1992 Lebanese general election
General elections were held in Lebanon between 23 August and 11 October 1992, the first since 1972.[1] Independent candidates won the majority of seats, although most of them were considered members of various blocs. Voter turnout was 30.3%.[2]
This article is part of a series on the politics and government of Lebanon |
---|
|
|
|
Other issues
|
|
Results
Party | Votes | % | Seats | +/– |
---|---|---|---|---|
Independents | 92 | +29 | ||
Hezbollah | 8 | New | ||
Syrian Social Nationalist Party | 6 | +6 | ||
Progressive Socialist Party | 5 | 0 | ||
Amal Movement | 5 | New | ||
Islamic Group | 3 | New | ||
Arab Democratic Party | 1 | New | ||
Al-Ahbash | 1 | New | ||
Toilers League | 1 | New | ||
Popular Nasserist Organization | 1 | New | ||
Promise Party | 1 | New | ||
Arab Socialist Ba'ath Party | 2 | +1 | ||
Armenian Revolutionary Federation | 1 | 0 | ||
Social Democrat Hunchakian Party | 1 | +1 | ||
Armenian Democratic Liberal Party | 0 | 0 | ||
Invalid/blank votes | – | – | – | |
Total | 723,291 | 100 | 128 | +29 |
Source: Nohlen et al. |
Of the 92 independent MPs, 68 were considered to be members of various blocs:[3]
- 12 in the Berri bloc (plus the five Amal Movement MPs)
- 11 in the Hrawi bloc
- 10 in the Salim el-Hoss bloc
- 9 in the Karami bloc
- 6 in the Frangieh bloc
- 5 in the Jumblatt bloc (plus the five Progressive Socialist Party MPs)
- 4 in the Hezbollah bloc (plus the eight Hezbollah MPs)
- 4 in the Murr bloc
- 3 in the Hariri bloc
- 3 in the Armenian Revolutionary Federation bloc (plus one MP from the party)
- 1 in the Hubayqa bloc (plus the Promise Party MP)
gollark: https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/f/f2/Green%27s_function_animation.gif
gollark: I am currently trying to extract useful insight from the detailed but also irritatingly unhelpful on some questions UCAS reports from 2 years ago.
gollark: How awful.
gollark: Prayer... project?
gollark: That would be mean, though.
References
- Dieter Nohlen, Florian Grotz & Christof Hartmann (2001) Elections in Asia: A data handbook, Volume I, p183 ISBN 0-19-924958-X
- Nohlen et al., p184
- Dieter Nohlen, Florian Grotz & Christof Hartmann (2001) Elections in Asia: A data handbook, Volume I, p190 ISBN 0-19-924958-X
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.