Guatemalan parliamentary election, 1994

Guatemala

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Politics and government of
Guatemala



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Parliamentary elections were held in Guatemala on 14 August 1994,[1] following the premature dissolution of Congress during the 1993 constitutional crisis, and in view of implementing constitutional reforms approved in January 1994. The result was a victory for the Guatemalan Republican Front, which won 33 of the 80 seats. Voter turnout was just 21%.[2]

The 1993 constitutional crisis started on 25 May 1993, when the then President Jorge Serrano Elías attempted a self-coup or autogolpe. Serrano suspended the constitution, dissolved Congress and the Supreme Court, imposed censorship and tried to restrict civil liberties.[3] Serrano's actions were met with broad national and international opposition and ruled "illegal" by the Constitutional Court of Guatemala, following which Serrano was forced to resign.

Results

Party District PR Total seats
Votes % Seats Votes % Seats
Guatemalan Republican Front 172,649 26.61 26 206,994 32.22 7 33
National Advancement Party 172,224 26.54 18 162,189 25.25 5 23
Guatemalan Christian Democracy 84,391 13.01 11 78,016 12.14 2 13
National Centre Union 63,697 9.82 6 57,155 8.90 1 7
National Liberation Movement 36,746 5.66 2 28,582 4.45 1 3
Movement of Action in Solidarity 23,604 3.64 0 20,418 3.18 0 0.
Democratic Union 20,446 3.15 1 19,732 3.07 0 1
Revolutionary Party 18,087 2.79 0 17,747 2.76 0 0
Guatemalan Reformist Party 16,300 2.51 0 13,007 2.02 0 0
Democratic Social Party 11,117 1.71 0 13,635 2.12 0 0
Nationalist Authentic Centre 8,388 1.29 0 9,692 1.51 0 0
Institutional Democratic Party 6,201 0.96 0 5,578 0.87 0 0
National Unity Front 5,901 0.91 0 6495 1.01 0 0
Progressive Party 5,527 0.85 0 0
Destitute People's Movement 3,136 0.49 0 0
Popular Democratic Front 2,583 0.40 0 0
Popular Alliance 5 557 0.09 0 0
Christian Social Party 448 0.07 0 0
Invalid/blank votes 81,858 82,017
Total 730,724 100 64 731,393 100 16 80

References

  1. ^ Nohlen, D (2005) Elections in the Americas: A data handbook, Volume I, p323 ISBN 9780199283576
  2. ^ Nohlen, p324
  3. ^ Barry S. Levitt (2006), "A Desultory Defense of Democracy: OAS Resolution 1080 and the Inter-American Democratic Charter, Latin American Politics and Society, Volume 48, Issue 3, September 2006, Pages: 93–123. pp104-5

Bibliography