1977 Norwegian parliamentary election

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
1977 Norwegian parliamentary election

← 1973 11 and 12 September 1977 1981 →

All 155 seats in the Norwegian Parliament
78 seats were needed for a majority
  First party Second party Third party
  Reiulf Steen.PNG Erling Norvik - 1970 - Frits Solvang - Norsk Teknisk Museum - DEX FS 005163 (cropped).jpg Korvald.PNG
Leader Reiulf Steen Erling Norvik Lars Korvald
Party Labour Conservative Christian Democratic
Last election 62 seats, 35.3% 29 seats, 17.2% 20 seats, 11.9%
Seats won 76 41 22
Seat change Increase14 Increase12 Increase2
Popular vote 972,434 563,783 224,355
Percentage 42.5% 24.5% 9.7%

  Fourth party Fifth party Sixth party
  Blank.png Berge Furre.jpg
Leader Gunnar Stålsett Berge Furre Hans Hammond Rossbach
Party Centre Socialist Left Liberal
Last election 21 seats, 6.8% 16 seats, 11.2%[1] 2 seats, 2.3%
Seats won 12 2 2
Seat change Decrease9 Decrease14 Steady0
Popular vote 184,087 96,248 54,243
Percentage 8.0% 4.2% 2.4%

Prime Minister before election

Odvar Nordli
Labour

Prime Minister after election

Odvar Nordli
Labour

Parliamentary elections were held in Norway on 11 and 12 September 1977.[2] The Labour Party remained the largest party in the Storting, winning 76 of the 155 seats.

Results[]

Norway 1977.png
Party Votes % Seats +/–
Labour Party 972,434 42.3 76 +14
Conservative Party 563,783 24.5 41 +12
Christian People's Party 224,355 9.7 22 +2
Centre Party 184,087 8.0 12 –9
Non-socialist joint lists 111,412 4.8 [a]
Socialist Left Party 96,248 4.2 2 –14
Liberal Party 54,243 2.4 2 0
Progress Party 43,351 1.9 0 –4
New People's Party 22,524 1.0 0 –1
Red Electoral Alliance 14,515 0.6 0 0
Communist Party 8,448 0.4 0
Single Person's Party 2,740 0.1 0 0
Norwegian Democratic Party 1,322 0.1 0 0
Freely Elected Representatives 1,149 0.0 0 New
Lapp People's List 499 0.0 0 0
Invalid/blank votes 3,386
Total 2,304,496 100 155 0
Registered voters/turnout 2,780,190 82.9
Source: Nohlen & Stöver

a Seven seats were won by joint lists, of which four went to the Christian People's Party, and one each to the Centre Party, the Conservative Party and the Liberal Party.[3]

References[]

  1. ^ As the Socialist Electoral League.
  2. ^ Dieter Nohlen & Philip Stöver (2010) Elections in Europe: A data handbook, p1438 ISBN 978-3-8329-5609-7
  3. ^ Nohlen & Stöver, pp1459-1460
Retrieved from ""