Macedonian parliamentary election, 1990

This article is part of a series on the
politics and government of
the Republic of Macedonia

Parliamentary elections were held in the Socialist Republic of Macedonia on 11 November 1990, with a second round on 25 November.[1] They were the first competitive elections in the country's history.[2] VMRO-DPMNE emerged as the largest party, winning 38 of the 120 seats.[3]

Electoral system

The 120 members of the Assembly were elected in 120 single-member constituencies. If no candidate received over 50% in the first round, a second round was held and contested by every candidate who received over 7% of the vote in the first round.[2] In the second round a majority was not required, and the candidate who received the most votes won the seat.[2]

Results

Party First round Second round Seats
Votes % Votes %
League of Communists of Macedonia–Party for Democratic Transformation234,36921.8220,74827.731
Party for Democratic Prosperity165,38815.458,0467.317
VMRO-DPMNE154,10114.3238,36729.938
Union of Reform Forces142,56413.3128,44916.111
Socialist Party of Macedonia77,1237.238,8934.94
PDP-NDP62,6285.813,3261.75
Movement for All-Macedonian Action42,9264.08,8031.10
SRS-MDPS32,7993.031,2363.96
Workers Party31,5912.92,9230.40
Macedonian People's Party26,1512.44,8060.60
Social Democratic Party16,9721.61,6560.20
Party of Yugoslavs in Macedonia16,8981.613,3311.72
Democratic Union-Party of Peasants13,2301.24,8290.60
League for Democracy13,0971.22,7070.30
SPM-MDPS5,9600.67,0610.91
People's Democratic Party4,5970.44,1050.51
PCERM-SPM3,7570.33,9610.41
Democratic Alliance of Turks3,3840.30
Christian Democratic Party2,7790.30
PCERM2,3590.20
Workers-Peasant Party1,8960.27260.10
MAAK/VMRO-DPMNE1,6980.20
SRS-SDPM7320.10
Union of Pensioners of Bitola4280.00
Independents18,1571.712,7691.63
Invalid/blank votes60,1445.334,4764.1
Total1,135,728100831,218100120
Registered voters/turnout[a]1,452,07277.2
Source: State Election Commission; Nohlen & Stöver

a Includes the 113,051 voters in the first round who were not registered, but voted using their ID cards.[4]

References

  1. Nohlen, D & Stöver, P (2010) Elections in Europe: A data handbook, p1278 ISBN 978-3-8329-5609-7
  2. 1 2 3 Nohlen & Stöver, p1274
  3. Nohlen & Stöver, p1288
  4. Nohlen & Stöver, p1284
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