Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
politics

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

2009 Luxembourg general election

none

2009 Luxembourg general election

none

FieldValue
election_name2009 Luxembourg general election
countryLuxembourg
previous_election[2004](2004-luxembourg-general-election)
next_election[2013](2013-luxembourg-general-election)
election_date7 June 2009
seats_for_electionAll 60 seats in the Chamber of Deputies
31 seats were needed for a majority
turnout90.93% ( 0.99 pp)
leader1Jean-Claude Juncker
party1Christian Social People's Party
last_election124
seats126
percentage137.34
leader2Jean Asselborn
party2Luxembourg Socialist Workers' Party
last_election214
seats213
percentage223.00
leader3Claude Meisch
party3Democratic Party (Luxembourg)
last_election310
seats39
percentage314.31
leader4*No spitzenkandidat*
party4The Greens (Luxembourg)
last_election47
percentage411.48
seats47
leader5Gast Gibéryen
party5Alternative Democratic Reform Party
last_election55
percentage57.69
seats54
leader7*No spitzenkandidat*
party7The Left (Luxembourg)
last_election70
percentage73.61
seats71
titlePrime Minister
posttitlePrime Minister after
before_electionJean-Claude Juncker
before_partyChristian Social People's Party
after_electionJean-Claude Juncker
after_partyChristian Social People's Party

31 seats were needed for a majority

General elections were held in Luxembourg on 7 June 2009, together with the 2009 election to the European Parliament. All sixty members of the Chamber of Deputies were elected for five years. The polls were topped by the Christian Social People's Party, which built upon its already high number of seats to achieve a commanding victory, with the highest vote share and number of seats of any party since 1954. Incumbent prime minister Jean-Claude Juncker, who was the longest-serving head of government in the European Union, renewed the coalition agreement with Deputy Prime Minister and Luxembourg Socialist Workers' Party leader Jean Asselborn and formed the Juncker–Asselborn II Government, which was sworn in on 23 July 2009.

Parties

Seven parties ran candidates in all four circonscriptions, of which, five were already represented in the Chamber of Deputies: the Christian Social People's Party (CSV), the Luxembourg Socialist Workers' Party (LSAP), the Democratic Party (DP), the Greens, and the Alternative Democratic Reform Party (ADR). Two parties that were not then represented also ran: The Left and the Communist Party (KPL). In addition, the Citizens' List, which was headed by current independent deputy Aly Jaerling, ran in two constituencies.

List #PartyRunning inSeatsCentreEstNordSud[2004](2004-luxembourg-general-election)Pre-election
1Communist Party of Luxembourg}}"Communist Party (KPL)[[File:Yes check.svg18px]][[File:Yes check.svg18px]][[File:Yes check.svg18px]][[File:Yes check.svg18px]]00
2The Greens (Luxembourg)}}"Greens[[File:Yes check.svg18px]][[File:Yes check.svg18px]][[File:Yes check.svg18px]][[File:Yes check.svg18px]]77
3Alternative Democratic Reform Party}}"Alternative Democratic Reform Party (ADR)[[File:Yes check.svg18px]][[File:Yes check.svg18px]][[File:Yes check.svg18px]][[File:Yes check.svg18px]]5Citizens' List]].
4Luxembourg Socialist Workers' Party}}"Luxembourg Socialist Workers' Party (LSAP)[[File:Yes check.svg18px]][[File:Yes check.svg18px]][[File:Yes check.svg18px]][[File:Yes check.svg18px]]1414
5Democratic Party (Luxembourg)}}"Democratic Party (DP)[[File:Yes check.svg18px]][[File:Yes check.svg18px]][[File:Yes check.svg18px]][[File:Yes check.svg18px]]1010
6The Left (Luxembourg)}}"The Left[[File:Yes check.svg18px]][[File:Yes check.svg18px]][[File:Yes check.svg18px]][[File:Yes check.svg18px]]00
7Christian Social People's Party}}"Christian Social People's Party (CSV)[[File:Yes check.svg18px]][[File:Yes check.svg18px]][[File:Yes check.svg18px]][[File:Yes check.svg18px]]2424
8Citizens' List}}"Citizens' List[[File:Red x.svg18px]][[File:Red x.svg18px]][[File:Yes check.svg18px]][[File:Yes check.svg18px]]01

Results

:\mbox{party's} ; \mbox{votes} \times \frac{\mbox{total} ; \mbox{of} ; \mbox{valid} ; \mbox{ballots}}{\mbox{total} ; \mbox{of} ; \mbox{valid} ; \mbox{votes}} }}

By locality

The CSV won a landslide victory, winning pluralities in 112 of Luxembourg's 116 communes, with the LSAP winning pluralities in four.

As in 2004, the CSV won pluralities in each of Luxembourg's four circonscriptions, and pluralities in nearly all of Luxembourg's communes. Only four communes didn't register pluralities for the CSV (down from seven in 2004). Wiltz in the north and Dudelange, Kayl, and Rumelange in the southern Red Lands voted for the LSAP.

The CSV's performance improved most markedly in Centre, where it increased its vote from 35.5% to 38.6%. In Centre, the CSV received almost twice as many votes as the Democratic Party in, only ten years after the DP won a plurality by over 2%. It gained one extra seat in Centre, and another in Est.

Votes by constituency

ConstituencyCSVLSAPDPGréngADRLénkKPLBLChristian Social People's Party}};" colspan="2"Luxembourg Socialist Workers' Party}};" colspan="2"Democratic Party (Luxembourg)}};" colspan="2"The Greens (Luxembourg)}};" colspan="2"Alternative Democratic Reform Party}};" colspan="2"The Left (Luxembourg)}};" colspan="2"Communist Party of Luxembourg}};" colspan="2"Citizens' List (Luxembourg)}};" colspan="2"
Centre390,05738.6180,19617.8196,46919.4133,49013.263,7906.335,4113.511,0371.1
East72,03041.528,18316.226,79115.424,57714.216,5109.53,9112.31,6851.0
North114,65839.650,40817.452,65318.231,22310.829,71010.35,7852.02,8361.02,2860.8
South55262335.6437,04328.2156,90710.1158,09810.2122,7347.964,0774.133,5502.226,2261.7

Seats by constituency

ConstituencyTotal
seatsSeats wonCSVLSAPDPGréngADRLénkChristian Social People's Party}};"Luxembourg Socialist Workers' Party}};"Democratic Party (Luxembourg)}};"The Greens (Luxembourg)}};"Alternative Democratic Reform Party}};"The Left (Luxembourg)}};"Centre21East7North9South23
94431
4111
41211
972221

Aftermath

The CSV's large margin of victory guaranteed that it would form the government once again, with Jean-Claude Juncker appointed as formateur and likely to remain as Prime Minister. Before the election, Juncker, Europe's longest-serving head of government, had told his party that he intended to step down as Minister for Finances, to be replaced by Luc Frieden. This brought into question his chairmanship of the Europe-wide Eurogroup, which he had chaired since 2005. However, he has since stated that he would remain in charge of monetary policy and relations with the European Central Bank.

The CSV was in a strong enough position to form a coalition with any one of three parties: LSAP (partner in the Juncker-Asselborn Ministry I), the DP (partner in the Juncker-Polfer Ministry), and the Greens (who had never previously entered the government). However, the DP and Greens had both ruled out the possibility of a coalition with the CSV, leaving only the previous coalition partners, LSAP, in the running. The CSV and LSAP formed a coalition agreement, with Juncker as Prime Minister and Jean Asselborn as Deputy Prime Minister, with the new government forming on 23 July.

Notes

References

References

  1. The Left is technically not a party, but an [[electoral alliance]].
  2. [[Aly Jaerling]] was elected as a member of the [[Alternative Democratic Reform Party]] in 2004, but now sits as an independent and is running for [[Citizens' List (Luxembourg). Citizens' List]].
  3. [[Dieter Nohlen]] & Philip Stöver (2010) ''Elections in Europe: A data handbook'', p2051 {{ISBN. 978-3-8329-5609-7
  4. (4 June 2009). "Juncker précise qu'il ne souhaite pas quitter la présidence de l'Eurogroupe". [[Le Monde]].
  5. (8 June 2009). "ECOFIN: EU's Juncker Wants To Remain Head of Eurogroup". [[The Wall Street Journal]].
  6. Glesener, Marc. (9 June 2009). "DP und Déi Gréng sagen Nein". [[Luxemburger Wort]].
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about 2009 Luxembourg general election — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report