
Social Credit Workers' Party
0.0%