1955 Malgravean General Election
1955 Malgravean General Election | |||||||
Previous election ← 1950 |
→ Next election 1960 | ||||||
Chamber of Representatives (Malgrave) | |||||||
22nd of March, 1955 | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Technology Party | Conservative Party | Unity Party' | |||||
Leader | Helen Magnus | Stefan Filipowski | Alicja Kumięga | ||||
Party | Technology Party | Conservative Party | Unity Party | ||||
Percentage Vote Share | 48% | 30% | 15% | ||||
Seats before | 851 | 564 | 266 | ||||
Seats after | 861 | 542 | 233 | ||||
Seat change | 10 | 22 | 33 | ||||
Action Party | Green Party | Socialist Party | |||||
Leader | Johann Leipzig | Clemente Bellini | Isabella Acardi | ||||
Party | Action Party | Green Party | Socialist Party | ||||
Percentage Vote Share | 3% | 2% | 2% | ||||
Seats before | 0 | 15 | 4 | ||||
Seats after | 45 | 15 | 4 | ||||
Seat change | 45 | ||||||
After a standard five-year term, the Chamber of Representatives and Chamber of Supervisors were dissolved by Helen Magnus in preperation for the 1955 General Election. This period of time is referred to historians as the golden period of the Technology Party, and looked upon fondly by many members and supporters even to this day.
Election Issues
In 1954 Rosalba Pontecorvo, the Minister of Science and Engineering and Antonio Santoro, the Minister of Health announced that the Malgravean Health Service and the Royal Institute for Biomedical Development had discovered a gradual weakening of the Malgravean immune system, with the cause eventually linked to Malgravean Immunodeficiency Disorder.
It meant that healthcare and overall scientific development was a major issue of the election campaign, with many wild theories floating around the cause of MIDD and the best way to tackle it.
Helen Magnus went on to win the 1955 Malgravean General Election with an increased majority, as she had been able to increase ration shares for goods that were considered luxurious in the past such as olive oil, and eliminate them entirely on stable goods like pasta and milk (although a large portion of this supply was now filled by soya and other non-dairy forms of milk). At the same time Prime Minister Magnus had been in power during a steady increase in the employment rate, although modern analysts argue if this was a result of her policies or the fact the country was in the final stage of its re-construction following the exodus.
Campaigns
Technology Party
The Technology Party outlined an improved funding model for the Royal Institute for Biomedical Development, and long-term planning for the health service to tackle the problems linked with the gradual weakening of the immune system. Between 1950 and 1955 the government had been able to increase rations for olive oil and eliminate them entirely on stable goods like pasta and non-dairy milk, and the Technology Party heavily campaigned on this and the steady increase in the employment rate experienced during the term.
Conservative Campaign
The Conservative Party accused the Technology Party of being too weak on national defence, and criticised the decision of the government to hold off on major offensive operations until the completion of the military modernisation project which the Conservative Party criticised for being a waste of money.
Elsewhere the Conservative Party pledged to open up the pharmaceutical company MalPha to the private sector, a highly controversial policy but one that energised the party base.
Unity Campaign
The Unity Party found themselves drowned out by the efforts of the Technology Party, as they were unable to count upon their traditional support within the industrial base due to the performance of the economy. It was also reported that a few internal issues prevented the party from having a truly unified campaign.