2010 Adamantine elections
← 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 → Midterm elections | |
Election day | October 9 |
---|---|
Incumbent president | Diomede Caltabiano (National Front) |
Next Congress | 109th |
Senate elections | |
Overall control | National Front hold |
Seats contested | 6 of 38 |
Net seat change | National Front +3 |
2010 Senate election results map National Front gain National Front hold | |
Chamber elections | |
Overall control | Solidarista gain |
Seats contested | All 85 voting seats |
Popular vote margin | Solidarista +7.4% |
Net seat change | Solidarista +12 |
2010 Chamber of Represeantives election results map National Front gain National Front hold Solidarista gain Solidarista hold | |
Gubernatorial elections | |
Seats contested | 11 of 18 |
Net seat change | +4 Solidarista |
2010 Gubernatorial election results map National Front gain National Front hold Solidarista gain Solidarista hold |
The 2010 Adamantine elections were held on Saturday, October 9, 2010 in the middle of Nationalist President Diomede Caltabiano's first term. Solidaristas ended the Nationalist's unified control of the federal legislature by securing an additional 12 seats within the Chamber of Represeantives. The Nationalists were able to defend three incumbents in the Senate, while picking up an additional three seats in Campialti, Monfalcone and Montagna. Solidaristas gained four gubernatorial seats in the provinces of Lucentezza, Catarina, Castello and San Loreto. San Loreto, Castello and Lucentezza all shifted from Nationalist trifecta's at the provincial level to Solidarista trifectas.
Heavy Nationalist losses were contributed mainly by the 2009 Porto Pellegrini Riots, the passage of the 2009 Federal Right-to-Work Law and the declining economy. Several government services were either reduced significantly or entirely ended, including the Rural Healthcare Service and the Commission for Workplace Safety and Health.
Issues
The Nationalist won a slim majority within the Chamber of Represeantives in 2010, winning 44 of the 85 seats, picking up a significant amount of seats in traditionally Solidarista leaning districts. Two chamber districts in the Federal District of Porto Pellegrini and three in Arata had been held by Solidarista representatives since the 1970s; all of which fell to Nationalists in 2008. In 2009, President Diomede Caltabiano signed the 2009 Federal Right-to-Work Law, prohibiting union security agreements between employers and labor unions. Caltabiano also abolished labor unions in the federal government, causing a major backlash from voters from heavily industrialized provinces.
Caltabiano signed a free trade agreements with Satucin shortly after his inauguration, igniting protests across Adamantina. During a 23 day standoff with protestors in Porto Pellegrini, Caltabiano ordered the Carabinieri to intervene, leading to 109 injuries, two deaths and thousands of arrests. Several representatives from Caltabiano's own party condemned his actions, demanding he resign. Caltabiano established the Adamantine Coalition for Conservative Action (ACCA), which sought to primary the twelve representatives who openly called for his resignation. Nine of the twelve anti-Caltabiano Nationalist representatives were successfully ousted from their seats during the primary in 2010. Five of the nine ACCA candidates ran in the seats recently picked up in Arata and the Federal District, and were unsuccessful during the general election.
Federal elections
Congressional elections
Senate elections
Chamber of Represeantives
All 85 voting seats of the Chamber of Represeantives were up for election. The Solidarista won the nationwide popular vote for the Chamber of Represeantives by 7.4% and picked up 12 seats, regaining control of the lower house it had previously lost in 2008. While the Nationalists suffered significant losses, they were successful in six districts, one in Argenta, Montagna, San Loreto, Campiati, Sarno and Venosa. The Solidaristas picked up two seats in Campiati, Arata and the Federal District, a one district in Montagna, Castello, Sarno, San Loreto and Panzarella.