March 1927 Vierz general election

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March 1927 Vierz general election
Vierz Empire
← January 1927 5 March 1927 August 1927 →

All 447 seats in the Imperial Assembly
224 seats needed for a majority
TurnoutIncrease 81.9%
Party Leader % Seats ±
VSP Lars Hencke 35.5% 159 +9
VPV Matthäus Scherler 30.8% 138 -23
BKV Helmut Pasche 14.2% 63 +39
PNE Kajetan von Katterfeld 10.4% 46 -31
KBP Anatol Wegmann 9.1% 41 +6
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.
Chancellor before Chancellor after
Karl Porzelt.jpg Alois Behrends
Independent
Lars Hencke
VSP
Lars Hencke, 1926.jpg

General elections were held in the Vierz Empire on Saturday 5 March 1927 to elect all 447 members of the Imperial Assembly, the lower house of the Reichsthing, the national legislature. The election was the second of three general elections to be held in Vierzland that year.

After the 8 January elections created a hung parliament, with no sole party holding enough seats to form a government and the failure of all coalition negotiations, emperor Victor II dissolved the imperial assembly and set another election for 5 March. The ensuing election campaign was defined by violence, paramilitarism, and propaganda via mass media. The election, as with the previous one, took place in the context of the Dark Months, a period of severe economic downturn that affected Vierzland and the rest of the world after the Tieradan credit default of 1925.

The Vierz Socialist Party led by Lars Hencke and the League of Communists led by Helmut Pasche secured a combined 49.7% of the seats on election day, forming a coalition minority government. Hencke was appointed chancellor on 11 March.

Hencke struggled to command authority over the legislature and his own government. This was complicated by the military and police's frequent refusal to cooperate with his government due to their own right-wing sympathies. After the abdication of Alexander II in June, emperor Victor II ordered military officer Hermann Eschau to restore order in the empire, resulting in the overthrow of Hencke's government on 15 June. Eschau became acting chancellor, and most socialist and communist MPs were arrested, detained, or forced to resign from their positions entirely.

Eschau would assume dictatorial control of the chancellery after a fraudulent election conducted in August, where most left-wing groups were barred from participation. It is for this reason that the March election was the last in Vierzland considered by historians to be "free and fair" until 1988—a period of 61 years.