Explore more publications!

The Results of the First Democratic Elections in Slovenia

SLOVENIA, March 31 - The 11th parliamentary elections in the independent state of Slovenia are now behind us. The next step, in accordance with the electoral timetable, is for the State Election Commission to present the final voting results and draw up the official record of the elections, which is to be completed between March 31 and April 7, 2026. Considering the current political developments, it seems appropriate to use this month's archivalia to look back and recall the first post-war multi-party democratic elections in Slovenia. Held between April 8 and 22, 1990, these elections played a pivotal role in Slovenia's path to independence.

Today, documents and materials related to this historical event are preserved by the Archives of the Republic of Slovenia in the archival fonds of the Republic Election Commission (SI AS 142). They attract growing public interest on each anniversary of the event, particularly with regard to which candidates and political parties voters trusted most during this pivotal period in Slovenian history.  

»People Got the Power« resonated throughout the Slovenian media following the first democratic elections. Journalist Tanja Starič wrote in the major newspaper Delo that »the phenomena of this first elections is that everyone felt like a winner – and, in a way, they were, because the winner of the elections was democracy, something Slovenian society at the time had never experienced before.«

Using the so-called combined electoral system, voters elected 240 delegates to the three chambers of the then Assembly: the Sociopolitical Chamber, the Chamber of Municipalities, and the Chamber of Associated Labour. A proportional electoral system was used for elections to the Sociopolitical Chamber (meaning that each party received a number of seats proportional to its share of the votes). A simple single-round plurality system was used for elections to the Chamber of Municipalities (the winner being the candidate who received the most votes), and a two-round plurality system was used for elections to the Chamber of Associated Labour (the winner being the party or the candidate that secured more than half of the votes cast).

April 1990 was election month. On April 8, voters elected representatives to the Sociopolitical Chamber and the Chamber of Municipalities. At the same time, they also elected four members of the Presidency, as well as the President of the Presidency of the Republic of Slovenia. On April 12, elections for delegates to the Chamber of Associated Labour were held, followed on April 22 by elections for delegates to local community councils, municipal sociopolitical chambers, as well as the second round of elections for delegates to the Chamber of Municipalities, and the second round of elections for the President of the Presidency. Voters for the delegates to the Sociopolitical Chamber had their work cut out for them, as more than 900 candidates competed for just 80 delegate seats. In practice, this meant that voters in each electoral district could choose from 15 or 16 political parties and more than 95 individual candidates on their lists. 

Based on the minutes received from electoral commissions of the electoral districts for the elections to the Sociopolitical Chamber of the Assembly of the Republic of Slovenia, as well as from commissions overseeing the elections of representatives of national communities to the chambers of the Assembly, the Republic Electoral Commission, at its session on April 16, 1990, determined the following: a total of 1,241,212 voters participated in the elections of delegates to the Sociopolitical Chamber on April 8, 1990. A total of 1,238,189 ballots were cast, of which 1,128,435 were valid and 109,754 invalid. As expected, voter turnout was high, with approximately three quarters of eligible voters casting their votes (76.2%). Individual candidate lists received the following number of votes: 

Legal Disclaimer:

EIN Presswire provides this news content "as is" without warranty of any kind. We do not accept any responsibility or liability for the accuracy, content, images, videos, licenses, completeness, legality, or reliability of the information contained in this article. If you have any complaints or copyright issues related to this article, kindly contact the author above.

Share us

on your social networks:
AGPs

Get the latest news on this topic.

SIGN UP FOR FREE TODAY

No Thanks

By signing to this email alert, you
agree to our Terms & Conditions