Athens Alpha (Greek: Α΄ Αθηνών) is a parliamentary constituency[1] in Attica represented in the Hellenic Parliament. In its present form it dates to 1958, when the Athens B constituency was split off, leaving Athens A with the Municipality of Athens. It elects fourteen Members of Parliament (MPs) by reinforced proportional representation.

Athens A
Electoral constituency
for the Hellenic Parliament
Athens A within Attica
Attica within Greece
Regional unitCentral Athens
Administrative regionAttica
Electorate477.440 (January 2014)
Current Electoral constituency
Created1958
Number of members14 Members of Parliament
Created fromAthens

Election results edit

Legislative election edit

Athens A constituency results
Election 1st party 2nd party 3rd party 4th party 5th party source
1990 New Democracy
51.33%
PASOK
31.54%
SYN
12.95%
OIKOL
1.60%
DIANA
1.06%
1993 New Democracy
42.75%
PASOK
38.06%
POLAN
6.44%
SYN
6.41%
KKE
4.96%
1996 New Democracy
38.83%
PASOK
35.34%
SYN
9.13%
KKE
6.08%
DIKKI
4.44%
[2]
2000 New Democracy
42.36%
PASOK
39.76%
KKE
6.54%
SYN
5.65%
DIKKI
2.70%
[3]
2004 New Democracy
44.56%
PASOK
36.43%
KKE
6.86%
SYRIZA
5.74%
LAOS
2.86%
[4]
2007 New Democracy
40.16%
PASOK
29.96%
KKE
10.52%
SYRIZA
9.27%
LAOS
5.39%
[5]
2009 PASOK
35.52%
New Democracy
31.75%
KKE
9.55%
SYRIZA
7.98%
LAOS
7.59%
[6]
May 2012 SYRIZA
19.12%
New Democracy
15.79%
PASOK
9.71%
ANEL
8.98%
XA
8.77%
[7]
June 2012 New Democracy
30.92%
SYRIZA
26.96%
PASOK
8.72%
XA
7.81%
DEMAR
7.37%
[8]
January 2015 SYRIZA
33.61%
New Democracy
30.07%
The River
7.23%
XA
7.05%
KKE
6.04%
[9]
September 2015 SYRIZA
31.55%
New Democracy
31.12%
XA
6.91%
KKE
5.83%
The River
5.73%
[10]
2019 New Democracy
42.33%
SYRIZA
31.28%
KKE
6.37%
KINAL
5.16%
MeRA25
3.84%
[11]
May 2023 New Democracy
42.18%
SYRIZA
22.55%
KKE
8.60%
PASOK-KINAL
6.70%
MeRA25
3.60%

Members of Parliament edit

2019–present edit

In the 2019 Greek legislative election, Athens A elected 14 members of parliament:

Name[12] Party
Konstantinos Bogdanos Independent
Nikitas Kaklamanis ND
Olga Kefalogianni ND
Vasilis Kikilias ND
Foteini Pipili ND
Thanos Plevris ND
Angelos Syrigos ND
Nikos Filis SYRIZA
Dimitrios Tzanakopoulos SYRIZA
Christoforos Vernardakis SYRIZA
Nikolaos Voutsis SYRIZA
Liana Kanelli KKE
Konstantinos Skandalidis KINAL
Angeliki Adamopoulou MeRA25

Jan 2015–2019 edit

In the September 2015 Greek legislative election, Athens A elected 14 members of parliament:

Name[13] Party
Alexandros Flampouraris SYRIZA
Nikos Voutsis SYRIZA
Nikos Filis SYRIZA
Christophoros Vernardakis[14] SYRIZA
Olga Kefalogianni ND
Vassilis Kikilias ND
Dora Bakoyannis ND
Nikitas Kaklamanis ND
Nikolaos Michaloliakos XA
Konstantinos Skandalidis DISI
Liana Kanelli KKE
Spyros Lykoudis Potami
Elena Kountoura ANEL
Marios Georgiadis EK

Jan 2015–Aug 2015 edit

In the January 2015 Greek legislative election, Athens A elected 14 members of parliament:

Name[15] Partyp
Alexis Tsipras SYRIZA
Nikos Filis SYRIZA
Zoe Konstantopoulou SYRIZA
Gabriel Sakellaridis SYRIZA
Nikos Voutsis SYRIZA
Dora Bakoyannis ND
Nikitas Kaklamanis ND
Olga Kefalogianni ND
Vassilis Kikilias ND
Spyros Lykoudis Potami
Nikolaos Michaloliakos XA
Liana Kanelli KKE
Elena Kountoura ANEL
Konstantinos Skandalidis PASOK

Jun 2012–Jan 2015 edit

In June 2012 Greek legislative election, Athens A elected 17 members of parliament:

Name[16] Party
Olga Kefalogianni ND
Dimitris Avramopoulos ND
Nikitas Kaklamanis ND
Foteini Pipili ND
Vassilis Kikilias ND
Panagiotis Mitarakis ND
Prokopis Pavlopoulos ND
Andreas Psycharis ND
Alexis Tsipras SYRIZA
Zoe Konstantopoulou SYRIZA
Nikolaos Voutsis SYRIZA
Maria Bolari SYRIZA
Kostas Skandalidis PASOK
Elena Kountoura ANEL
Nikolaos Michaloliakos XA
Ioannis Panousis DIMAR
Liana Kanelli KKE

Notes and references edit

  1. ^ "MPs Per Constituency (electoral map)". Hellenic Parliament. Retrieved 12 November 2012.
  2. ^ "Results 1996". Ministry of Interior. Archived from the original on 4 February 2015. Retrieved 26 January 2015.
  3. ^ "Results 2000". Ministry of Interior. Archived from the original on 19 January 2015. Retrieved 26 January 2015.
  4. ^ "Results 2004". Ministry of Interior. Archived from the original on 4 February 2015. Retrieved 26 January 2015.
  5. ^ "Results 2007". Ministry of Interior. Retrieved 26 January 2015.
  6. ^ "Results 2009". Ministry of Interior. Retrieved 26 January 2015.
  7. ^ "Results 2012 May". Ministry of Interior. Retrieved 26 January 2015.
  8. ^ "Results 2012 June". Ministry of Interior. Retrieved 26 January 2015.
  9. ^ "Results 2015". Ministry of Interior. Retrieved 26 January 2015.
  10. ^ "Election 2015 September". Ministry of Interior. Retrieved 26 September 2015.
  11. ^ "Election 2019". Ministry of Interior. Retrieved 21 October 2019.
  12. ^ Sorting by Name and then by Parliamentary Group will provide an alphabetical ordering of MPs inside each Parliamentary Group/Party.
  13. ^ Sorting by Name and then by Parliamentary Group will provide an alphabetical ordering of MPs inside each Parliamentary Group/Party.
  14. ^ Since 19 November 2015 when Gabriel Sakellaridis resigned; Sakellaridis had been elected second after Flampouraris.
  15. ^ Sorting by Name and then by Parliamentary Group will provide an alphabetical ordering of MPs inside each Parliamentary Group/Party.
  16. ^ Sorting by Name and then by Parliamentary Group will provide an alphabetical ordering of MPs inside each Parliamentary Group/Party.

External links edit