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1922 Finnish parliamentary election

General election


General election

FieldValue
countryFinland
flag_yearstate-1920
typeparliamentary
previous_election1919 Finnish parliamentary election
previous_year1919
next_election1924 Finnish parliamentary election
next_year1924
seats_for_electionAll 200 seats in the Parliament of Finland
majority_seats101
election_date1–3 July 1922
image_size130x130px
image1Väinö Tanner.jpg
leader1Väinö Tanner
party1Social Democratic Party of Finland
last_election137.98%, 80 seats
seats1**53**
popular_vote1**216,861**
percentage1**25.06%**
swing112.92pp
image2Pekka Ville Heikkinen, 1958 (cropped).jpg
leader2Pekka Heikkinen
party2Agrarian League (Finland)
last_election219.70%, 42 seats
seats245
popular_vote2175,401
percentage220.27%
seat_change23
swing20.57pp
image3AnttiTulenheimo.jpg
leader3Antti Tulenheimo
party3National Coalition Party
last_election315.71%, 26 seats
seats335
popular_vote3157,116
percentage318.15%
seat_change39
swing32.44pp
image4Niilo-Wallari-1955.jpg
leader4Niilo Wälläri
party4Socialist Workers'
last_election4
seats427
popular_vote4128,181
percentage414.81%
seat_change4*new*
swing4*new*
seat_change127
leader5Eric von Rettig
party5Swedish People's Party of Finland
last_election512.13%, 22 seats
seats525
seat_change53
popular_vote5107,414
percentage512.41%
swing50.28pp
before_electionAimo Cajander
titlePrime Minister
before_partyIndependent
posttitlePrime Minister after election
after_electionKyösti Kallio
after_partyAgrarian League (Finland)
image6OskariMantere.jpg
leader6Oskari Mantere
party6National Progressive Party (Finland)
last_election612.81%, 26 seats
seats615
seat_change611
popular_vote679,676
percentage69.21%
swing63.60pp

Parliamentary elections were held in Finland between 1 and 3 July 1922. The Social Democratic Party remained the largest in Parliament with 53 of the 200 seats. The caretaker government of Professor Aimo Cajander (Progressive), that President Kaarlo Juho Ståhlberg had appointed in June 1922, following the resignation of Prime Minister Juho Vennola (Progressive), remained in office until Kyösti Kallio formed an Agrarian-Progressive minority government in November 1922. Voter turnout was 58.5%.

Background

By 1922, the Finnish society, economy and politics had begun to stabilize. The Progressive (liberal) President Kaarlo Juho Ståhlberg had pardoned many Red (socialist) prisoners of the Finnish Civil War, the worst poverty caused by World War I and the Civil War was over, and the Agrarian leader, Kyösti Kallio, was preparing a law (Lex Kallio) that would distribute the excess farmlands of wealthy landowners to the former tenant farmers and other landless rural people. The Social Democrats, led by Väinö Tanner, had committed themselves to the peaceful and democratic pursuit of socialist reform goals. The mostly Agrarian-Progressive minority governments pursued moderate and conciliatory policies. Compulsory schooling of Finnish children was enacted in 1921. The Communists dared to organize the Socialist Workers' Party before the elections, so they preferred open political activity to underground political activity. Shortly before the election campaign officially started, the Finnish Parliament rejected a five-year defence treaty between Finland, Poland, Latvia and Estonia. Enough deputies doubted the ability of Poland and the Baltic countries to defend Finland during a real war.

Results

References

References

  1. [[Dieter Nohlen]] & Philip Stöver (2010) ''Elections in Europe: A data handbook'', p606 {{ISBN. 978-3-8329-5609-7
  2. Nohlen & Stöver, p613
  3. Seppo Zetterberg et al., eds., A Small Giant of the Finnish History / Suomen historian pikkujättiläinen, Helsinki: WSOY, 2003, pages 619–620, 629–630, 672
  4. Pentti Virrankoski, A History of Finland 1&2 / Suomen historia 1&2, Helsinki: Finnish Literary Society / Suomalaisen kirjallisuuden seura, 2009, pages 786–787, 791, 797–800
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