Gylian presidential election, 1982

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Gylian presidential election, 1982

← 1975 22 January 1982 1986 →
Turnout94,5%
  LenResis.jpg DorisDuranti1.jpg
Nominee Len Resis Doris Duranti
Party LU Ind
Final vote 3.885.799 3.390.979
Percentage 53,4% 46,6%

Gylias-elections-presidential-1982-final.png
Results of the final preference distribution by region
  Len Resis   Doris Duranti

President before election

Reda Kazan

President after election

Len Resis

A presidential elections was held in Gylias on 22 January 1982.

Liberal Union candidate Len Resis defeated independent candidate Doris Duranti, whose strong showing was attributed by observers to the electorate's frustration with the wretched decade.

Procedure

The election was held through instant-runoff voting.

Candidates were registered with Elections Gylias in accordance with normal procedures. They could either be nominated by a political party or electoral bloc, civic organisations, or self-nomination as independents.

Candidates

Candidate Nominator Office(s) held Details
Len Resis LenResis.jpg Liberal Union None Campaigned as the main liberal candidate.
Doris Duranti DorisDuranti2.jpg Independent Regional Councillor for Alţira
(since 1978)
Campaigned on promotion of the arts and culture.
Lea Kersed LeaKersed(small).jpg National Bloc Deputy for Nerveiík-Iárus-Daláyk
(since 1969)
Leader of the Opposition
(since 1976)
Campaigned as the main conservative candidate.
Édith Champion ÉdithChampion-1981.jpg Progressive Alliance None Campaigned as the main leftist candidate.
Meiko Kaji MeikoKaji2.jpg People Power-Citizens' Movement None Campaigned on promotion of anarchism.
Françoise Chatelain FrançoiseChatelain1.jpg OMFLGACFEN None Campaigned on promotion of francité.
Luiza Monteira Maria Pia de Bragança 2.jpg Centre of Constitutional Monarchists Deputy for Ḑarna
(since 1980)
Campaigned on promotion of monarchism.

Results

Candidate Nominator First count % Final count %
Len Resis LU 1.693.593 20,9% 3.885.799 53,4%
Doris Duranti Independent 1.653.077 20,4% 3.390.979 46,6%
Lea Kersed NB 1.223.601 15,1%
Édith Champion PA 1.199.291 14,8%
Meiko Kaji PP-CM 1.004.811 12,4%
Françoise Chatelain OMFLGACFEN 786.022 9,7%
Luiza Monteira CCM 364.649 4,5%
Others/write-ins 178.273 2,2%
Total 8.103.316 100% 7.276.778 100%
Registered voters and turnout 8.670.311 94,5%

Maps

First count pluralities by region
Final count majorities by region

Analysis

The election reflected the deepening problems of the wretched decade, and was considered one of the most dispirited presidential elections, lacking the colourful eccentricity of the Golden Revolution-era campaigns, now mainly represented by perennial mainstays Françoise Chatelain and Luiza Monteira.

Lea Kersed, leader of the National Bloc and incumbent opposition leader, chose to run for the presidency in an attempt to break the parliamentary impasse that had developed since the previous year's federal election. She also sought to keep the public's attention on the Progressive Alliance's failure to take up her grand coalition proposal, casting them as the obstacle to a resolution. The PA, for its part, planned not to field a candidate, until Édith Champion demanded to run on their behalf. The actress Meiko Kaji volunteered to run in order to ensure anarchists were represented, and received an endorsement from People Power-Citizens' Movement.

The first count was tight, with five candidates in the range of 12%–20% and narrow margins between them. Liberal Union candidate Len Resis won pluralities in the traditional liberal strongholds of Arxaþ, Alţira, and Elena, with the addition of Envadra, and finished first. Doris Duranti, running as an independent, made a strong showing, winning pluralities in the TomesḐarnaAðunaHerlan southern belt, and somewhat surprisingly, Kausania.

Lea Kersed finished third overall, winning pluralities in Nerveiík-Iárus-Daláyk and Nauras. However, her first preference vote underperformed the NB's tally in the 1980 federal election by almost 5% — while she was well-respected among voters, they saw her more as a credible future Prime Minister and were thus reluctant to elect her President.

Édith's campaign was dogged by public frustration with the PA's participation in the Aén Ďanez government, which she opposed, and she finished fourth with pluralities only in the northern mountain regions and Mişeyáke — a great collapse from Reda Kazan's landslide election in 1975.

Meiko Kaji easily took pluralities in Sváen and Nezyál, aided by their reputation for political eccentricity, and won a plurality in Tandar largely as a protest vote.

The final count dramatically reversed the map, with only Kausania, Envadra, and Elena staying in the same camp. Len largely gained transfers from Lea and Luiza's voters, while Doris largely gained transfers from Édith, Meiko, and Françoise's voters. It was reported that some Édith voters preferenced Len second to symbolically express a desire to rebuild the PA–LU alliance. The centre-right transfers helped carry Len to victory by 53,4% to 46,6%, despite him carrying less regions – 9 compared to Doris' 11.

The final map reflected a northern–southern political divide that dated back to the Liberation War. Having become the main leftist candidate by default in the final round, Doris won the north through PA and PP-CM vote transfers, and swept Arxaþ and Alţira with lopsided majorities of 70%–80%, aided by a campaign that emphasised her fame as an Alscian actress in regions where nostalgia for Alscia remained a potent force. However, this was not enough to match Len's sweep of southern Gylias, including his decisive majority in Nerveiík-Iárus-Daláyk.

In the long run, the election had an impact on federal politics. It dissuaded Lea from any further presidential bids and benefited her popularity, enabling her to lead the NB to a plurality in 1985. It also gave Édith exposure as a talented and charismatic campaigner despite her poor result, paving the way for her election as Governor of Nauras the next year and establishing her as a rising star in the PA.