1965 Malgravean General Election
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1965 Malgravean General Election | |||||||
Previous election ← 1960 |
→ Next election 1970 | ||||||
Chamber of Representatives (Malgrave) | |||||||
22nd of March, 1965 | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Conservative Action Party | Technology Party | Unity Party' | |||||
Leader | Johann Leipzig | Edoardo Pavonie | Bronisław Malinowski | ||||
Party | Conservative Action Party | Technology Party | Unity Party | ||||
Percentage Vote Share | 43% | 27% | 19% | ||||
Seats before | 987 | 591 | 289 | ||||
Seats after | 1052 | 440 | 347 | ||||
Seat change | 72 | 151 | 58 | ||||
Green Party | Progressive Party | Socialist Party | |||||
Leader | Clemente Bellini | Jeon Hun-young | Isabella Acardi | ||||
Party | Green Party | Progressive Party | Socialist Party | ||||
Percentage Vote Share | 4% | 4% | 3% | ||||
Seats before | 25 | 0 | 8 | ||||
Seats after | 31 | 22 | 8 | ||||
Seat change | 6 | 22 | |||||
After a tumultuous five-year term the Chamber of Representatives and the Chamber of Supervisors were dissolved to make way for a new general election. The 1965 election is an oddity in Malgravean history, as the ongoing fighting made direct voting in this region impossible. Instead ballots from internal refugees were assigned to Pakosc and seats were assigned accordingly.
In recent years it has been theorised that some of these ballots were assigned unfairly, however, no proof of these claims has ever surfaced and it is considered to be a conspiracy theory.
Election Issues
WIP
Campaigns
Conservative Campaign
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Technology Party
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Progressive Campaign
WIP