1980 Central Shaneville Presidential election

Revision as of 19:25, 17 November 2021 by 365Shane (talk | contribs)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
1980 Central Shanevlle presidential election
Central Shaneville flag.png
← 1976 14 November 1980 (1980-11-14) 1984 →

264 seats in the Central Shaneville Parliament (CSP)
133 seats needed for a majority
Turnout85%
  First party Second party Third party
  Tom Johnson CSV.jpg John M Perkins.jpg Aaron Hoskins.jpg
Leader Tom Johnson John M Perkins Aaron Hoskins
Party Democratic Liberal Progressive Conservative Party New Democratic Party
Leader since January 1974 May 1970 November 1944
Leader's seat The Valley Southern Bay Lincoln Island
Last election 2,461,075 (30.5%) 2,638,454 (32.7%) 2,341,201 (29.0%)
Seats before 64 - -
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 639,599 (7.9%)
Seats before -
Seats won -
Seat change -
FPTP vote 0
Percentage 0.0%
Swing -

President of Central Shaneville before election

John M Perkins
Conservative

President of Central Shaneville

TBD
TBD

The 1980 Central Shaneville Presidential election was held on the 14 November 1980 - John M Perkins was the incumbent President heading into the election, Perkins' first term as President was highly anticipated and is generally considered a success compared to Guille before him.

The exit polls suggested that the people of Central Shaneville wanted the Liberal Party back in power following the shambles of the NDP lead minority in 1972 and the overhyped Conservative lead minority in 1976 - both cabinets not really doing a whole lot for the island nation during the last eight years - There was also a strong desire to return to the policies of the original Liberal administration under John Dunston - one of Central Shaneville's most successful presidents ever.

The people of Central Shaneville felt like a return to a Liberal party President would stabilize the small nation, this was seen as funny because the same people had voted out the Liberals eight years previously.

Exit Poll

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

Parties Seats Change
Liberal Party 153 -
Progressive Conservative Party 56 -
New Democratic Party 20 -
Social Credit Workers' Party 17 -
Undecided 17 -
LIBERAL PARTY WINS MAJORITY GOVERNMENT

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
(Incumbent)
0 0.0%
0 / 264
xxx 0.0
0.0%
New Democratic Party Aaron Hoskins 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%