Czechoslovak parliamentary election, 1990

Czechoslovak federal election, 1990
Czechoslovakia
8 June 1990 (1990-06-08) – 9 June 1990 (1990-06-09)

All 150 seats to the House of the People
All 150 seats to the House of Nations

75 seats needed for a majority
Turnout 96.79%
  First party Second party Third party
 
Leader Jan Urban Ladislav Adamec Ján Budaj
Party OF KSČ VPN
Seats after 68 23 19
Seat change Increase 68 Decrease 116 Increase 19
Popular vote 3,851,172 1,445,407 1,104,125
Percentage 36.2% 13.6% 10.4%

Federal elections were held in Czechoslovakia on 8 and 9 June 1990,[1] alongside elections for the Czech and Slovak Assemblies.[2] They were the first elections held in the country since the end of Communist rule seven months earlier, and the first free elections since 1946.

The election saw a comprehensive victory for the movement of President Václav Havel. The Czech wing, Civic Forum, won 68 of the 150 seats in the House of the People and 50 of the 150 seats in the House of Nations. Its Slovak counterpart, Public Against Violence, won 19 seats in the House of the People and 33 in the House of Nations.[2] Civic Forum won 36% of the vote for the House of the People, the most a Czechoslovakian party won in a free election.

The two wings of Havel's movement commanded a strong majority in the legislature, [3] with 87 seats in the House of the People and 83 in the House of Nations between them. It was the only occasion in which a party or alliance won an outright majority of seats in a free election. Voter turnout was 96.2%.[2] The Communist Party of Czechoslovakia, running in an honest election for the first time in 44 years, made a stronger showing than expected, taking 13 percent of the vote in both chambers to finish second behind Civic Forum.[3]

Although Civic Forum and Public Against Violence had more than enough seats between them to govern without the support of other parties, they sought a broader base. They let it be known that they were willing to go into coalition with all parties except the Communists and the Slovak National Party.[3]

Results

House of the People

Party Votes % Seats
Civic Forum3,851,17236.268
Communist Party of Czechoslovakia1,445,40713.623
Public Against Violence1,104,12510.419
Christian Democratic Movement644,0086.111
Christian and Democratic Union629,3595.99
Movement for Autonomous Democracy–Party for Moravia and Silesia572,0155.49
Slovak National Party372,0253.56
Alliance of Farmers and the Countryside360,7793.40
Social Democracy342,4553.20
Green Party332,9743.10
CoexistenceHungarian Christian Democratic Movement296,5752.85
Czechoslovak Socialist Party201,5321.90
Democratic Party149,3101.40
People's Democratic Party–Rally for the Republic76,3380.70
Free Bloc64,0700.60
Freedom Party49,0120.50
VSZS47,9710.50
Czechoslovakian Democratic Forum23,4280.20
Rómovia22,6700.20
HOS22,1650.20
Movement of Czechoslovakian Understanding21,9790.20
Friends of Beer Party8,9430.10
Invalid/blank votes136,929
Total10,775,125100150
Source: Nohlen & Stöver

House of Nations

Party Votes % Seats
Civic Forum3,613,51334.050
Communist Party of Czechoslovakia1,452,65913.724
Public Against Violence1,262,27811.933
Movement for Autonomous Democracy–Party for Moravia and Silesia658,4776.27
Christian and Democratic Union633,0536.06
Christian Democratic Movement564,1725.314
Slovak National Party387,3873.69
Alliance of Farmers and the Countryside359,4743.40
Social Democracy352,6783.30
Green Party336,3103.20
CoexistenceHungarian Christian Democratic Movement287,4262.77
Czechoslovak Socialist Party210,7352.00
Democratic Party124,5611.20
Free Bloc84,5530.80
People's Democratic Party–Rally for the Republic79,3240.80
VSZS54,9160.50
Freedom Party42,1110.40
Czechoslovakian Democratic Forum32,5430.30
Movement of Czechoslovakian Understanding25,6720.20
HOS22,1240.20
Rómovia20,4450.20
Friends of Beer Party13,8690.10
Invalid/blank votes139,731
Total10,758,011100150
Source: Nohlen & Stöver

References

  1. Nohlen, D & Stöver, P (2010) Elections in Europe: A data handbook, p471 ISBN 978-3-8329-5609-7
  2. 1 2 3 Nohlen & Stöver, p472
  3. 1 2 3 Kamm, Henry. Now, the Czech Reality; Political 'Amateurs,' After Free Elections, Turn to Problems Left by the Communists. The New York Times, 1990-06-11.
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