Canarian parliamentary election, 2003
Canarian parliamentary election, 2003
|
|
|
All 60 seats in the Parliament of Canarias 31 seats needed for a majority |
Registered |
1,439,784 8.2% |
Turnout |
930,449 (64.6%) 1.9 pp |
|
First party |
Second party |
Third party |
|
|
|
|
Leader |
Adán Martín |
José Manuel Soria |
Juan Carlos Alemán |
Party |
CC |
PP |
PSOE |
Leader since |
2003 |
16 July 1999 |
2000 |
Last election |
26 seats, 37.3%[lower-alpha 1] |
15 seats, 27.1% |
19 seats, 24.0% |
Seats won |
23 |
17 |
17 |
Seat change |
3 |
2 |
2 |
Popular vote |
304,413 |
283,186 |
235,234 |
Percentage |
32.9% |
30.6% |
25.4% |
Swing |
4.4 pp |
3.5 pp |
1.4 pp |
|
|
Island-level units won by CC (yellow), PP (blue), PSOE (red) and FNC (purple) |
|
The 2003 Canarian parliamentary election was held on Sunday, 25 May 2003, to elect the 6th Canarian Parliament, the unicameral regional legislature of the Spanish autonomous community of the Canary Islands. At stake were all 60 seats in the Parliament, determining the President of the Canary Islands.
Electoral system
The 60 members of the Canarian Parliament were elected in 7 multi-member districts using the D'Hondt method and a closed-list proportional representation system. Unlike other regions, districts did not coincide with provincial limits, being determined by law for each of the main islands to become a district of its own. The electoral system came regulated under the Autonomous Statute of Autonomy. Each district was assigned a fixed set of seats, distributed as follows: El Hierro (3), Fuerteventura (7), Gran Canaria (15), La Gomera (4), La Palma (8), Lanzarote (8) and Tenerife (15).
Voting was on the basis of universal suffrage in a secret ballot. Only lists polling above 30% of the total vote in each district or above 6% in all of the community (which include blank ballots—for none of the above) were entitled to enter the seat distribution.[1]
Results
Overall
← Summary of the 25 May 2003 Canarian Parliament election results →
|
Party |
Vote |
Seats |
Votes |
% |
±pp |
Won |
+/− |
|
Canarian Coalition (CC)[lower-alpha 1] |
304,413 | 32.90 | 4.36 |
23 | 3 |
|
People's Party (PP) |
283,186 | 30.61 | 3.48 |
17 | 2 |
|
Spanish Socialist Workers' Party (PSOE) |
235,234 | 25.42 | 1.39 |
17 | 2 |
|
|
Canarian Nationalist Federation (FNC) |
44,703 | 4.83 | 0.02 |
3 | 3 |
|
The Greens of Canarias (LV) |
18,340 | 1.98 | 0.52 |
0 | ±0 |
|
Canarian United Left (IUC) |
12,128 | 1.31 | 1.43 |
0 | ±0 |
|
Canarian People's Alternative (APCa) |
6,737 | 0.73 | New |
0 | ±0 |
|
25 May Citizen Alternative (AC25M) |
2,719 | 0.29 | New |
0 | ±0 |
|
Communist Party of the Canarian People (PCPC-PCPE) |
1,776 | 0.19 | New |
0 | ±0 |
|
Humanist Party (PH) |
1,322 | 0.14 | 0.02 |
0 | ±0 |
|
Lanzarote Assembly (AC) |
964 | 0.10 | New |
0 | ±0 |
Parties with less than 0.1% of the vote |
1,920 |
0.21 |
– |
0 |
±0 |
|
Tinerfenian Union (UT) |
571 | 0.06 | New |
0 | ±0 |
|
Canarian Pensionist Tagoror (TPC) |
449 | 0.05 | 0.03 |
0 | ±0 |
|
The People (LG) |
448 | 0.05 | New |
0 | ±0 |
|
National Democracy (DN) |
409 | 0.04 | New |
0 | ±0 |
|
Centrist Union (UC) |
43 | 0.00 | 0.53 |
0 | ±0 |
|
Blank ballots |
11,806 | 1.28 | 0.23 |
|
|
Total |
925,248 | 100.00 | |
60 | ±0 |
|
Valid votes |
925,248 | 99.44 | 0.02 |
|
Invalid votes |
5,201 | 0.56 | 0.02 |
Votes cast / turnout |
930,449 | 64.62 | 1.88 |
Abstentions |
509,335 | 35.38 | 1.88 |
Registered voters |
1,439,784 | |
|
Source: Argos Information Portal |
Vote share |
|
|
|
|
|
CC |
|
32.90% |
PP |
|
30.61% |
PSOE |
|
25.42% |
FNC |
|
4.83% |
LV |
|
1.98% |
IUC |
|
1.31% |
Others |
|
1.67% |
Blank ballots |
|
1.28% |
Parliamentary seats |
|
|
|
|
|
CC |
|
38.33% |
PP |
|
28.33% |
PSOE |
|
28.33% |
FNC |
|
5.00% |
Notes
- 1 2 Canarian Coalition results are compared to the Canarian Coalition and Independent Herrenian Group totals in the 1999 election.
References