2015 Urcean elections: Difference between revisions

From IxWiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
m Text replacement - "Concilium Daoni" to "Conshilía Purpháidhe"
Tag: Reverted
m Undo revision 85730 by Urcea (talk)
Tag: Undo
Line 34: Line 34:
| seats_other =  
| seats_other =  
| daoni_map = [[File:2035 CD Election Results.png|200px]]
| daoni_map = [[File:2035 CD Election Results.png|200px]]
| daoni_map_caption = Results of 2015 Conshilía Purpháidhe election
| daoni_map_caption = Results of 2015 Concilium Daoni election
| governor_seats_contested =
| governor_seats_contested =
| governor_net_change =
| governor_net_change =
Line 45: Line 45:
The [[Procurator|Procuratorial]] election featured significant upheaval as the National Pact nominee, [[James Dynan]], was elected to a second term. It was the first time the [[Democratic Labor Party (Urcea)|Democratic Labor Party]] nominee finished above third place in an election. [[James Cossus Reed]] stood for Procurator a second time, the first non-incumbent to run for two consecutive times since [[List_of_former_Urcean_officials#Herdan,_Stephen|Stephen Herdan]]. As a consequence of the [[2015 Urcean political realignment]], the [[Commonwealth Union (Urcea)|Commonwealth Union]], the second largest party in Urcea, did not appear for the first time in smore than a century. The [[Julian Party (Urcea)|Julian Party]] did not nominate a candidate. Dynan's final percentage of 57.4% was largest percentage a candidate for Procurator had received since the [[Second Great War]]. He received more than 141 million more votes in the 2015 election than the 2010 election, the largest single-election improvement for a candidate for Procurator in the history of Urcea. His 28.7% margin of victory equaled the total percentage of votes for his next competitor, the only time in the history of the modern Urcean political system that a candidate for Procurator doubled the support of the next runner up.
The [[Procurator|Procuratorial]] election featured significant upheaval as the National Pact nominee, [[James Dynan]], was elected to a second term. It was the first time the [[Democratic Labor Party (Urcea)|Democratic Labor Party]] nominee finished above third place in an election. [[James Cossus Reed]] stood for Procurator a second time, the first non-incumbent to run for two consecutive times since [[List_of_former_Urcean_officials#Herdan,_Stephen|Stephen Herdan]]. As a consequence of the [[2015 Urcean political realignment]], the [[Commonwealth Union (Urcea)|Commonwealth Union]], the second largest party in Urcea, did not appear for the first time in smore than a century. The [[Julian Party (Urcea)|Julian Party]] did not nominate a candidate. Dynan's final percentage of 57.4% was largest percentage a candidate for Procurator had received since the [[Second Great War]]. He received more than 141 million more votes in the 2015 election than the 2010 election, the largest single-election improvement for a candidate for Procurator in the history of Urcea. His 28.7% margin of victory equaled the total percentage of votes for his next competitor, the only time in the history of the modern Urcean political system that a candidate for Procurator doubled the support of the next runner up.


The [[Conshilía Purpháidhe]] election saw the National Pact win a landslide victory in the Daoni in addition to Dynan's reelection. The election saw 40% of seats (200 seats) in the Daoni change party affiliation, which set a record in Urcean history.
The [[Concilium Daoni]] election saw the National Pact win a landslide victory in the Daoni in addition to Dynan's reelection. The election saw 40% of seats (200 seats) in the Daoni change party affiliation, which set a record in Urcean history.
==Party nominations==
==Party nominations==
===Procurator===
===Procurator===

Revision as of 13:35, 4 September 2024

2015 Urcean elections
2010          2015          2020
Election dayNovember 3rd, 2015
Incumbent ProcuratorJames Dynan (National Pact)
Incumbent Chancellor and Temporary PresidentJames Cossus Reed (Union for National Solidarity)
2015 Urcean Procuratorial election
Partisan controlNational Pact hold
Popular vote margin+28.7%
Vote percentage
  James Dynan (NP)57.4%
  Ronan Cornelius Marcán (DLP)28.7%
  James Cossus Reed (UNS)11.9%
Other2%
2015 Urcean Conshilía Daoni elections
All 500 seats contested
251 needed for majority
Overall controlNational Pact gain
Elected ChancellorBridget Farrell (NP)
  National Pact290 (Increase 141)
  Democratic Labor Party90 (Increase 59)
  Union for National Solidarity84 (Decrease 194)
  Julian Party36 (Decrease 6)
Results of 2015 Concilium Daoni election

The 2015 Urcean elections were held on Tuesday, November 3, 2015.

The Procuratorial election featured significant upheaval as the National Pact nominee, James Dynan, was elected to a second term. It was the first time the Democratic Labor Party nominee finished above third place in an election. James Cossus Reed stood for Procurator a second time, the first non-incumbent to run for two consecutive times since Stephen Herdan. As a consequence of the 2015 Urcean political realignment, the Commonwealth Union, the second largest party in Urcea, did not appear for the first time in smore than a century. The Julian Party did not nominate a candidate. Dynan's final percentage of 57.4% was largest percentage a candidate for Procurator had received since the Second Great War. He received more than 141 million more votes in the 2015 election than the 2010 election, the largest single-election improvement for a candidate for Procurator in the history of Urcea. His 28.7% margin of victory equaled the total percentage of votes for his next competitor, the only time in the history of the modern Urcean political system that a candidate for Procurator doubled the support of the next runner up.

The Concilium Daoni election saw the National Pact win a landslide victory in the Daoni in addition to Dynan's reelection. The election saw 40% of seats (200 seats) in the Daoni change party affiliation, which set a record in Urcean history.

Party nominations

Procurator

Daoni leadership

Issues

Election results

Procurator

Daoni

Governors

Local

Turnout

Aftermath and reactions