Jump to content

February 1993 Liechtenstein general election

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
February 1993 Liechtenstein general election
Liechtenstein
← 1989 7 February 1993 October 1993 →

All 25 seats in the Landtag
13 seats needed for a majority
Turnout87.54%
Party Leader Vote % Seats +/–
FBP Markus Büchel 44.19 12 0
VU Hans Brunhart 45.43 11 −2
FL Wolfgang Marxer 10.38 2 +2
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.
Results by consistency
Prime Minister before Prime Minister after
Hans Brunhart
VU
Markus Büchel
FBP

General elections were held in Liechtenstein on 7 February 1993. Although the Patriotic Union won the most votes, the Progressive Citizens' Party won the most seats, whilst the Free List obtained representation in the Landtag the first time, being the first third party to gain seats in the Landtag. Voter turnout was 88%.[1] Fresh elections were subsequently held in October.

Electoral system

[edit]

The 25 members of the Landtag were elected by open list proportional representation from two constituencies, Oberland with 15 seats and Unterland with 10 seats. Only parties and lists with more than 8% of the votes cast in each constituency were eligible to win seats in the Landtag.[2]

Candidates

[edit]
Oberland FBP VU FL
  • Alois Beck
  • Christian Brunhart
  • Thomas Büchel
  • Roman Hermann
  • Xaver Hoch
  • Theo Jäger
  • Eugen Kranz
  • Guido Meier
  • Berthold Nägele
  • Werner Ospelt
  • Bruno Risch
  • Martha Tschikof-Bühler
  • David Vogt
  • Dieter Walch
  • Ernst Walch
  • Norbert Bürzle
  • Alice Fehr-Heidegger
  • Kuno Frick
  • Walter Hartmann
  • Lorenz Heeb
  • Paul Kindle
  • Karlheinz Ospelt
  • Ruth Ospelt-Beck
  • Volker Rheinbeger
  • Monika Rohrer-Nutt
  • Alfons Schädler
  • Walter Schädler
  • Xaver Schädler
  • Peter Wolff
  • Evelyne Bermann
  • Claudia Heeb-Fleck
  • Christel Hilti-Kaufmann
  • René Hasler
  • Hilmar Hoch
  • Konrad Kindle
  • Clemens Laternser
  • Nikolaus Ruther
  • Paul Vogt
Unterland FBP VU FL
  • Toni Batliner
  • Josef Büchel
  • Otmar Hasler
  • Anton Heeb
  • Franz Hoop
  • Carl Kaiser
  • Gabriel Marxer
  • Gebhard Näscher
  • Martha Spiegel-Oehri
  • Renate Wohlwend
  • Manfred Biedermann
  • Hansjörg Goop
  • Christl Gstöhl-Jehle
  • Egon Gstöhl
  • Arnold Kind
  • Helmuth Kind
  • Oswald Kranz
  • Linde Oehri-Meier
  • Theo Oehri
  • Walter Oehry
Source: Liechtensteiner Volksblatt

Results

[edit]
PartyVotes%Seats+/–
Patriotic Union73,21745.4311–2
Progressive Citizens' Party71,20944.19120
Free List16,72410.382+2
Total161,150100.00250
Valid votes12,09298.67
Invalid/blank votes1631.33
Total votes12,255100.00
Registered voters/turnout13,99987.54
Source: Nohlen & Stöver[3]

By electoral district

[edit]
Electoral district Seats Party Elected members Votes % Seats
Oberland 15 Patriotic Union
50,982 42.25 7
Progressive Citizens' Party
56,507 46.83 7
Free List 13,186 10.93 1
Unterland 10 Progressive Citizens' Party
  • Otmar Hasler
  • Renate Wohlwend
  • Gabriel Marxer
  • Carl Kaiser
  • Josef Büchel
20,214 49.99 5
Patriotic Union
  • Oswald Kranz
  • Manfred Biedermann
  • Egon Gstöhl
  • Arnold Kind
16,692 41.28 4
Free List Wolfgang Marxer 3534 8.74 1
Source: Liechtensteiner Volksblatt

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Dataset: Liechtenstein: Parliamentary Election 1993 - February Archived 2013-10-04 at the Wayback Machine European Election Database
  2. ^ Marxer, Wilfred; Frommelt, Fabian (31 December 2011). "Wahlsysteme". Historisches Lexikon des Fürstentums Liechtenstein (in German). Retrieved 17 November 2024.
  3. ^ Dieter Nohlen & Philip Stöver (2010) Elections in Europe: A data handbook, pp1181–1183 ISBN 978-3-8329-5609-7