2006 Macedonian parliamentary election

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2006 Macedonian parliamentary election

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All 120 seats in the Sobranie
  First party Second party
  Gruevski.jpg Buckovski May 2006.jpg
Leader Nikola Gruevski Vlado Bučkovski
Party VMRO-DPMNE SDSM
Alliance
Last election 33 seats 61
Seats won 45 32
Seat change Increase 12 Decrease 29
Popular vote 303,543 218,164
Percentage 32.5% 23.3%

Prime Minister before election

Vlado Bučkovski
SDSM

Prime Minister after election

Nikola Gruevski
VMRO–DPMNE

Parliamentary elections were held in Macedonia on 5 July 2006. The result was a victory for the VMRO-DPMNE-led coalition, which won 45 of the 120 seats.

Electoral system[]

The 120 seats were elected from six 20-seat constituencies by proportional representation.[1] Seats were allocated using the d'Hondt method with an electoral threshold of 5%.[1]

Conduct[]

The international community sent 6,000 observers to monitor electoral procedures, as NATO and European Union officials saw the elections as a key test of Macedonian ambitions of joining both organizations after local elections in March 2005 were marred by irregularities. The campaign was marked by serious cross-political confrontations, occasionally resulting in violence,[2] mainly between the two major ethnic Albanian parties, the Democratic Union for Integration (DUI) and the Democratic Party of Albanians (DPA). The situation was seen as seriously tarnishing the international reputation of the country. As the confrontations between the ethnic Albanian parties intensified, a diplomatic offensive from Western officials took place to put an end to the irregularities. These efforts were supported by the ethnic Macedonian parties, but also by calls from the Albanian and Kosovan prime ministers. However, the situation did not improve significantly. On 22 June 2006 there were clashes between the two major ethnic Macedonian parties VMRO-DPMNE and the SDSM in the center of Skopje.

The representatives of the EU and the United States continued with their efforts to stop the irregularities. NATO warned the Macedonian government that pre-election violence risked delays to the country's ambitions to join the military alliance. Problems within the Macedonian bloc stopped immediately, and incidents between the Albanian parties also progressively stopped. The last week of the campaign was calm, with almost no incidents. There were no major problems on election day, with only minor irregularities in the western part of the country. The counting of the votes also passed almost without any objections. The Macedonian government, the European Union and the United States dubbed the elections "a success".

Results[]

The results showed a clear victory for the coalition led by VMRO-DPMNE, which won 45 of the 120 seats. The centre-left coalition led by the SDSM won 35 seats. The majority of Albanian votes went to the DUIPDP coalition (17 seats), while the DPA won 11 seats. Other parties that won seats included the New Social Democratic Party (7 seats), VMRO-NP (6 seats), Democratic Renewal of Macedonia (1 seat) and the Party for European Future (1 seat).

PartyVotes%Seats
VMRO-DPMNE coalition[a]303,54332.4645
Together for Macedonia[b]218,16423.3332
Coalition[c]114,30112.2216
Democratic Party of Albanians70,1377.5011
VMRO – People's Party57,2046.126
New Social Democratic Party57,0496.107
Democratic Renewal of Macedonia17,5921.881
Party for Economic Renewal13,1141.400
Agricultural People's Party of Macedonia12,6221.350
Party for a European Future11,4411.221
Democratic Alternative11,1751.190
Social Democratic Party8,3750.900
National Democratic Party4,4910.480
National Alternative4,2540.450
New Democratic Forces–Democratic Alliance of Albanians4,1420.440
Union of Tito's Left Forces2,9900.320
Democratic-Republican Union of Macedonia2,6740.290
League for Democracy2,6640.280
Macedonian Party2,2120.240
Party for a Democratic Future1,4720.160
TMRO1,4280.150
Radical Party of the Serbs in Macedonia1,2740.140
United Macedonians1,2700.140
VRMO-Democratic Party1,2220.130
Leftist Forces of Macedonia1,1860.130
Movement for National Unity of Turks8990.100
TMORO-VEP7310.080
Communist Party of Macedonia6020.060
DPM-Tetovo5850.060
Centre of Democratic Forces1330.010
Democratic Party "Go Macedonia–Forza"760.010
Independents6,1570.661
Total935,179100.00120
Valid votes935,17996.10
Invalid/blank votes37,9313.90
Total votes973,110100.00
Registered voters/turnout1,741,44955.88
Source: Nohlen & Stöver
  1. ^ Of the 45 seats won by the coalition, the VMRO-DPMNE won 38, the Socialist Party 3, the Liberal Party 2, the Democratic Union 1 and the Union of Roma in Macedonia 1.
  2. ^ Of the 32 seats won by the coalition, the Social Democratic Union won 23, the Liberal Democratic Party 5, the Democratic Party of Turks 2, the United Party of Romas in Macedonia 1 and the Democratic Party of Serbs in Macedonia 1.
  3. ^ Of the 16 seats won by the coalition, the Democratic Union for Integration won 13 and the Party for Democratic Prosperity 3.

Aftermath[]

After unsuccessful negotiations between VMRO-DPMNE and DUI, VMRO-DPMNE leader Nikola Gruevski decided to form a government with the DPA. After a tough negotiation process (especially between VMRO-DPMNE and NSDP), in August 2006 Gruevski announced that the new government would be composed of VMRO-DPMNE, DPA, NSDP, DOM, and PEI, with the coalition partners holding 65 of the 120 seats in parliament.

The DUI-PDP coalition started protests throughout the Albanian-dominated parts of the country due to their exclusion from the coalition. In May 2007, the PDP accepted Gruevski's offer to join the government, and in June the PDP became a coalition partner.

See also[]

  • History of the Republic of Macedonia

References[]

  1. ^ a b Dieter Nohlen & Philip Stöver (2010) Elections in Europe: A data handbook, p. 1276, ISBN 978-3-8329-5609-7
  2. ^ Violence mars Macedonia campaign BBC News, 26 June 2006
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