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1911 Portuguese National Constituent Assembly election

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

1911 Portuguese National Constituent Assembly election
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National Constituent Assembly elections were held in Portugal on 28 May 1911 following a coup in October 1910.[1] The result was a victory for the Portuguese Republican Party, which won 229 of the 234 seats.[2]

Quick facts All 234 seats in the National Constituent Assembly 118 seats needed for a majority, First party ...
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Electoral system

The country was divided into 51 constituencies for the elections.[3] Lisbon elected 20 members from two 10 member seats using proportional representation and the d'Hondt method, whilst Porto had one 10 member constituency using the same system.[3] The remaining seats were elected from 48 constituencies with three or four members.[3]

Property qualifications for voters were abolished and suffrage was extended to all adults who were either literate or heads of their households, as well as soldiers, who had previously been barred from voting.[4] Bankrupts and "vagabonds" were excluded from the electoral roll.[3]

Candidates for the election had to be literate, and could not run in more than one seat.[3] Party lists had to obtain a certain number of signatures in every constituency (100 in Lisbon and Porto and 25 in other constituencies) in order to contest the election.[3]

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Parties

The table below lists the parties that contested the elections:

More information Party, Ideology ...

Results

More information Party, Votes ...
More information Parliamentary seats ...

Aftermath

The 1911 constitution was subsequently drawn up, which provided for a bicameral parliament and a president elected by a two-thirds vote in parliament.[3]

References

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