Jump to content

User:ValenciaThunderbolt/sandbox

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Infobox Changes

[edit]

2003 Japanese general election

[edit]

W/ Percentages and Votes

[edit]
ValenciaThunderbolt/sandbox

← 2000 November 9, 2003 2005 →

All 480 seats in the House of Representatives of Japan
241 seats needed for a majority
Turnout59.80%
  First party Second party
 
Leader Junichiro Koizumi Naoto Kan
Party Liberal Democratic Democratic
Last election 233 149
Seats won 237 177
Seat change Increase 4 Increase28
Constituency vote 26,089,327 21,814,154
% and swing 43.85pp (Increase2.88pp) 36.66pp (Increase5.68pp)
Regional vote 20,660,185 22,095,636
% and swing 34.96pp (Increase6.65pp) 37.39pp (Increase1.20pp)
Third parties
Party Leader % Seats +/–
Constituency seats
Communist Kazuo Shii 8.13 0 0
Social Democratic Takako Doi 2.87 1 −18
Komeito Takenori Kanzaki 1.49 34 +3
New Conservative Hiroshi Kumagai 1.33 4 −3
Independents Masami Tanabu 0.84 1 −4
Liberal League Torao Tokuda 0.16 1 0
Independents 11 −4
Party list seats
Komeito Takenori Kanzaki 14.78 25 +1
Communist Kazuo Shii 7.76 9 −11
Social Democratic Takako Doi 5.12 5 −10
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.
Districts and PR districts, shaded according to winners' vote strength.
Prime Minister before Prime Minister after
Junichiro Koizumi
Liberal Democratic
Junichiro Koizumi
Liberal Democratic

W/O Percentages and Votes

[edit]
ValenciaThunderbolt/sandbox

← 2000 November 9, 2003 2005 →

All 480 seats in the House of Representatives of Japan
241 seats needed for a majority
Turnout59.80%
  First party Second party
 
Leader Junichiro Koizumi Naoto Kan
Party Liberal Democratic Democratic
Seats won 237 177
Seat change Increase4 Increase50
Third parties
Party Leader Seats +/–
Komeito Takenori Kanzaki 34 +3
Communist Kazuo Shii 9 −11
Social Democratic Takako Doi 6 −13
New Conservative Hiroshi Kumagai 4 −3
Independents Masami Tanabu 1 −4
Liberal League Torao Tokuda 1 0
Independents 11 −4
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.
Districts and PR districts, shaded according to winners' vote strength.
Prime Minister before Prime Minister after
Junichiro Koizumi
Liberal Democratic
Junichiro Koizumi
Liberal Democratic

W/ Scottish TIE with 5% Vote Threshold (Const. and PR Vote)

[edit]
ValenciaThunderbolt/sandbox

← 2000 November 9, 2003 2005 →
Turnout59.80%
 
Party Liberal Democratic Democratic Komeito
Constituency vote 26,089,327 21,814,154 886,507
% and swing 43.85pp (Increase2.88pp) 36.66pp (Increase5.68pp) 1.49pp (Decrease0.53pp)
Regional vote 20,660,185 22,095,636 8,733,444
% and swing 34.96pp (Increase6.65pp) 37.39pp (Increase1.20pp) 14.78pp (Increase1.81pp)

 
Party Communist Social Democratic
Constituency vote 4,837,953 1,708,672
% and swing 8.13pp (Decrease3.95pp) 2.87pp (Decrease2.47pp)
Regional vote 4,586,172 3,027,390
% and swing 7.76pp (Decrease3.47pp) 5.12pp (Decrease4.24pp)

Districts and PR districts, shaded according to winners' vote strength.

Prime Minister before election

Junichiro Koizumi
Liberal Democratic

Elected Prime Minister

Junichiro Koizumi
Liberal Democratic

W/ Scottish TIE with 5% Total Seat Threshold

[edit]
ValenciaThunderbolt/sandbox

← 2000 November 9, 2003 2005 →

All 480 seats in the House of Representatives of Japan
241 seats needed for a majority
Turnout59.80%
  First party Second party Third party
 
Leader Junichiro Koizumi Naoto Kan Takenori Kanzaki
Party Liberal Democratic Democratic Komeito
Last election 233 149 12.97%, 31 seats
Seats won 237 177 34
Seat change Increase 4 Increase 28 Increase 3
Constituency vote 26,089,327 21,814,154 886,507
% and swing 43.85pp (Increase2.88pp) 36.66pp (Increase5.68pp) 1.49pp (Decrease0.53pp)
Regional vote 20,660,185 22,095,636 8,733,444
% and swing 34.96pp (Increase6.65pp) 37.39pp (Increase1.20pp) 14.78pp (Increase1.81pp)

Districts and PR districts, shaded according to winners' vote strength.

Prime Minister before election

Junichiro Koizumi
Liberal Democratic

Elected Prime Minister

Junichiro Koizumi
Liberal Democratic

2023 Thai general election

[edit]
ValenciaThunderbolt/sandbox

14 May 2023[1]

All 500 seats in the House of Representatives
251 seats needed for a majority
Registered52,238,594
Turnout75.64pp (Increase 0.95 pp)
  First party Second party Third party
 
Pita_Limjaroenrat,_October_2023.jpg
Paetongtarn_Shinawatra.jpg
Anutin_Charnvirakul_-_2023_(52638148766)_(cropped).jpg
Candidate Pita Limjaroenrat Paetongtarn Shinawatra Anutin Charnvirakul
Party Move Forward Pheu Thai Bhumjaithai
Last election 51 seats 136 seats 51 seats
Seats won 151 141 71
Seat change Decrease 70 Increase 5 Increase 20
Constituency vote 9,665,433 9,340,082 5,133,441
% and swing 25.40pp (Decrease5.3pp) 25.54pp (Decrease5.3pp) 13.49pp (Decrease5.3pp)
Party vote 14,438,851 10,962,522 1,138,202
% and swing 37.99pp (Decrease2.6pp) 28.84pp (Decrease2.6pp) 2.99pp (Decrease2.6pp)

  Fourth party Fifth party Sixth party
 
Prawit_Wongsuwan_(2018)_cropped.jpg
Fumio_Kishida_and_Prayut_Chan-o-cha_at_the_Prime_Minister's_Office_2022_(1)_(cropped).jpg
Jurin_Laksanawisit_2009_(cropped).jpg
Candidate Prawit Wongsuwon Prayut Chan-o-cha Jurin Laksanawisit
Party Palang Pracharat United Thai Nation Democrat
Last election 116 seats Did not exist 53 seats
Seats won 40 36 25
Seat change Decrease 76 New Decrease 28
Constituency vote 4,186,441 3,607,575 2,278,857
% and swing 11.00pp (Decrease5.3pp) 9.48pp (Decrease5.3pp) 5.99pp (Decrease5.3pp)
Party vote 537,625 4,766,408 925,349
% and swing 1.41pp (Decrease2.6pp) 12.54pp (Decrease2.6pp) 2.43pp (Decrease2.6pp)

Results of the election

Prime Minister before election

Prayut Chan-o-cha
United Thai Nation Party

Elected Prime Minister

Srettha Thavisin
Pheu Thai

2021 German federal election

[edit]
ValenciaThunderbolt/sandbox

← 2017 26 September 2021 (2021-09-26)[a] Next →

All 735 seats in the Bundestag, including 137 overhang and leveling seats
368 seats needed for a majority
Opinion polls
Registered61,172,771 Decrease 0.8%
Turnout46,298,338 (76.4%) (Increase 0.2pp)
  First party Second party Third party
 
Olaf Scholz 2021 cropped.jpg
Armin Laschet 2021 (cropped).jpg
Annalena Baerbock (2021) cropped.jpg
Candidate Olaf Scholz Armin Laschet Annalena Baerbock[b]
Party SPD CDU/CSU Greens
Last election 153 seats 246 seats 67 seats
Seats won 206 197 118
Seat change Increase 53 Decrease 49 Increase 51
Constituency vote 12,184,094 13,233,971 6,435,360
% and swing 26.36% (Increase 1.72pp) 28.63pp (Decrease 8.64pp) 13.92pp (Increase 5.37pp)
State vote 11,901,556 11,177,746 6,814,401
% and swing 25.71% (Increase 5.20pp) 24.14pp (Decrease 8.79pp) 14.72pp (Increase 5.78pp)[c]

  Fourth party Fifth party Sixth party
 
2020-02-14 Christian Lindner (Bundestagsprojekt 2020) by Sandro Halank–2.jpg
AfD leadership 2021.jpg
Die Linke Leadership 2021.jpg
Candidate Christian Lindner Alice Weidel
Tino Chrupalla
Janine Wissler
Dietmar Bartsch
Party FDP AfD Left
Last election 80 seats 94 seats 69 seats
Seats won 91 83 39
Seat change Increase 11 Decrease 11 Decrease 30
Constituency vote 4,019,562 4,699,917 2,286,070
% and swing 8.70pp (Increase 1.70pp) 10.17pp (Decrease 1.29pp) 4.87pp (Decrease 3.60pp)
State vote 5,291,010 4,809,228 2,255,860
% and swing 11.43pp (Increase 0.68pp) 10.39pp (Decrease 2.25pp) 4.95pp (Decrease 4.37pp)

The left side shows constituency winners of the election by their party colours. The right side shows party list winners of the election for the additional members by their party colours.

Government before election

Angela Merkel
CDU/CSU

Elected Government

Olaf Scholz
Social Democratic Party of Germany

  1. ^ "ด่วน! กกต.เคาะวันเลือกตั้ง 14 พ.ค. 66". 21 March 2023. Archived from the original on 21 March 2023. Retrieved 21 March 2023.
  2. ^ Anderson, Emma (5 August 2021). "German Greens must sit out vote in one state during national election". Politico. Archived from the original on 22 October 2021. Retrieved 27 September 2021.


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).