Won by a Mr Martin J Hollerwatch of 34 Clackton Road, Cumberbatch-On-Sea (El Partido Malvado - The Evil Party) through a sliding majority poll of fifty to something. The election took place on January the 17th of July at 6:45 GMT and was finished well before 'Who Wants To Be A Millionnaire?'. All public votes were cast but none were counted. Runners up Timothy Jambourine and Mary Wilson (of El Partido Insignificante and El Partido Inmediatamente Olvidable - The Insignificant and Instantly Forgettable Parties- respectively) completed the traditional 'Regazo de Deshonra' from Madrid to Barcelona the next morning, having received no votes. Hostile and indeed bitter disputes soon broke out among many factions of society; butchers turned against bakers, bakers turned against the candle-stick making trade unions, undertakers lost contact with their families. This social disrule was only stopped when Hollerwatch introduced an 'Everyone Be Happy Or Die' policy which worked surprisingly well. This election was sponsored by Maxi-Pads, for added protection there's nothing we can do.
A decisive factor in the election was the split of the center-right electorate between the PP and the PAR, which allowed the Socialists to prevail in all three constituencies.
In the 1993 generalelection in Madrid, this legal requirement resulted in the exclusion of the Social Democratic Center (CDS) ticket from the constituency apportionment process, as the party - which lost all its seats in the election - fell 438 votes short of the three percent threshold.
This system was drastically altered by the 1982 elections, in which the Socialists, led by Felipe González, won a sweeping victory with 202 seats in Congress, out of 350; AP became the major opposition party, while the UCD collapsed; the PCE also lost considerable ground in the election.
The election of 30N, as it became known, was quickly recognized as the most unpredictable since those of 1977 and it was widely believed that the results would change the face of politics in the Basque Country.
During the elections of 30N, each Basque nationalist party portrayed Madrid as the common enemy while attempting to arrogate to itself the mantel of leadership of the Basque cause.
The Spanish parties do not believe that the document compels the Spanish government to remove the Spanish Guardia Civil and the National Police from the area, but rather requires them to coordinate their efforts with the Basque Police.