Aragonese parliamentary election, 1999

Aragonese parliamentary election, 1999
Aragon
13 June 1999

All 67 seats in the Courts of Aragon
34 seats needed for a majority
Registered 999,828 Increase0.6%
Turnout 657,464 (65.8%)
Decrease5.3 pp
  First party Second party Third party
 
Leader Santiago Lanzuela Marcelino Iglesias José María Mur
Party PP PSOE PAR
Leader since 24 September 1993 15 February 1995 1995
Last election 27 seats, 37.5% 19 seats, 25.7% 14 seats, 20.4%
Seats won 28 23 10
Seat change Increase1 Increase4 Decrease4
Popular vote 249,458 201,117 86,519
Percentage 38.2% 30.8% 13.3%
Swing Increase0.7 pp Increase5.1 pp Decrease7.1 pp

  Fourth party Fifth party
 
Leader Chesús Bernal Jesús Lacasa
Party CHA IU
Leader since 29 June 1986 1998
Last election 2 seats, 4.8% 5 seats, 9.2%
Seats won 5 1
Seat change Increase3 Decrease4
Popular vote 72,101 25,040
Percentage 11.0% 3.9%
Swing Increase6.2 pp Decrease5.3 pp

President before election

Santiago Lanzuela
PP

Elected President

Marcelino Iglesias
PSOE

The 1999 Aragonese parliamentary election was held on Sunday, 13 June 1999, to elect the 5th democratically-elected Courts of Aragon, the regional legislature of the Spanish autonomous community of Aragon. At stake were all 67 seats in the Courts, determining the President of the Government of Aragon.

The election saw increases in both vote share and seats for the People's Party (PP), which had formed the Government of Aragon since 1995, and the Spanish Socialist Workers' Party (PSOE). The Aragonese Party (PAR) continued its long-term decline from its peak at the 1987 election while on the left, Chunta Aragonesista (CHA) gained most of United Left (IU) former support, which lost 4 of its 5 seats.

Despite winning the election and gaining one seat from 1995, the PP went into opposition as incumbent President of Aragon Santiago Lanzuela was unable to gather the support from his former coalition partner the PAR. Instead, the PAR supported Socialist Marcelino Iglesias as new regional President, entering into a coalition administration with the PSOE.[1]

Electoral system

The number of seats in the Aragonese Courts was set to a fixed-number of 67. All Courts members were elected in 3 multi-member districts, corresponding to Aragon's three provinces, using the D'Hondt method and a closed-list proportional representation system. Each district was entitled to an initial minimum of 13 seats, with the remaining 28 seats allocated among the three provinces in proportion to their populations, on the required condition that the number of inhabitants per seat in each district did not exceed 2.75 times those of any other. For the 1999 election, seats were distributed as follows: Huesca (18), Teruel (15) and Zaragoza (34).

Voting was on the basis of universal suffrage in a secret ballot. Only lists polling above 3% of valid votes in each district (which include blank ballotsfor none of the above) were entitled to enter the seat distribution.[2]

Results

Overall

Summary of the 13 June 1999 Aragonese Courts election results
Party Vote Seats
Votes % ±pp Won +/−
People's Party (PP) 249,458 38.21 Increase0.71 28 Increase1
Spanish Socialist Workers' Party (PSOE) 201,117 30.81 Increase5.09 23 Increase4
Aragonese Party (PAR) 86,519 13.25 Decrease7.18 10 Decrease4
Aragonese Union (CHA) 72,101 11.04 Increase6.19 5 Increase3
United Left of Aragon (IU) 25,040 3.86 Decrease5.36 1 Decrease4
SOS Nature (SOS) 3,621 0.55 Increase0.42 0 ±0
Humanist Party (PH) 982 0.15 New 0 ±0
Upper Aragonese Territory Regenerationist Group (ARTA) 373 0.06 New 0 ±0
Blank ballots 13,599 2.08 Increase0.50
Total 652,810 100.00 67 ±0
Valid votes 652,810 99.29 Decrease0.11
Invalid votes 4,654 0.71 Increase0.11
Votes cast / turnout 657,464 65.76 Decrease5.36
Abstentions 342,364 34.24 Increase5.36
Registered voters 999,828
Source: Argos Information Portal
Vote share
PP
 
38.21%
PSOE
 
30.81%
PAR
 
13.25%
CHA
 
11.04%
IU
 
3.84%
Others
 
0.76%
Blank ballots
 
2.08%
Parliamentary seats
PP
 
41.79%
PSOE
 
34.33%
PAR
 
14.93%
CHA
 
7.46%
IU
 
1.49%

Results by province

References

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