Finnish parliamentary election, 1995

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

Parliamentary elections were held in Finland on 19 March 1995.[1]

The previous centre-right, non-socialist cabinet fell as the Social Democratic Party (SDP) made strong gains and achieved the best result of any party since World War II, winning 63 of the 200 seats in the Eduskunta. The main reason for the defeat of the Centre Party-led coalition was its unpopular austerity program and lingering effects of the early 1990s recession.

After the election, a five party "Rainbow Coalition" was formed, between the SDP, National Coalition Party, Left Alliance, Swedish People's Party and the Green League, with SDP leader Paavo Lipponen appointed Prime Minister.

Results

Party Votes % Seats +/–
Social Democratic Party785,63728.363+15
Centre Party552,00319.844–11
National Coalition Party497,62417.939–1
Left Alliance310,34011.222+3
Green League181,1986.59–1
Swedish People's Party142,8745.1110
Finnish Christian League82,3113.07–1
Young Finns78,0662.82New
Finnish Rural Party36,1851.31–6
Alliance for Free Finland28,0671.00New
Liberal People's Party16,2470.60–1
Åland Coalition9,9050.410
Women's Party7,9190.30New
Ecological Party the Greens7,8650.31New
Natural Law Party6,8190.20New
Pensioners for People5,1240.200
Communist Workers' Party – For Peace and Socialism4,7840.200
Pensioners' Party3,9740.100
Joint Responsibility Party1,7060.100
Others11,7970.40
Invalid/blank votes22,681
Total2,803,6021002000
Registered voters/turnout4,088,35868.6
Source: Tilastokeskus[2]
Popular vote
SDP
 
28.25%
KESK
 
19.85%
KOK
 
17.89%
VAS
 
11.16%
VIHR
 
6.52%
RKP
 
5.14%
SKL
 
2.96%
NUOR
 
2.81%
SMP
 
1.30%
VSL
 
1.01%
Others
 
3.11%
Parliament seats
SDP
 
31.50%
KESK
 
22.00%
KOK
 
19.50%
VAS
 
11.00%
RKP
 
5.50%
VIHR
 
4.50%
SKL
 
3.50%
NUOR
 
1.00%
SMP
 
0.50%
Others
 
1.00%

References

  1. Nohlen, D & Stöver, P (2010) Elections in Europe: A data handbook, p606 ISBN 978-3-8329-5609-7
  2. Eduskuntavaalit 1927–2003 Tilastokeskus 2004
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