1964 Central Shaneville Presidential election

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1964 Central Shanevlle presidential election
Central Shaneville flag.png
← 1960 13 November 1964 (1964-11-13) 1968 →

264 seats in the Central Shaneville Parliament (CSP)
133 seats needed for a majority
Turnout88.5%
  First party Second party Third party
  Steve McLaren.jpg Robert Bourassa CSV.gif Bob Dylan.jpg
Leader Steve McLaren Robert Bourassa Bob Dylan
Party Democratic Liberal Progressive Conservative Party New Democratic Party
Leader since October 1960 January 1962 October 1960
Leader's seat Cagliari Porte-Vecchio Ajaccio
Last election 3,150,762 (38.7%) 1,874,911 (23.0%) 2,455,822 (30.1%)
Seats before 103 58 78
Seats won - - -
Seat change - - -
FPTP vote 0 0 0
Percentage 0.0% 0.0% 0.0%
Swing - - -

  Fourth party
  Bill Chadwell.jpg
Leader Bill Chadwell
Party Social Credit Workers' Party
Leader since November 1944
Leader's seat Catia Island
Last election 670,875 (8.2%)
Seats before 25
Seats won -
Seat change -
FPTP vote 0
Percentage 0.0%
Swing -

President of Central Shaneville before election

Steve McLaren
Democratic Liberal

President of Central Shaneville

TBD
TBD

The 1964 Central Shaneville Presidential election was held on the 13 November 1964, Steve McLaren and the Liberals were the incumbent President and party respectively.

The 1964 election were the first elections to feature televised debates which came to the attention of the entire nation, this was the first time the electorate could see all the candidates on one platform rather than having to rely on party posters, newspaper articles and radio broadcasts.

Other things to note during the campaigns include President McLaren's campaign was based around the importance of the university, it was a popular choice with voters who wanted to see the islands prosperous.

Meanwhile, the Social Credit Party was criticized when Bill Chadwell (who was seen as out of touch by the people) suggested that the government might consider putting an end to public assistance to smaller parties.

The 1964 election was predicted to be the biggest majority win in Presidential election history with the Liberals predicted to win 219 seats which was backed by media pundits alike.

Exit Poll

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

Parties Seats Change
Liberal Party 219 -
New Democratic Party 17 -
Social Credit Workers' Party 15 -
Progressive Conservative Party 10 -
Undecided 3 -
LIBERAL PARTY WINS BACK A MAJORITY

Results

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

Party Leader MLs Votes
Of total Of total
Progressive Conservative Party TBD 0 0.0%
0 / 264
xxx 0.0
0.0%
Liberal Party TBD 0 0.0%
0 / 264
xxx 0.0%'
0.0%
New Democratic Party TBD 0 0.0%
0 / 264
xxx 0.0%
0.0%
Social Credit Workers' Party TBD 0 0.0%
0 / 264
xxx 0.0%
0.0%


Voting summary

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