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1999 Aragonese regional election

Election in the Spanish region of Aragon


Election in the Spanish region of Aragon

FieldValue
election_name1999 Aragonese regional election
countryAragon
typeparliamentary
ongoingno
previous_election1995 Aragonese regional election
previous_year1995
next_election2003 Aragonese regional election
next_year2003
seats_for_electionAll 67 seats in the Cortes of Aragon
majority_seats34
opinion_polls#Opinion polls
registered1,017,735 2.4%
turnout657,464 (64.6%)
6.5 pp
election_date13 June 1999
image1[[File:Santiago Lanzuela 1996 (cropped).jpg170x170px]]
leader1Santiago Lanzuela
party1People's Party of Aragon
leader_since124 September 1993
leaders_seat1Zaragoza
last_election127 seats, 37.5%
seats128
seat_change11
popular_vote1249,458
percentage138.2%
swing10.7 pp
image2[[File:Marcelino Iglesias 2010 (cropped).jpg170x170px]]
leader2Marcelino Iglesias
party2Socialists' Party of Aragon
leader_since215 February 1995
leaders_seat2Zaragoza
last_election219 seats, 25.7%
seats223
seat_change24
popular_vote2201,117
percentage230.8%
swing25.1 pp
image3[[File:José María Aznar recibe al presidente del Partido Aragonés Regionalista (cropped).jpg170x170px]]
leader3José María Mur
party3Aragonese Party
leader_since31995
leaders_seat3Zaragoza
last_election314 seats, 20.4%
seats310
seat_change34
popular_vote386,519
percentage313.3%
swing37.1 pp
image4[[File:Chesús Bernal en la noche electoral de 1995.jpg170x170px]]
leader4Chesús Bernal
party4Chunta Aragonesista
leader_since429 June 1986
leaders_seat4Zaragoza
last_election42 seats, 4.8%
seats45
seat_change43
popular_vote472,101
percentage411.0%
swing46.2 pp
image5[[File:Portrait placeholder.svg170x170px]]
leader5Jesús Lacasa
party5United Left of Aragon
leader_since51998
leaders_seat5Zaragoza
last_election55 seats, 9.2%
seats51
seat_change54
popular_vote525,040
percentage53.9%
swing55.3 pp
map_imageAragonProvinceMapCortes1999.png
map_size225px
map_captionConstituency results map for the Cortes of Aragon
titlePresident
before_electionSantiago Lanzuela
before_partyPeople's Party of Aragon
after_electionMarcelino Iglesias
after_partySocialists' Party of Aragon

6.5 pp

A regional election was held in Aragon on Sunday, 13 June 1999, to elect the 5th Cortes of the autonomous community. All 67 seats in the Cortes were up for election. It was held concurrently with regional elections in twelve other autonomous communities and local elections all across Spain, as well as the 1999 European Parliament election.

The election saw increases in both vote share and seats for the People's Party (PP), which had formed the Government of Aragon since 1995, and the Spanish Socialist Workers' Party (PSOE). The Aragonese Party (PAR) continued its long-term decline from its peak at the 1987 election while on the left, Chunta Aragonesista (CHA) gained most of United Left (IU) former support, which lost 4 of its 5 seats.

Despite winning the election and gaining one seat from 1995, the PP went into opposition as incumbent President of Aragon Santiago Lanzuela was unable to gather the support from his former coalition partner the PAR. Instead, the PAR supported Socialist Marcelino Iglesias as new regional president, entering into a coalition administration with the PSOE.

Overview

Under the 1982 Statute of Autonomy, the Cortes of Aragon were the unicameral legislature of the homonymous autonomous community, having legislative power in devolved matters, as well as the ability to vote confidence in or withdraw it from a regional president.

Electoral system

Voting for the Cortes was on the basis of universal suffrage, which comprised all nationals over 18 years of age, registered in Aragon and in full enjoyment of their political rights, provided that they were not sentenced—by a final court ruling—to deprivation of the right to vote, nor being legally incapacitated.

The Cortes of Aragon were entitled to a minimum of 60 and a maximum of 75 seats, with the electoral law setting its size at 67. All members were elected in three multi-member constituencies—corresponding to the provinces of Huesca, Teruel and Zaragoza, with each being allocated an initial minimum of 13 seats and the remaining 28 being distributed in proportion to their populations (provided that the seat-to-population ratio in the most populated province did not exceed 2.75 times that of the least populated one)—using the D'Hondt method and a closed list proportional voting system, with an electoral threshold of three percent of valid votes (which included blank ballots) being applied in each constituency. The use of the electoral method resulted in an effective threshold based on the district magnitude and the distribution of votes among candidacies.

As a result of the aforementioned allocation, each Cortes constituency was entitled the following seats:

SeatsConstituencies
**34**Zaragoza
**18**Huesca
**15**Teruel

The law did not provide for by-elections to fill vacated seats; instead, any vacancies that occurred after the proclamation of candidates and into the legislative term were to be covered by the successive candidates in the list and, when required, by the designated substitutes.

Election date

The term of the Cortes of Aragon expired four years after the date of its previous ordinary election, with election day being fixed for the fourth Sunday of May every four years, but a legal amendment introduced in 1998 allowed for regional elections held in May 1995 to be held concurrently with European Parliament elections, provided that they were scheduled for within a four month-timespan. The election decree was required to be issued no later than the fifty-fifth day prior to the scheduled election date and published on the following day in the Official Gazette of Aragon (BOA). The previous election was held on 28 May 1995, setting the date for election day concurrently with that year's European Parliament election on Sunday, 13 June 1999.

The regional president had the prerogative to dissolve the Cortes of Aragon and call a snap election, provided that no motion of no confidence was in process, no nationwide election was due and some time requirements were met: namely, that dissolution did not occur either during the first legislative session or within the parliament's last year ahead of its scheduled expiry, nor before one year had elapsed since a previous dissolution. In the event of an investiture process failing to elect a regional president within a two-month period from the first ballot, the Cortes were to be automatically dissolved and a fresh election called. Any snap election held as a result of these circumstances would not alter the period to the next ordinary election, with elected deputies merely serving out what remained of their original four-year term.

The election to the Cortes of Aragon was officially called on 20 April 1999 with the publication of the corresponding decree in the BOA, setting election day for 13 June and scheduling for the chamber to reconvene on 7 July.

Outgoing parliament

The table below shows the composition of the parliamentary groups in the chamber at the time of the election call.

GroupsPartiesLegislatorsSeatsTotal
People's Party of Aragon}}"People's Parliamentary GroupPeople's Party of Aragon}}"PP27
Socialists' Party of Aragon}}"Socialist Parliamentary GroupSocialists' Party of Aragon}}"PSOE19
Aragonese Party}}"Aragonese Parliamentary GroupAragonese Party}}"PAR14
United Left of Aragon}}"United Left Parliamentary GroupUnited Left of Aragon}}"IU5
Mixed Parliamentary GroupChunta Aragonesista}}"CHA2

Parties and candidates

The electoral law allowed for parties and federations registered in the interior ministry, alliances and groupings of electors to present lists of candidates. Parties and federations intending to form an alliance ahead of an election were required to inform the relevant electoral commission within ten days of the election call, whereas groupings of electors needed to secure the signature of at least one percent of the electorate in the constituencies for which they sought election, disallowing electors from signing for more than one list of candidates.

Below is a list of the main parties and electoral alliances which contested the election:

CandidacyParties and
alliancesLeading candidateIdeologyPrevious resultGov.Ref.Vote %Seats
People's Party of Aragon}}"**PP**{{Collapsible listtitle = Listbullets = onPeople's Party (PP)[[File:Santiago Lanzuela 1996 (cropped).jpg50px]]Santiago LanzuelaConservatism
Christian democracy
Socialists' Party of Aragon}}"**PSOE**{{Collapsible listtitle = Listbullets = onSpanish Socialist Workers' Party (PSOE)[[File:Marcelino Iglesias 2010 (cropped).jpg50px]]Marcelino IglesiasSocial democracy
Aragonese Party}}"**PAR**{{Collapsible listtitle = Listbullets = onAragonese Party (PAR)[[File:José María Aznar recibe al presidente del Partido Aragonés Regionalista (cropped).jpg50px]]José María MurRegionalism
Centrism
United Left of Aragon}}"**IU**{{Collapsible listtitle = Listbullets = onUnited Left of Aragon (IU)
– Communist Party of Aragon (PCE–A)
– Socialist Action Party (PASOC)
– Republican Left (IR)
– Revolutionary Workers' Party (POR)
– Workers' Revolutionary Party (PRT)[[File:Portrait placeholder.svg50px]]Jesús LacasaSocialism
Communism
Chunta Aragonesista}}"**CHA**{{Collapsible listtitle = Listbullets = onAragonese Union (CHA)[[File:Chesús Bernal en la noche electoral de 1995.jpg50px]]Chesús BernalAragonese nationalism
Eco-socialism

Opinion polls

The tables below list opinion polling results in reverse chronological order, showing the most recent first and using the dates when the survey fieldwork was done, as opposed to the date of publication. Where the fieldwork dates are unknown, the date of publication is given instead. The highest percentage figure in each polling survey is displayed with its background shaded in the leading party's colour. If a tie ensues, this is applied to the figures with the highest percentages. The "Lead" column on the right shows the percentage-point difference between the parties with the highest percentages in a poll.

Voting intention estimates

The table below lists weighted voting intention estimates. Refusals are generally excluded from the party vote percentages, while question wording and the treatment of "don't know" responses and those not intending to vote may vary between polling organisations. When available, seat projections determined by the polling organisations are displayed below (or in place of) the percentages in a smaller font; 34 seats were required for an absolute majority in the Cortes of Aragon.

Polling firm/CommissionerFieldwork dateSample sizeTurnout[[File:People's Party (Spain) Logo (1993-2000).svg27pxlink=People's Party of AragonPP]][[File:Logo PSOE, 1976-2001.svg17pxlink=Socialists' Party of AragonPSOE]][[File:PAR 1999 logo.svg20pxlink=Aragonese PartyPAR]][[File:Logo-izquierda-unida2.png25pxlink=United Left of AragonIU]][[File:Logo CHA until 2009.svg32pxlink=Chunta AragonesistaCHA]]LeadPeople's Party of Aragon}};"Socialists' Party of Aragon}};"Aragonese Party}};"United Left of Aragon}};"Chunta Aragonesista}};"
**1999 regional election**13 Jun 199964.6**38.2**
30.8
13.3
3.9
11.0
People's Party of Aragon}}; color:white;"7.4
title=El PP volverá a necesitar a los regionalistas del PA para gobernarurl=http://hemeroteca.abc.es/nav/Navigate.exe/hemeroteca/madrid/abc/1999/06/07/020.htmllanguage=eswork=ABCdate=7 June 1999}}24 May–2 Jun 1999??**36.7**
26.0
19.5
7.3
8.0
People's Party of Aragon}}; color:white;"10.7
title=Los populares necesitarán pactar de nuevourl=https://elpais.com/diario/1999/06/07/espana/928706404_850215.htmllanguage=eswork=El Paísdate=7 June 1999}}26 May–1 Jun 1999?70**38.0**
29.2
18.0
6.0
8.0
People's Party of Aragon}}; color:white;"8.8
title=Aragón: PP y PAR, obligados a entenderseurl=https://www.elmundo.es/papel/hemeroteca/1999/06/01/espana/681488.htmllanguage=eswork=El Mundodate=1 June 1999}}20–26 May 1999800?**40.4**
30.4
13.7
8.1
5.1
People's Party of Aragon}}; color:white;"10.0
title=Preelectoral elecciones autonómicas y municipales, 1999. Comunidad Autónoma de Aragón (Estudio nº 2326. Mayo 1999)url=https://www.cis.es/es/visor?migrado=true&fichero=e232600htmllanguage=eswork=CISdate=4 June 1999}}3–20 May 19991,33470.8**38.3**
24.1
19.7
7.8
8.2
People's Party of Aragon}}; color:white;"14.2
**1996 general election**3 Mar 199677.5**47.9**
34.6
9.1
6.4
People's Party of Aragon}}; color:white;"13.3
**[1995 regional election](1995-aragonese-regional-election)**28 May 199571.1**37.5**
25.7
20.4
9.2
4.8
People's Party of Aragon}}; color:white;"11.8

Voting preferences

The table below lists raw, unweighted voting preferences.

Polling firm/CommissionerFieldwork dateSample size[[File:People's Party (Spain) Logo (1993-2000).svg27pxlink=People's Party of AragonPP]][[File:Logo PSOE, 1976-2001.svg17pxlink=Socialists' Party of AragonPSOE]][[File:PAR 1999 logo.svg20pxlink=Aragonese PartyPAR]][[File:Logo-izquierda-unida2.png25pxlink=United Left of AragonIU]][[File:Logo CHA until 2009.svg32pxlink=Chunta AragonesistaCHA]]LeadPeople's Party of Aragon}};"Socialists' Party of Aragon}};"Aragonese Party}};"United Left of Aragon}};"Chunta Aragonesista}};"
**1999 regional election**13 Jun 1999**24.9**20.08.62.57.235.0People's Party of Aragon}}; color:white;"4.9
CIS3–20 May 19991,334**24.5**15.58.33.15.033.78.6People's Party of Aragon}}; color:white;"9.0
**1996 general election**3 Mar 1996**37.2**26.87.15.022.1People's Party of Aragon}}; color:white;"10.4
**[1995 regional election](1995-aragonese-regional-election)**28 May 1995**26.5**18.014.46.53.428.4People's Party of Aragon}}; color:white;"8.5

Victory preferences

The table below lists opinion polling on the victory preferences for each party in the event of a regional election taking place.

Polling firm/CommissionerFieldwork dateSample size[[File:People's Party (Spain) Logo (1993-2000).svg27pxlink=People's Party of AragonPP]][[File:Logo PSOE, 1976-2001.svg17pxlink=Socialists' Party of AragonPSOE]][[File:PAR 1999 logo.svg20pxlink=Aragonese PartyPAR]][[File:Logo-izquierda-unida2.png25pxlink=United Left of AragonIU]][[File:Logo CHA until 2009.svg32pxlink=Chunta AragonesistaCHA]]Other/
NoneLeadPeople's Party of Aragon}};"Socialists' Party of Aragon}};"Aragonese Party}};"United Left of Aragon}};"Chunta Aragonesista}};"
CIS3–20 May 19991,334**29.1**21.29.04.95.40.729.7People's Party of Aragon}}; color:white;"7.9

Victory likelihood

The table below lists opinion polling on the perceived likelihood of victory for each party in the event of a regional election taking place.

Polling firm/CommissionerFieldwork dateSample size[[File:People's Party (Spain) Logo (1993-2000).svg27pxlink=People's Party of AragonPP]][[File:Logo PSOE, 1976-2001.svg17pxlink=Socialists' Party of AragonPSOE]][[File:PAR 1999 logo.svg20pxlink=Aragonese PartyPAR]][[File:Logo-izquierda-unida2.png25pxlink=United Left of AragonIU]][[File:Logo CHA until 2009.svg32pxlink=Chunta AragonesistaCHA]]Other/
NoneLeadPeople's Party of Aragon}};"Socialists' Party of Aragon}};"Aragonese Party}};"United Left of Aragon}};"Chunta Aragonesista}};"
CIS3–20 May 19991,334**59.5**3.83.70.30.10.032.6People's Party of Aragon}}; color:white;"55.7

Preferred President

The table below lists opinion polling on leader preferences to become president of the Government of Aragon.

Polling firm/CommissionerFieldwork dateSample size[[File:Santiago Lanzuela 1996 (cropped).jpg50px]][[File:Marcelino Iglesias 2010 (cropped).jpg50px]][[File:José María Aznar recibe al presidente del Partido Aragonés Regionalista (cropped).jpg50px]][[File:Chesús Bernal en la noche electoral de 1995.jpg50px]][[File:Portrait placeholder.svg50px]]Other/
None/
Not
careLeadPeople's Party of Aragon}};"Socialists' Party of Aragon}};"Aragonese Party}};"Chunta Aragonesista}};"United Left of Aragon}};"Lanzuela
PPIglesias
PSOEMur
PARBernal
CHALacasa
IU
CIS3–20 May 19991,334**29.5**9.55.31.35.21.447.8People's Party of Aragon}}; color:white;"20.0

Results

Overall

Parties and alliancesPopular voteSeatsVotes%±ppTotal+/−
People's Party of Aragon}}"People's Party (PP)249,45838.21+0.71**28**+1
Socialists' Party of Aragon}}"Spanish Socialist Workers' Party (PSOE)201,11730.81+5.09**23**+4
Aragonese Party}}"Aragonese Party (PAR)86,51913.25−7.18**10**−4
Chunta Aragonesista}}"Aragonese Union (CHA)72,10111.04+6.19**5**+3
United Left of Aragon}}"United Left of Aragon (IU)25,0403.86−5.36**1**−4
SOS Nature}}"SOS Nature (SOS)3,6210.55+0.420±0
Humanist Party (Spain)}}"Humanist Party (PH)9820.15*New*0±0
Upper Aragonese Territory Regenerationist Group (ARTA)3730.06*New*0±0
Blank ballots13,5992.08+0.50
Total652,81067±0
Valid votes652,81099.29−0.11
Invalid votes4,6540.71+0.11
Votes cast / turnout657,46464.60−6.52
Abstentions360,27135.40+6.52
Registered voters1,017,735
Sources

Distribution by constituency

ConstituencyPPPSOEPARCHAIUPeople's Party of Aragon}}"Socialists' Party of Aragon}}"Aragonese Party}}"Chunta Aragonesista}}"United Left of Aragon}}"%S%S%S%S%SSources
Huesca33.8**7**Socialists' Party of Aragon}}; color:white;"34.2**7**16.1**3**9.0**1**3.4
TeruelPeople's Party of Aragon}}; color:white;"40.2**7**31.6**5**17.7**3**4.34.1
ZaragozaPeople's Party of Aragon}}; color:white;"39.0**14**29.8**11**11.7**4**12.8**4**3.9**1**
**Total**People's Party of Aragon}}; color:white;"38.2**28**30.8**23**13.3**10**11.0**5**3.9**1**

Aftermath

Government formation

Ballot →29 July 1999Required majority →
34 out of 67
{{Collapsible listtitle = Yes• PSOE (23)• PAR (10)
{{Collapsible listtitle = No• PP (28)
{{Collapsible listtitle = Abstentions• CHA (5)
Absentees
Sources

Notes

References

;Opinion poll sources

;Other

Bibliography

References

  1. (1999-07-30). "Votes from PAR and IU give Socialist Iglesias the presidency of Aragon". El País.
  2. {{harvp. Statute. 1982
  3. {{harvp. Statute. 1982
  4. {{harvp. LEAr. 1987
  5. {{harvp. LOREG. 1985
  6. {{harvp. LEAr. 1987
  7. Gallagher, Michael. (30 July 2012). "Effective threshold in electoral systems". [[Trinity College Dublin]].
  8. (19 April 1999). "Decreto de 19 de abril de 1999, de la Presidencia del Gobierno de Aragón, por el que se convocan elecciones a las Cortes de Aragón".
  9. {{harvp. LEAr. 1987
  10. {{harvp. LOREG. 1985
  11. {{harvp. LEAr. 1987
  12. {{harvp. LOREG. 1985
  13. {{harvp. Statute. 1996
  14. {{harvp. LPGA. 1995
  15. {{harvp. Statute. 1982
  16. Lozano, Carles. "Elecciones a las Cortes de Aragón (desde 1983)".
  17. {{harvp. LEAr. 1987
  18. {{harvp. LOREG. 1985
  19. Giner, Juan. (22 December 1997). "Ciscar impone una candidatura única en el PSOE aragonés". [[El Mundo (Spain).
  20. Montserrat, Concha. (9 July 1998). "Marcelino Iglesias, proclamado vencedor de las primarias socialistas en Aragón". [[El País]].
  21. "Elecciones a Cortes de Aragón. Resultados del año 1999 en Aragón". [[Cortes of Aragon]].
  22. "Archivo Electoral de Aragón. Cortes de Aragón 1999. Resultados. Aragón". [[Government of Aragon]].
  23. (2 July 1999). "Resolución del Presidente de la Junta Electoral de Aragón, de 25 de junio de 1999, por la que se procede a la publicación del resumen de los resultados de las elecciones a las Cortes de Aragón convocadas por Decreto de 19 de abril de 1999, según los datos que figuran en las actas de proclamación remitidas por las Juntas Electorales Provinciales de la Comunidad Autónoma de Aragón". Official Gazette of Aragon.
  24. (30 July 1999). "Los votos del Par e IU dan al socialista Iglesias la presidencia de Aragón". El País.
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