- Croatian parliamentary election, 1990
-
Croatian parliamentary election, 1990 22 April and 7 May 1990 → 1992
membersAll 80 seats to the Social-Political Council
All 116 seats to the Municipalities Council
All 160 seats to the Associated Labour Council
Prime Minister before election
Antun Milović
SKHSubsequent Prime Minister
Parliamentary elections were held in Croatia on 22 April 1990, with a second round of voting on 6 May.[1] The first free elections since multi-party politics were introduced, they resulted in a victory for the Croatian Democratic Union, which won 55 of the 80 seats. In the first round voter turnout was 84.5%.[2]
Contents
Background
The elections were called by the Communist government of Croatia after constitutional amendments allowing multi-party elections had been passed earlier in the year. The form of parliament that was about to be elected remained unchanged from 1974 Constitution:
- Council of Municipalities (Vijeće općina, VO)
- Council of Socio-Political Organisations (Društveno-političko vijeće, DPV)
- Council of Associated Labour (Vijeće udruženog rada, VUR)
The latter represented "working people" of various professions and because of that special elections were held on Monday, allowing voters to cast their ballots at their respective workplaces.
The new electoral law, devised by Smiljko Sokol and modelled on French electoral legislation, introduced a runoff voting system. A candidate getting more than 50% would win the first round outright but failing that, all candidates winning at least 7% of the votes could enter the second round.
Elections for Parliament were also held in conjunction with elections for municipal assemblies (with an identical runoff voting system).
Campaign
At the very start of the campaign three major blocs emerged:
- The first one was dominated by League of Communists of Croatia, re-branded as the League of Communists of Croatia-Party for Democratic Change (which has the initials SDP in Croatian) and led by Ivica Račan.
- The second was Coalition of People's Accord, very broad coalition of small parties representing Communist-dissidents, liberals, anti-Communists, and moderate nationalists gathered around Croatian Spring leaders Savka Dabčević-Kučar and Miko Tripalo.
- The third group was dominated by more radical Croatian nationalists and led by Franjo Tuđman and his Croatian Democratic Union party (which has the initials HDZ in Croatian).
Some sections of Croatia that would later become Republic of Serbian Krajina also saw emergence of Serb Democratic Party.
The electoral law and superior organisational abilities of HDZ founders gradually narrowed the contest down to only two options – SDP and HDZ. The former tried to win by describing the latter as dangerous nationalist extremists and relying on votes of ethnic Serbs. The latter very skillfully used both decades of Croatian dissatisfaction with Communism and Yugoslavia and fear of emerging Serb nationalism embodied by Slobodan Milošević.
The campaign got very heated, but was surprisingly non-violent, except in ethnically mixed areas where the first incidents (which in retrospect can be seen as the harbingers of the full-scale warfare of a year later) took place. One of such incidents happened in city of Benkovac, where an ethnic Serb attacked Franjo Tuđman during election rally.
Results
The first results were announced in the evening of 22 April. Although the HDZ failed to win an outright majority in the first round, the number of seats won and percentage of votes made it clear that the SDP was going to lose power to the HDZ and that it was likely that the HDZ would become the governing party for some time to come. This triggered a mass defection of government officials to the HDZ.
Yet, despite this historic setback, there was relatively little change in actual percentage of votes in second round, mostly because Coalition of People's Accord candidates who had qualified refused to quit the race. This allowed SDP to win some constituencies, especially in urban, middle-class and ethnic Serb areas.
The final outcome was indisputably clear. HDZ won almost two thirds of the seats and clear mandate to push any legislative and constitutional agenda. SDP became the second largest party in Parliament. The minuscule remainder of the seats was shared by the Coalition of People's Accord, the Serb Democratic Party and a few independent candidates.
Results of the election for the Social-Political Council of the Socialist Republic of Croatia Party First round Second round Total
seatsVotes % Seats Votes % Seats Croatian Democratic Union (HDZ) 1,201,122 41.9 55 League of Communists of Croatia – Party for Democratic Change-Socialist Party of Croatia (SKH-SDP - SSH) 1,001,967 35.0 20 Coalition of People's Accord (KNS) 439,372 15.3 3 Serb Democratic Party (SDS) 46,418 1.6 1 Yugoslav Independent Democratic Party 13,560 0.5 0 European Green List 12,282 0.4 0 Rijeka Democratic Union 8,008 0.3 0 Other parties 23,855 0.8 0 Independents 118,147 4.1 1 Invalid/blank votes 115,852 – – – – – Total 2,980,663 100 80 Source: Nohlen & Stöver Overall results of the election for all three houses of parliament of the Socialist Republic of Croatia Party Total seats HDZ 205 SKH-SDP 107 KNS (HSLS, SDSH, HKDS, HDS, non-party members) 21 SDS 5 Independents and minorities 13 Total 351 Source: HINA[3] Aftermath
The newly elected Parliament convened on 30 May, a date later celebrated as Statehood Day – a public holiday in Croatia.
Sources
- Grdešić, Ivan; Kasapović, Mirjana; Šiber, Ivan; Zakošek, Nenad (1991). Hrvatska u izborima '90. [Croatia in the Election of '90]. Zagreb, Croatia: Naprijed. ISBN 863490279X.
References
- ^ Nohlen, D & Stöver, P (2010) Elections in Europe: A data handbook, p410 ISBN 9873832956097
- ^ Nohlen & Stöver, p414
- ^ "Predsjednik Josipović na svečanosti u prigodi obilježavanja Dana Hrvatskog sabora i 20-te obljetnice prvog demokratskog izabranog višestranačkog Sabora RH" (in Croatian). HINA. Office of the President of Croatia. 2010-05-27. http://www.predsjednik.hr/27052012. Retrieved 2011-11-18.
Elections and referendums in Croatia Kingdom of Croatia-Slavonia Kingdom of Dalmatia Parliamentary elections Presidential elections Chamber of Counties elections Local elections Referendums (For the 1918–1989 period see Elections in Yugoslavia)Categories:- Elections in Croatia
- 1990 in Croatia
- 1990 elections in Europe
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