Castile-La Mancha parliamentary election, 1991
Castile-La Mancha parliamentary election, 1991
|
|
|
All 47 seats in the Courts of Castile-La Mancha 24 seats needed for a majority |
Registered |
1,304,996 3.6% |
Turnout |
946,138 (72.5%) 2.9 pp |
|
First party |
Second party |
Third party |
|
|
|
|
Leader |
José Bono |
José Manuel Molina |
José Molina Martínez |
Party |
PSOE |
PP |
IU |
Leader since |
25 March 1983 |
23 December 1989 |
1991 |
Last election |
25 seats, 46.3% |
18 seats, 35.9%[lower-alpha 1] |
0 seats, 5.4% |
Seats won |
27 |
19 |
1 |
Seat change |
2 |
1 |
1 |
Popular vote |
489,876 |
336,642 |
57,967 |
Percentage |
52.2% |
35.9% |
6.2% |
Swing |
5.9 pp |
±0.0 pp |
0.8 pp |
|
President before election
José Bono
PSOE |
Elected President
José Bono
PSOE |
|
The 1991 Castile-La Mancha parliamentary election was held on Sunday, 26 May 1991, to elect the 3rd Courts of Castile-La Mancha, the regional legislature of the Spanish autonomous community of Castile-La Mancha. At stake were all 47 seats in the Courts, determining the President of the Junta of Communities of Castile-La Mancha.
For the third consecutive time, the election was won by the Spanish Socialist Workers' Party, which under José Bono obtained a new absolute majority, with 27 out of 47 seats and over 52% of the share. The People's Party (PP), a party formed in 1989 from the merger of the People's Alliance (AP), the People's Democratic Party and the Liberal Party (PL), obtained 19 seats and 35.9% of the vote. United Left (IU) entered the Courts for the first time with 1 seat.
The three parties' gains came at the cost of the Democratic and Social Centre (CDS), which lost 2/3 of its votes and its 4 seats, being expelled from the Courts as a result.
Electoral system
The number of seats in the Castile-La Mancha Courts was set to a fixed-number of 47. All Courts members were elected in 5 multi-member districts, corresponding to Castile-La Mancha's five provinces, using the D'Hondt method and a closed-list proportional representation system. Each district was assigned a fixed set of seats, distributed as follows: Albacete (10), Ciudad Real (11), Cuenca (8), Guadalajara (7) and Toledo (11).
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 ballots—for none of the above) were entitled to enter the seat distribution.[1]
Results
Overall
← Summary of the 26 May 1991 Castile-La Mancha Courts election results →
|
Party |
Vote |
Seats |
Votes |
% |
±pp |
Won |
+/− |
|
Spanish Socialist Workers' Party (PSOE) |
489,876 | 52.17 | 5.84 |
27 | 2 |
|
People's Party (PP)[lower-alpha 1] |
336,642 | 35.85 | 0.07 |
19 | 1 |
|
United Left (IU) |
57,967 | 6.17 | 0.81 |
1 | 1 |
|
Democratic and Social Centre (CDS) |
32,793 | 3.49 | 7.00 |
0 | 4 |
|
The Greens (LV) |
4,836 | 0.52 | New |
0 | ±0 |
|
Action for Talavera (ACTAL) |
2,441 | 0.26 | New |
0 | ±0 |
|
Social Democratic Party of Castile-La Mancha (PSDCLM) |
1,102 | 0.12 | 0.02 |
0 | ±0 |
|
Regionalist Unitary Party (PUR) |
1,052 | 0.11 | 0.02 |
0 | ±0 |
|
Regionalist Party of Castile-La Mancha (PRCM) |
984 | 0.10 | New |
0 | ±0 |
|
Communal Land (TC) |
918 | 0.10 | New |
0 | ±0 |
|
Regionalist Party of Guadalajara (PRGU) |
769 | 0.08 | New |
0 | ±0 |
|
Alliance for the Republic (AR) |
294 | 0.03 | New |
0 | ±0 |
|
Blank ballots |
9,300 | 0.99 | 0.01 |
|
|
Total |
938,974 | 100.00 | |
47 | ±0 |
|
Valid votes |
938,974 | 99.24 | 0.40 |
|
Invalid votes |
7,164 | 0.76 | 0.40 |
Votes cast / turnout |
946,138 | 72.50 | 2.93 |
Abstentions |
358,858 | 27.50 | 2.93 |
Registered voters |
1,304,996 | |
|
Source: Argos Information Portal |
Vote share |
|
|
|
|
|
PSOE |
|
52.17% |
PP |
|
35.85% |
IU |
|
6.17% |
CDS |
|
3.49% |
Others |
|
1.32% |
Blank ballots |
|
0.99% |
Parliamentary seats |
|
|
|
|
|
PSOE |
|
57.45% |
PP |
|
40.43% |
IU |
|
2.13% |
Notes
References
Elections in Castile-La Mancha |
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| Parliamentary elections | |
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