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1945 Hungarian parliamentary election

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1945 Hungarian parliamentary election

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FieldValue
countryKingdom of Hungary (1920–46)
typeparliamentary
previous_election1944 Hungarian parliamentary election
previous_year1944
next_election1947 Hungarian parliamentary election
next_year1947
seats_for_electionAll 409 elected seats in the Diet
majority_seats205
election_date4 November 1945
turnout92.50%
image1Tildy_Zoltán-MTI_1946.jpg
leader1Zoltán Tildy
party1FKgP
alliance1MNFF
leader_since11945
seats1**245**
popular_vote1**2,697,137**
percentage1**57.03%**
image2File:Szakasits_Árpád_1949.jpg
leader2Árpád Szakasits
party2MSZDP
alliance2MNFF
leader_since2October 1944
seats269
popular_vote2823,250
percentage217.41%
image3Mátyás Rákosi General Secretary of the Hungarian Communist Party (cropped).jpg
leader3Mátyás Rákosi
party3MKP
alliance3MNFF
leader_since323 February 1945
seats370
popular_vote3801,986
percentage316.96%
leader4Péter Veres
party4NPP
alliance4MNFF
leader_since4March 1945
seats423
popular_vote4324,772
percentage46.87%
leader5
party5PDP
alliance5MNFF
leader_since5August 1947
seats52
popular_vote576,393
percentage51.62%
map{{Switcher
titlePrime Minister
posttitlePrime Minister after election
before_electionBéla Miklós
before_partyMilitary
after_electionZoltán Tildy
after_partyIndependent Smallholders, Agrarian Workers and Civic Party

| [[File:1945 Hungarian parliamentary election - Results by constituency.svg|300px]] | Results by constituency | [[File:1945 Hungarian parliamentary election - Results by district.svg|300px]] | Results by district

Parliamentary elections were held in Hungary on 4 November 1945. They came at a turbulent moment in the country's history: World War II had had a devastating impact; the Soviet Union was occupying it, with the Hungarian Communist Party growing in numbers; a land reform that March had radically altered the property structure; and inflation was rampant.

In what is generally reckoned as the first relatively free election in the country's history,

Background

Elections (which had not taken place since 1939) were required by the Yalta Agreement; moreover, the revolutionary social and political changes of 1945 were effected without popular consultation, and in view of the special ties developing that year between Moscow and Budapest (an agreement on close economic cooperation and the resumption of full diplomatic relations), the Western powers urged free elections and withheld acknowledging the Provisional Government until the Soviets agreed to hold them.

The election, by secret ballot and without census or fraud, is reckoned as the first relatively democratic election ever held in Hungary, and was certainly the closest thing to an honest election held in the country until 1990. It was also one of only two remotely free elections ever held in what would become the Soviet bloc (the other being the 1946 elections in Czechoslovakia). One author states it was "generally fair, but not entirely free", as only "democratic" parties were allowed to compete, meaning most of the pre-war right-wing parties were excluded, as well as those parties that did not participate in the Hungarian National Independence Front, a wartime anti-fascist alliance. Only the leaders of the dissolved rightist parties, SS volunteers and those interned or being prosecuted by the people's courts were barred from voting. The liberal electoral law was also supported by the Communists, who were not bothered by the failure of their proposal to field a single list of candidates on the part of the Communist-Social Democrat coalition parties, which would have ensured a majority for left-wing parties: intoxicated by their recruitment successes and misjudging the effect of the land reform on their appeal, they expected an "enthralling victory" (József Révai predicted winning as much as 70%). To their bitter disappointment, the result was nearly the opposite: the Independent Smallholders Party, winning the contest in all 16 districts, won 57% of the vote, the Social Democrats won slightly above and the Communists slightly below 17%, and the National Peasant Party just 7% (the rest going to the Citizen Democrats' Party and the new Hungarian Radical Party of Oszkár Jászi's followers).

Election ballot, 1945

Of the many reasons for the success of the Smallholders and the failure of the Communists was the fact that Cardinal József Mindszenty, head of the Hungarian Catholic hierarchy, infuriated at the loss of the overwhelming majority of its property without compensation and at the clergy's being excluded from voting upon Communist initiative, condemned the "Marxist evil" in a pastoral letter and called on the faithful to support the Smallholders, who upheld traditional values. Also, in this, Hungary's first election under full universal suffrage, and its only one where men and women voted with different-coloured ballot papers, women surprised the Communists by generally backing the Smallholders; the former launched a propaganda campaign implying these women were easily deceived or ignorant. Still, the verdict of 4.8 million voters, 90% of the enfranchised, was clear in general terms: they preferred parliamentary democracy based on private property and a market economy to socialism with state economic management and planning. They hoped these preferences would prevail in spite of the presence of Soviet occupying forces, who were expected to leave once a peace treaty was signed. However, guided by the same expectation and wishing to avoid confrontation until then, the Smallholders yielded to Marshal Kliment Voroshilov (Chairman of the Allied Control Commission), who made it clear that a grand coalition in which the Communists preserved the gains already secured (that is, the Ministry of the Interior and control over the police) was the only kind of government acceptable to the Soviets.

Parties and leaders

PartyIdeologyLeader
Independent Smallholders, Agrarian Workers and Civic Party}}"Independent Smallholders' Party (FKgP)AgrarianismLiberal democracyBig tent
Social Democratic Party of Hungary}}"Hungarian Social Democratic Party (MSzDP)Social democracyDemocratic socialism
Hungarian Communist Party}}"Hungarian Communist Party (MKP)CommunismMarxism
National Peasant Party (NPP)Agrarian socialismLeft-wing populism
Civic Democratic Party (PDP)LiberalismNational liberalism
Hungarian Radical Party (MRP)LiberalismSocial liberalism

Results

Aftermath

After the election, on 9 November the four major parties divided the portfolios. The arrangement, in which the Smallholders took the Interior Ministry while the Communists obtained the Finance Ministry, was rejected by Soviet Foreign Minister Vyacheslav Molotov, who instructed Voroshilov to renegotiate the Interior Ministry and a deputy premier post for the Communists. A debate on the form of the state also ensued; Mindszenty led a vigorous monarchist campaign but despite some uncertainty among the Smallholders, a republic was chosen.

Smallholders' leader Zoltán Tildy was elected president on 1 February 1946, while Ferenc Nagy became Prime Minister of a government in which the Smallholders held half the portfolios. The Communists received the Interior Ministry (László Rajk) and Deputy Premier (Mátyás Rákosi) posts, as well as transport and social welfare. Control of the Interior Ministry and especially the security police helped the Communists marginalise political opponents one by one. Selected assassinations, sabotage of opposition parties' offices and the closure of Catholic youth organisations were among the methods employed.

Notes

References

  • Borhi, László. Hungary in the Cold War, 1945-1956. Central European University Press (2004),
  • Kontler, László. A History of Hungary. Palgrave Macmillan (2002),

References

  1. [[Dieter Nohlen]] & Philip Stöver (2010) ''Elections in Europe: A data handbook'', p899 {{ISBN. 978-3-8329-5609-7
  2. the [[Independent Smallholders, Agrarian Workers and Civic Party. Independent Smallholders Party]] won a sweeping victory. However, the Smallholders' gains were gradually whittled away by Communist [[Salami slicing tactics (politics). salami tactics]], fulfilling the prediction of Communist leader [[Mátyás Rákosi]] that the defeat would "not play an important role in Communist plans".Borhi, pp77–78
  3. Kontler, p.395-6
  4. Andorka, Rudolf et al. ''A Society Transformed'', p.8. Central European University Press (1999), {{ISBN. 963-9116-49-1
  5. Wittenberg, Jason. ''Crucibles of Political Loyalty'', p.56. Cambridge University Press (2006), {{ISBN. 0-521-84912-8
  6. Kontler, p.396
  7. Duchen, Claire and Bandhauer-Schoffmann, Irene. ''When the War was Over'', p.135. Continuum International Publishing Group (2000), {{ISBN. 0-7185-0180-2
  8. “An Attempt at a New, Democratic Start.” Hungary 1944-1953, Lesson 1. ''The Institute for the History of the 1956 Revolution,'' [http://rev.hu/history_of_45/ora1/ora1_e.htm]
  9. Borhi, p.77
  10. Best, Antony, et al. ''International History of the Twentieth Century'', p.217. Routledge (2003), {{ISBN. 0-415-20739-8
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