Election information for the blind and sight-impaired people Main Page / Previous elections / Parliamentary election 1998 The Constitution of the Republic of Hungary declares that the Republic of Hungary is an independent and democratic constitutional state, where all power belongs to the people, who exercise popular sovereignty through elected representatives as well as directly. The Constitution stipulates the date of the parliamentary election: the general election of Members of Parliament is to be held in April or May of the fourth year following the election of the previous Parliament. The President of the Republic shall set the actual date of the election. The Act on the election of Members of Parliament, enacted in 1989, established a two-round, mixed election system in Hungary, combining elements of the single-member-constituency and the list election systems. The Hungarian Parliament is made up of 386 members, of which 176, 152 and 58 are elected, respectively, in single-member constituencies and on the basis of the district and national lists. Accordingly, the Hungarian electoral system is structured as follows: - 176 single-member constituencies: the country is divided
into 176 single-member constituencies, a single candidate to be elected Member
of Parliament in each constituency. Important elements of the electoral system include the mandate threshold, which essentially means that only those parties are allocated seats from the district and national lists, which have obtained more than 5 percent, on a national basis, of the valid district list votes. The nomination system has an important additional filtering role
by ensuring that only the political forces having the support of a substantial
part of the society should get into Parliament. 1. In single-member constituencies, independent and party
candidates should accumulate an equal number of at least 750 valid proposal
coupons in order to be eligible. The system of the allocation of seats Single-member constituencies are based on the absolute majority principle, i.e. the candidate having obtained more than half of the votes cast in the constituency shall become Member of Parliament. In the absence of such candidate, a second election round is held in that constituency. For the second election round, the law does not specify absolute majority, thus the seat is obtained by the candidate obtaining the highest number of votes. In district constituencies, party list candidates obtain seats in the proportion of the votes cast, according to the order of the ballot-paper (fixed list). The seats are allocated by the Hagenbach-Bischoff method, provided that the lists failing to accumulate more than 5 percent of the votes cast for all party lists, totalled on a national basis, shall not be eligible. On the national list (compensatory list), the parties are allocated seats in the proportion of their surplus votes. Surplus votes include the votes cast in single-member constituencies and not gaining a seat in either election round, and the votes cast in district constituencies – in a valid election round – which proved insufficient for a seat or which exceeded the number of votes utilised for obtaining the seat. Seats are allocated by the d’Hondt method, provided that the parties failing to reach the 5-percent parliamentary threshold shall not obtain a seat on the national list.
Distribution of seats in Parliament as the result of the 1998 parliamentary elections Total
number of Members of Parliament: 386 Participation
in the 1st and 2nd rounds of the parliamentary elections
in 1994 1st
round: 68,90% 1998 1st
round: 56,26% |