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LATVIA
Saeima (Parliament)
ELECTIONS IN 2006

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A historical Archive of past election results for this chamber can be found on a separate page

Parliament name (generic / translated) Saeima / Parliament
Structure of parliament Unicameral
BACKGROUND
Dates of election / renewal (from/to) 7 October 2006
Purpose of elections Elections were held for all the seats in Parliament on the normal expiry of the members' term of office.
The 2006 elections were the first since the country's accession to the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (NATO) in April 2004 and the European Union (EU) in May 2004.

Since gaining independence from the former Soviet Union in August 1991 Latvia had had 12 coalition governments including three since the last elections in October 2002. Soon after those elections a conservative government was formed led by the New Era (JL) party leader Mr. Einars Repse. It included four parties - the JL (26 seats) the Union of Greens and Farmers (ZZS 12 seats) the Latvia First Party (LPP 10 seats) and the Conservative Union for Fatherland and Freedom (TB/LNNK seven seats) - controlling a total of 55 seats in the 100-member parliament. However the coalition collapsed when the JL withdrew in protest at a vote-buying scandal in municipal elections involving the LPP.

A new centre-right coalition comprising the ZZS the LPP and the People's Party (TP which won 20 seats in 2002) was formed in March 2004. However the new Prime Minister Mr. Indulis Emsis (ZZS) resigned when parliament rejected his 2005 budget proposals. In December 2004 Mr. Aigars Kalvitis became Prime Minister leading the same three-party coalition. For Civil Rights (PCTVL) a leftist party representing the Russian minority that had won 25 seats in 2002 did not participate in any of the three governments.

In all 19 political parties and 1 024 candidates contested the 2006 elections. The LPP formed an electoral coalition with the Latvian Way (LC) party and pledged to work for the country's stability by promoting the free market economy. It also promised to work closely with the EU and to adopt the euro by 2008. Its main rivals were the JL and two parties representing the Russian minority: the PCTVL and the Concord Centre (SC also known as Harmony Centre) a leftist party formed in 2005 that pledged to promote linguistic diversity in education.

In all 60.08 per cent of eligible voters turned out for the polls down from the 71 per cent recorded in 2002.

The final results gave a narrow majority of 51 seats to the parties in the outgoing governmental coalition the first time that a government was returned to office since independence in 1991. The opposition JL lost eight seats while the PCTVL lost 19 and the newly created SC won 17.

The new parliament held its first session on 6 November 2006 and elected former Prime Minister Indulis Emsis as its new Speaker.

On 7 November the parliament re-elected Mr. Aigars Kalvitis as Prime Minister. He subsequently formed a new government comprising the TP the ZZS the LPP-LC and the TB/LNNK which had won 8 seats thus controlling 59 seats in the 100-member parliament.

Note on PARLINE:
"For Civil Rights" is officially known as "For Human Rights in United Latvia".
STATISTICS
Voter turnout
Round no 17 October 2006
Number of registered electors
Voters
Blank or invalid ballot papers
Valid votes
1'490'636
908'979 (60.98%)

901'665
Notes The number of "voters" refers to registered electors who received ballot papers at the polling station. 907 460 of them actually cast their ballots.
Distribution of votes
Round no 1
Political Group Candidates Votes %
People's Party (TP) 65 177'481
Union of Greens and Farmers (ZZS) 70 151'595
New Era (JL) 86 148'602
Concord Centre (SC) 84 130'887
Electoral union of Latvia first party (LPP) and party Latvian way (LC) 64 77'869
Conservative Union for Fatherland and Freedom (TB/LNNK) 89 62'989
For Civil Rights (PCTVL) 71 54'684
Distribution of seats
Round no 1
Political Group Total
People's Party (TP) 23
Union of Greens and Farmers (ZZS) 18
New Era (JL) 18
Concord Centre (SC) 17
Electoral union of Latvia first party (LPP) and party Latvian way (LC) 10
Conservative Union for Fatherland and Freedom (TB/LNNK) 8
For Civil Rights (PCTVL) 6
Distribution of seats according to sex
Men
Women
Percent of women
81
19
19.00%
Distribution of seats according to age
21 to 30 years
31 to 40 years
41 to 50 years
51 to 60 years
61 to 70 years
Over 70 years
4
17
38
25
15
1
Distribution of seats according to profession
Civil/public servants/administrators (including social/development workers) 29
Business/trade/industry employees including executives 12
Educators 11
Legal professions 11
Economists 6
Medical professions (doctors dentists nurses) 6
Liberal professions (including artists authors) and sports professionals 6
Media-related professions (journalists/publishers) 6
Scientists 5
Farmers/agricultural workers (including wine growers) 4
Engineers/PC experts 1
Bankers (including invest bankers)/accountants 1
Architects 1
Clerical occupations 1
Comments
Sources:
- http://web.cvk.lv/
- Parliament (30.10.2006 01.01.2008 01.01.2010)

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