1931 Bulgarian parliamentary election

Parliamentary elections were held in Bulgaria on 21 June 1931.[1] The result was a victory for the Popular Bloc, an alliance of the Bulgarian Agrarian National Union (Dragiev), the Democratic Party, the National Liberal Party (Petrov) and the Radical Democratic Party, which won 151 of the 273 seats. Voter turnout was 85.2%.[2]

This article is part of a series on the
politics and government of
Bulgaria

This would be the last officially partisan election held in Bulgaria before World War II (the 1939 elections were officially nonpartisan, but candidates representing parties ran as individuals). By the time of the next elections in which parties were formally allowed to take part, in 1945, the country had been through two dictatorships and a third, Communist one was rapidly consolidating.[3] As a result, the 1931 election was also the last free election held in the country until 1990.

Results

Party Votes % Seats +/–
Popular Bloc626,55348.4151+105
Democratic Alliance-National Liberal Party403,68631.278−96
Bulgarian Communist Party168,28113.031New
United Labour Social Democratic Party27,3232.10New
Socialist Federation26,5012.00New
BZNS (Tomov)-Craftsmen-Radical Democratic Party20,8051.60−6
United People's Progressive Party8,1520.600
Independents11,9800.900
Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization8+1
Bulgarian Social Democratic Workers Party (Broad Socialists)5−5
Invalid/blank votes22,228
Total1,315,509100273+12
Source: Nohlen & Stöver
gollark: Bees approach.
gollark: No, this is also not possible unless you just somehow reverse the last bit.
gollark: Well, we can brute force each bit separately I think.
gollark: Oh. Hmm. It isn't 32 bits of output.
gollark: The entire hash is a few tens of arithmetic operations in total, and there are 2^32 possible outputs, so it should be bruteforceable quite fast.

References

  1. Dieter Nohlen & Philip Stöver (2010) Elections in Europe: A data handbook, p368 ISBN 978-3-8329-5609-7
  2. Nohlen & Stöver, p380
  3. Bulgaria: a country study. Library of Congress Federal Research Division, December 1989.
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