Akashian general election, 2018
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400 seats in the National Assembly 201 seats needed for a majority | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Turnout | 86,3% | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Most voted party by province | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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A general election was held in Akashi on 30 June 2018. The Kōko Kaga government was re-elected with a minority.
With party leaderships unchanged since the last election, this proved largely a straight rematch between the Socialist Party and Moderate People's Party. Kōko's popularity remained largely steady going into the election but that of Hiroshi Sone lagged behind. Thus, both the largest parties slipped in opinion polls, with smaller parties gaining at their expense.
Notably for the election, foreign policy and civil liberties became major issues, to the benefit of Future Party leader Momoka Nishimura. The jailing of Quenminese whistleblower Ninh Tuyết Vi was strongly condemned by Momoka, who joined forces with Communist Party leader Rise Takashima to push the government to take a harder line against Quenmin.
Results
General election, 30 June 2018 | |||||||||
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Party | Party list | Constituency | Total seats |
+/- | |||||
PR | % | +/− | STV | % | +/− | ||||
Socialist Party | 1.301.030 | 16,4% | -4,1% | 1.268.415 | 16,0% | -4,5% | 75 | -25 | |
Moderate People's Party | 1.269.297 | 16,0% | -0,2% | 1.236.705 | 15,6% | -2,9% | 70 | -2 | |
Communist Party | 1.031.304 | 13,0% | +0,6% | 1.070.225 | 13,5% | +1,0% | 58 | +3 | |
United Reform Party | 1.007.505 | 12,7% | +3,1% | 729.339 | 9,2% | +0,7% | 42 | +5 | |
Green Party | 832.976 | 10,5% | +0,3% | 864.108 | 10,9% | +0,6% | 40 | ±0 | |
National Cooperative Party | 634.649 | 8,0% | -0,1% | 689.701 | 8,7% | +1,0% | 30 | +4 | |
Future Party | 602.916 | 7,6% | -0,7% | 887.890 | 11,2% | +3,4% | 41 | +12 | |
National Union | 571.184 | 7,2% | +0,4% | 523.221 | 6,6% | +4,6% | 18 | +1 | |
Conservative National Party | 222.127 | 2,8% | +0,1% | 198.190 | 2,5% | -0,1% | 6 | -1 | |
Akashi Renewal Party | 198.328 | 2,5% | +0,2% | 190.262 | 2,4% | -0,1% | 6 | ±0 | |
Independents | 261.793 | 3,3% | +0,4% | 269.538 | 3,4% | +0,2% | 14 | +3 | |
Total | 7.933.109 | 100% | — | 7.927.593 | 100% | — | 400 | — | |
Registered voters and turnout | 9.192.478 | 86,3% | — | 9.192.478 | 86,2% |
Bloc strength | ||
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Bloc | Parties | Seats |
Crimson bloc | CP, GP | 98 |
Pale crimson bloc | SP, NU | 93 |
Light yellow bloc | NCP, FP | 71 |
Light blue bloc | MPP, URP | 112 |
Dark blue bloc | CNP, ARP | 12 |
- Government: Socialist Party–Green Party–National Cooperative Party–National Union coalition.
The SP maintained its plurality, making this the third election in a row they had suffered losses but still finished first. Their losses this time were more modest: their vote shrank by 4% and they lost 25 seats.
The MPP had a disappointing night, suffering a slight setback of 2 seats, although they still remained the second largest party and thus the official opposition.
Most parties experienced minor seat losses or gains of between 1 and 5 seats. The main exception was the FP, which compensated for a slight decrease in PR vote by increasing its first preference votes in constituencies. Its gain of 12 seats was the largest of any of the parties.
The province map was a repeat of 2014, with the SP holding onto pluralities in the crucial Kagi and Matō, despite a strong challenge by the MPP in the latter.
In the new legislature, the pale crimson bloc fell behind the crimson bloc in total seats, which had last happened in 1998. More significantly, the two blocs combined were now short of a majority, holding 191 seats between them.
Kōko remained in office with her coalition, which could count on outside support from the CP or FP as necessary.