2023 Angelean General Election

Jump to navigation Jump to search
2023 Angelean General Election
Los Angeles
← 2021 7 May 2023 Next →

All 606 seats in the Presidium
304 seats needed for a majority
Turnout89.06% (Increase XXpp)
Party Leader % Seats ±
Alliance Luca DiFelice 29.82 184
PK Charles Maggle 24.67 152
AdE Hanneke Watering 9.56 59
UP Rafael Díez 7.20 44
PD Florian Bombelles 5.60 35
PLF Fuscolo Ferone 4.73 29
AdPE Brandon Duff 2.81 17
PdEN Antônio Varejão 2.46 15
FoV/FoF Toke Clausen 2.27 14
Birthday Marianne Hansen 2.26 14
MNM Ġużepp Depares 2.03 13
FdS Ricardo Johannes 1.89 12
RpNL Julien Camille 1.66 10
NKCP Zoey McLeod 1.32 8
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.
Angelean 2023 map.png
Most voted-for party by district
Cabinet before Cabinet after
Second Maggle cabinet
PK-AdE-UP-FdS-NKCP
Johannes Cabinet
Alliance-PK-FdS

General elections were held in Los Angeles on 7 May 2023 to elect the members of the Presidium. At stake were at 602 seats in the Presidium, as well as a variable number of overhang and leveling seats determined thereafter.

The Conservative Alliance, made up of seven regionally-based center-right parties, and led by Luca DiFelice, won the lowest percentage of the vote for a winning party at 29.82%, edging out the Communist Party's 24.67% under incumbent general secretary Charles Maggle. Swings against the AdE, AdPE, and several other mainstream parties in favor of the right-wing populist Democratic Party and several secessionst parties. A total of fourteen parties or alliances (twenty eight parties if the Alliance and AdPE are broken up)

Federal elections were held in Germany on 24 September 2017 to elect the members of the 19th Bundestag. At stake were at least 598 seats in the Bundestag, as well as 111 overhang and leveling seats determined thereafter.

The Christian Democratic Union of Germany and the Christian Social Union of Bavaria (CDU/CSU), led by incumbent chancellor Angela Merkel, won the highest percentage of the vote with 33%, though it suffered a large swing against it of more than 8%. The Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD) achieved its worst result since post-war Germany at 21%. Alternative for Germany (AfD), which was previously unrepresented in the Bundestag, became the third party in the Bundestag with 12.6% of the vote, whilst the Free Democratic Party (FDP) won 10.7% of the vote and returned to the Bundestag after losing all their seats in 2013. It was the first time since 1957 that a party to the political right of the CDU/CSU gained seats in the Bundestag. The other parties to achieve representation in the Bundestag were the Left and Alliance 90/The Greens, each close to 9% of the vote. In the 709 member Bundestag, a majority is 355 and the CDU/CSU won 246 seats (200 CDU and 46 CSU), the SPD 153, the AfD 94, the FDP 80, The Left 69, and the Greens 67.

For the second consecutive occasion, the CDU/CSU reached a coalition agreement with the SPD to form a grand coalition, the fourth in post-war German history, and the new government took office on 14 March 2018. The agreement came after a failed attempt by the CDU/CSU to enter into a Jamaica coalition with the Greens and the FDP, which the latter pulled out of citing irreconcilable differences between the parties on migration and energy policy. This had been by far the longest government formation in the history of the Federal Republic of Germany, as it was the first time a proposed coalition formation negotiation had collapsed and had been replaced by another coalition.