1864 Belgian general election

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1864 Belgian general election

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All 116 seats in the Chamber of Representatives
57 seats needed for a majority
  First party Second party
  Charlesrogier.jpg No image.png
Leader Charles Rogier
Party Liberal Catholic
Leader since Candidate for PM
Seats before 59 seats 57 seats
Seats won 64 52
Seat change Increase 5 Decrease 5
Popular vote 39,576 39,750
Percentage 49.74% 49.96%

Belgian Chamber 1864.svg

Government before election

Rogier II
Liberal

Government after election

Rogier II
Liberal

General elections were held in Belgium on 11 August 1864,[1][2] the first full general elections since 1857.[3] The snap elections were called upon the loss of a parliamentary majority for the liberal government of Charles Rogier and a hung parliament, following the death of liberal representative Charles Cumont in July 1864. In the last few parliamentary sessions preceding the elections, all Catholic members quit the Chamber, resulting in it not being quorate.

Although the Catholics received the most votes for seats in the Chamber of Representatives, the result was a victory for the Liberal Party, which won 64 of the 116 seats.[2] Voter turnout was 76.7%,[3] although only 103,717 people (2.1% of the population) were eligible to vote.[2]

Results[]

Chamber of Representatives[]

Party Votes % Seats +/–
Catholics 39,750 50.0 52 –5
Liberal Party 39,576 49.7 64 +5
Others 240 0.3 0 New
Invalid/blank votes 4,383
Total 83,949 100 116 0
Registered voters/turnout 103,717 76.7
Source: Mackie & Rose,[3] Sternberger et al

References[]

  1. ^ Codebook Constituency-level Elections Archive, 2003
  2. ^ a b c Sternberger, D, Vogel, B & Nohlen, D (1969) Die Wahl der Parlamente: Band I: Europa - Erster Halbband, p105
  3. ^ a b c Thomas T Mackie & Richard Rose (1991) The International Almanac of Electoral History, Macmillan, p46
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