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Encyclopedia > Belgian general election, 2003


Politics of Belgium

The May 18, 2003 Belgian general elections were the first Belgian elections to be held under a new electoral code. One of the novelties was an electoral threshold of 5%, which has cost many seats to the N-VA and the Green parties.


The Flemish Greens even lost all their seats. The Greens were attacked on two fronts: some, including their coalition partners, accused them of being too fundamentalist, while others said that they had betrayed their ideals. The resignation of a Walloon green minister (Isabelle Durant), one week before the elections, probably didn't do them much good either. Although it was predicted in some opinion polls, the gains of the Front National were surprising, considering that it seldom appeared in the media. The most important trend was the recovery of the Flemish social_democrats, led by the popular (some would say populist) Steve Stevaert. The fact that Dutch caused rumours that he hoped to become Prime Minister, if the social-democrats would turn out to be the largest political family.


Themes that probably influenced the election results in some way or another were the government's opposition to the 2003 invasion of Iraq, the controversy around the nuisance around the airport of Zaventem, the controversy surrounding the banning of tobacco publicity, and unemployment. But a general dominating theme was lacking.


Results


For the Chamber of Deputies:

Party 1999 in % 1999 in seats 2003 in % 2003 in seats gains/losses in % gains/losses in seats
VLD 14,3 23 15,4 25 +1,1 +2
SP.a-SPIRIT(1) 9,5 14 14,9 23 +5,4 +9
CD&V (2) 14,1 22 13,2 21 -1,1 -1
PS 10,2 19 13,0 25 +2,8 +6
Vl.Blok 9,9 15 11,6 18 +1,7 +3
MR (3) 10,1 18 11,4 24 +1,3 +6
cdH(4) 5,9 10 5,5 8 -0,4 -2
N-VA(5) 5,6 10 3,1 1 -2,5 -9
ECOLO 7,4 11 3,1 4 -4,3 -7
AGALEV 7,0 11 2,5 0 -3,5 -11
FN 1,5 1 2,0 1 +0,5 0

For the Senate (only the directly elected senators are shown):

Party 1999 in % 1999 in seats 2003 in % 2003 in seats gains/losses in % gains/losses in seats
SP.a-SPIRIT (1) 8,9 4 15,5 7 +6,6 +3
VLD 15,4 6 15,4 7 0 +1
PS 9,7 4 12,8 6 +3,1 +2
CD&V (2) 14,7 6 12,7 6 -2,0 0
MR (3) 10,6 5 12,1 5 +1,6 0
Vl.Blok 9,4 4 11,3 5 +1,9 +1
cdH (4) 6,0 3 5,5 2 -0,5 -1
ECOLO 7,4 3 3,2 1 -4,2 -2
FN 1,5 0 2,2 1 +0,7 +1

Notes


(1) The data of the 1999 election are those of the SP.
(2) The data of the 1999 election are those of the CVP.
(3) The data of the 1999 elections are those of the PRL-FDF-MCC alliance.
(4) The data of the 1999 elections are those of the PSC.
(5) The data of the 1999 elections are those of the Volksunie.




  Results from FactBites:
 
Elections in Belgium - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (489 words)
The regional parliaments are elected every five years, and their elections coincide with those for the European Parliament.
Elections for the members of Belgium's municipal and provincial councils are held every six.
The next municipal and provincial elections in 2006 and the next general election will be in 2007, the next regional elections are expected in 2009.
Belgian Union - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (408 words)
In the center of Europe, it consists of 3 large language groups: Dutch speaking Belgians or Flemings (north Belgians, about 59% of the population), French speaking Belgians or Walloons (south Belgians, about 40% of the population), and German speaking Belgians (East Belgians, about 1% of the population).
The Belgian Union is a centrist party for reconciliation between the language groups, promoting multilingualism, and 1 government and 1 parliament for all Belgians without the division by language (which they consider as racist as a division by skin colour).
They are the only party defending this, all other Belgian parties have, together with the creation of the federal states, been split on a language basis.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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