2030 Urcean elections

The 2030 Urcean elections were held on Tuesday, November 5, 2030.

The long term consequences of the 2015 Urcean political realignment, establishment of the Solidarity Party, and Final War of the Deluge reduced the Urcean political spectrum back to just two large parties by 2030 - the Solidarity Party and National Pact. Both the Procuratorial and Concilium Daoni elections were presented by both major parties as a referendum on the leadership of Livio Iarnán. Solidarity argued that, though many of the large scale reforms had not been achieved, Iarnán steadily governed the country in the wake of the Final War of the Deluge and had implemented many sensible reforms which gestured at broader changes. The National Pact had several arguments related to his leadership, namely that he did not deliver on his promises, that his promises were too radical for Urcea, and that peacetime required a return to the constitutionally-oriented, stable leadership of the National Pact.

Livio Iarnán won reelection easily, defeating the National Pact's Daoni leader Conner Scipio Salderio by 14 points. It was the largest victory in a Procuratorial election since the 2015 Urcean elections and the second largest of the 21st century, only trailing 2015. In the Daoni, Solidarity was returned with a slightly reduced majority, and the National Pact only made minor gains. The Working Families Party - which broke away from the Social Labor Party during the 2026-30 term - was a major election night surprise, gaining 13 seats and becoming the third largest party. The Social Labor Party continued its steady decline in the Daoni since the 2015 election.

Daoni
After a decade and a half of major swings occurring in the Daoni beginning with the 2015 Urcean elections, the 2030 election presented largely a return to form for Urcean politics to the 1990s and early 2000s, with less than 50 total seats changing parties.

Working Families emerges
The major election night surprise was the 13 seat gain of the Working Families Party, a relatively minor political party whose Daoni members split from the Social Labor Party in 2026. The Party's left wing, religious-friendly message resonated with some voters who had traditionally been part of the left wing of the defunct Commonwealth Union. After the 2030 election, it had 18 seats, making it the third largest in the Daoni. Its 13 pickups came equally from the Social Labor Party and Solidarity Party in heavily urbanized areas.