label

{{Diff||diff=next||label}}

South Korea edit

Scia Della Cometa/sandbox
 
← 2020 10 April 2024

All 300 seats in the National Assembly
151 seats needed for a majority
Turnout66.99% (  0.78pp)
  First party Second party Third party
     
Leader Lee Jae-myung Han Dong-hoon Cho Kuk
Party DAK People Power / People Future Rebuilding Korea
Last election 180 seats 106 seats
Seats won 176 120 12
Seat change   4   14 New
Constituency vote 15,074,269 13,179,769
% and swing 52.31%  2.40pp 45.73%  4.27pp
Party vote 7,567,459 9,441,520 6,874,278
% and swing 26.70%  6.66pp 33.8%  6.36pp 24.25%  2.5pp

  Fourth party Fifth party
 
 
Leader Lee Jun-seok Lee Nak-yon
Party New Reform New Future
Last election
Seats won 3 3
Seat change New New
Constituency vote 195,147
% and swing 0.68%
Party vote 1,896,719 1,025,775
% and swing 6.8% 3.62%

 
Results of the election.

Speaker before election

Kim Jin-pyo
Democratic

Elected Speaker

TBD

Sources edit

1861 edit

1861 Italian general election in Italy
 
27 January 1861 (first round)
3 February 1861 (second round)
1865 →

All 443 Italian seats to the Chamber of Deputies
222 seats needed for a majority
Turnout82.47% (  2.9 pp)
Party Leader % Seats
Historical Right Camillo Benso of Cavour 42.5% 342
Historical Left Urbano Rattazzi 27.6% 62
Historical Far Left Giuseppe Mazzini 4.4% 14
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.
Prime Minister after the election
Camillo Benso of Cavour
Historical Right

Senate 2022 edit

2022 Italian general election
 
← 2018 25 September 2022 Next →

400 seats in the Chamber (C· 200 seats in the Senate (S)
201 seats needed for a majority in the Chamber  · 104 seats needed for a majority in the Senate
Opinion polls
Registered46,021,956 (C· 45,210,950 (S)
Turnout33,923,321 (C· 63.8% (  9.1 pp)
31,231,814 (S· 63.7% (  9.3 pp)
  First party Second party
 
Leader Giorgia Meloni Enrico Letta
Party
Alliance Centre-right coalition Centre-left coalition
Seats won 237 (C· 115 (S) 84 C · 44 S
Popular vote 12,305,014 (C)
12,135,847 (S)
7,340,096C
7,161,688 S
Percentage 43.8% (C· 44.0% (S) 26.1% C · 26.0% S
Swing   6.8 pp (C·   6.5 pp (S)   3.2 pp C ·   3.0 pp S

  Third party Fourth party
 
Leader Giuseppe Conte Carlo Calenda
Party Five Star Movement Action – Italia Viva
Alliance
Seats won 52 (C· 28 (S) 21 (C· 9 (S)
Popular vote 4,333,972 (C)
4,285,894 (S)
2,186,669 (C)
2,131,310 (S)
Percentage 15.4% (C· 15.6% (S) 7.8% (C· 7.7% (S)
Swing   17.3 pp (C·   16.6 pp (S) New

   
Election results maps by constituencies for the Chamber of Deputies (on the left) and for the Senate (on the right).

Prime Minister before election

Mario Draghi
Independent

Prime Minister after the election

Giorgia Meloni
Brothers of Italy


Summary of the 25 September 2022 Senate of the Republic election results[1]
 
 
Coalition Party Proportional First-past-the-post Aosta Valley Trentino-Alto Adige Overseas Total
seats
+/−
(seats)
Votes % Seats Votes % Seats Votes % Seats Votes % Seats Votes % Seats
Centre-right Brothers of Italy 7,167,136 26.01 34 12,129,547 44.02 30 18,509 34.05 137,015 27.24 1 294,712 27.05 65 +47
League 2,439,200 8.85 13 15 1 30 –28
Forza Italia 2,279,802 8.27 9 9 18 –39
Us Moderates 243,409 0.88 2 2 –2
Centre-left Democratic Party–IDP 5,226,732 18.96 31 7,161,688 25.99 4 [a] 149,682 29,29 1 370,262 33.98 3 39 –14
Greens and Left Alliance 972,316 3.53 3 1 4 New
Campobase 1 1 New
Others 972,214 3.53 14,610 1.34 0 0 New
Five Star Movement 4,285,894 15.55 23 4,285,894 15.55 5 28,355 5.64 101,794 9.34 28 –84
Action – Italia Viva 2,131,310 7.73 9 2,131,310 7.73 6,782 1.35 76,070 6.98 9 New
South Tyrolean People's PartyPATT 116,003 23.06 2 2 –1
South calls North 271,549 0.99 271,549 0.99 1 1 New
Associative Movement of Italians Abroad 138,758 12.73 1 1 ±0
Others 2,119,823 5,72 0 2,119,823 5,72 0 35,850 65.95 65.117 13.42 0 93,107 8.54 0 ±0
Total 27,569,675 100 122 27,569,675 100 67 54,359 100 1 502,954 100 6 1,090,147 100 4 200 −115

MPITLT edit

Movement for the Independence of the Free Territory of Trieste
Movimento per l'Indipendenza del Territorio Libero di Trieste
LeaderGiovanni Marchesich
Founded1958
Dissolved1980s
IdeologySeparatism

The Movement for the Independence of the Free Territory of Trieste (Movimento per l'Indipendenza del Territorio Libero di Trieste) was a political party based in Trieste, founded in 1958 by Giovanni Marchesich. Its main goal was the proclamation of independence of the Free Territory of Trieste from Italy.

The leader Giovanni Marchesich was continuously elected to the city council from 1962 to 1982.[2] In 1966 the party achieved its best result, winning two seats with 4.40% of the votes.

Giorgio Marchesich (son of Giovanni), already provincial councillor for the party and member of the List for Trieste and the Julian Front, founded in 2012 the Front for Independence of the Free Territory of Trieste,[3] a party that has inherited the legacy of the Movement for the Independence of the Free Territory of Trieste. This party scored 1.94% of the vote in the local election in 2016 with Marchesich candidate for Mayor. In 2021 Giorgio Marchesich was again candidate for mayor with the Movement for the Independence of the Free Territory of Trieste, that scored 1.45% of the vote.

This template's initial visibility currently defaults to autocollapse, meaning that if there is another collapsible item on the page (a navbox, sidebar, or table with the collapsible attribute), it is hidden apart from its title bar; if not, it is fully visible.

To change this template's initial visibility, the |state= parameter may be used:

  • {{Scia Della Cometa|state=collapsed}} will show the template collapsed, i.e. hidden apart from its title bar.
  • {{Scia Della Cometa|state=expanded}} will show the template expanded, i.e. fully visible.

References edit

  1. ^ "Eligendo: Senato [Scrutini] Italia (escluse Valle d'Aosta e Trentino-Alto Adige/Südtirol)". Eligendo (in Italian). Italian Ministry of the Interior. 25 September 2022. Retrieved 27 September 2022.
  2. ^ "Un Memorial dedicato al governatore del Tlt". Il Piccolo.
  3. ^ "Indipendentismo Triestino: il Fronte e il Movimento Divisi sulla Politica". Trieste prima.

MPITLT edit

Building Democracy
Costruire Democrazia
LeaderMassimo Romano
FoundedSeptember 2009
IdeologyRegionalism
Regional Council of Molise
1 / 21

The Building Democracy (Costruire Democrazia) was a political party based in Molise, Italy.

History edit

The party was founded in September 2009 by the lawyer Massimo Romano, former member of Italy of Values.[1] In 2011 Romano ran in the primary elections to choose the centre-left candidate for president, which Frattura later won.[2] In the 2011 Molise regional election, Bulding democracy, within the Centre-left coalition, won 4.23% of the vote and one seat (assigned to Romano).

The party took part in the 2013 Italian general election, obtaining only 2,635 votes for the Senate. In the same year, it also took part in the 2013 Molise regional election within a coalition of civic lists,[3] obtaining 5.07% of the vote and one seat (assigned, in this occasion, to Filippo Monaco).[4]

After a period of inactivity, Bulding democracy participates again in the 2023 Molise regional election,[5][6] within the centre-left coalition, obtaining 5.73% of the votes and one seat (won by the leader Massimo Romano).[7]

References edit


Cite error: There are <ref group=lower-alpha> tags or {{efn}} templates on this page, but the references will not show without a {{reflist|group=lower-alpha}} template or {{notelist}} template (see the help page).