Cypriot legislative election, 2016

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Cypriot legislative election, 2016

← 2011 22 May 2016

56 of 80 seats in the House of Representatives
  First party Second party Third party
  Averof Neophytou 2009.jpg Andros-Kyprianou-2011.jpg Male portrait placeholder cropped.jpg
Leader Averof Neophytou Andros Kyprianou Nikolas Papadopoulos
Party DISY AKEL DIKO
Leader since 2013 2009 2013
Last election 20 seats, 34.3% 19 seats, 32.7% 9 seats, 15.8%
Seats won 18 16 9
Seat change Decrease 2 Decrease 3 Steady 0
Popular vote 107,824 90,206 50,924
Percentage 30.7% 25.7% 14.5%
Swing Decrease 3.7% Decrease 7.1% Decrease 1.3%

  Fourth party Fifth party Sixth party
  Male portrait placeholder cropped.jpg Giorgos Lillikas Senate of Poland.JPG Female portrait placeholder cropped.jpg
Leader Marinos Sizopoulos Giorgos Lillikas Eleni Theocharous
Party EDEK SYPOL Solidarity
Leader since 2015 2013 2016
Last election 5 seats, 8.9% Did not stand Did not stand
Seats won 3 3 3
Seat change Decrease 2 Increase 3 Increase 1
Popular vote 21,730 21,109 18,424
Percentage 6.2% 6.0% 5.2%
Swing Decrease 2.8% Increase 6.0% Increase 5.2%

  Seventh party Eighth party
  Male portrait placeholder cropped.jpg Male portrait placeholder cropped.jpg
Leader George Perdikes Christos Christou
Party Greens ELAM
Leader since 2011 2008
Last election 1 seat, 2.2% 0 seats, 1.08%
Seats won 2 2
Seat change Increase 1 Increase 2
Popular vote 16,915 13,041
Percentage 4.8% 3.7%
Swing Increase 2.6% Increase 2.6%

CypElec2016.png
Map of the Election By District.

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Parliamentary elections were held in Cyprus on 22 May 2016 to elect 56 of the 80 Members of the House of Representatives.

Political system

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The Republic of Cyprus is a unitary republic with a presidential system of government. The President of Cyprus, directly elected in the middle of the legislative term, is both head of state and head of government, presiding over the executive Council of Ministers. The multi-member proportional elections to the House of Representatives however accommodate a multi-party system, where the elected president's party usually joins forces with smaller parties to form a joint coalition government that usually adapts to parliamentary shifts after legislative elections.

Electoral system

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The 80 seats in the House of Representatives are elected from six multi-member constituencies, with the number of seats allocated according to the population of each area. Of the 80 seats, 56 are elected by Greek Cypriots and 24 by Turkish Cypriots. However, due to the partition of the island in 1974, the 24 Turkish Cypriot seats are unfilled and the House of Representatives has de facto had 56 seats since its enlargement in the 1980s.

The elections are held using open list proportional representation, with seats allocated using the Hare quota. Any remaining seats are allocated to lists that won at least one seat or parties that received at least 3.6% of the vote.[1] In the open list system, voters first select the list they want to vote for, and then select a number of candidates equal to a quarter of the number of seats in the constituency. The first candidate on the list is not required to receive preferential votes to be elected. Voting is mandatory, and anyone who fails to vote can be fined or imprisoned.[2]

Background

2011

The previous legislative election took place on 22 May 2011. President Demetris Christofias of the communist Progressive Party of Working People (AKEL) had led a coalition consisting of his party as well as the centrist Democratic Party (DIKO) and the social-democratic Movement for Social Democracy (EDEK) since his election in 2008.

After three years in power, AKEL scored 32.7% in the 2011 legislative elections, narrowly behind the opposition center-right Democratic Rally, which polled 34.3% of votes. Meanwhile, AKEL's partners DIKO and EDEK scored 15.8% and 8.9% respectively. A mere two months after the legislative election, the Evangelos Florakis Naval Base explosion took place, triggering calls for President Christofias' resignation.

2013

Amidst widespread dissatisfaction and a deepening economic crisis, Christofias announced that he would not run for a second term in the presidential election in 2013.[3] Ultimately, Nicos Anastasiades of DISY emerged victorious in the presidential election, taking 45.5% of the vote, against 26.9% for the AKEL-backed Stavros Malas and the EDEK-backed Giorgos Lillikas. In the second round, Anastasiades captured 57.5% to 42.5% for Malas. The Anastasiades administration took office on 28 February 2013, comprising DISY, DIKO and the European Party (EVROKO). The Democrats later pulled out of the coalition, however.[4]

2014

Roughly a year into the presidency of Nicos Anastasiades, the Cypriot parties faced the electorate in European Parliament elections. Ahead of the election, DISY and EVROKO announced that they would participate in the election on a joint ticket; the social democrats in EDEK and the Ecological and Environmental Movement (KOP) also formed an electoral pact for the event. With the economic problems the country faced under Demetris Christofias' AKEL-led government fresh in the minds of voters, the party plummeted to 27.0% of the vote, a loss of 8.4% points. Meanwhile, the DISY-EVROKO pact garnered 37.8%. This election also served as the first electoral test of the Citizens' Alliance (SYPOL) party of former presidential candidate Giorgos Lillikas, which polled 6.8% but failed to win seats in the European Parliament. The decline of AKEL and the rise of anti-establishment parties continued into 2015 and 2016.[5]

2016

Mere months before the 2016 legislative election, ex-DISY MEP Eleni Theocharous launched a splinter party, in opposition to Anastasiades' approach to the Cyprus issue.[6] She advocated for tighter co-operation with other parties particularly DIKO and EDEK. The new party was dubbed the Solidarity Movement. On 11 March 2016, it was announced that EVROKO would merge into the new party, placing its candidates on its lists in the upcoming elections.[7]

Parties and leaders

Party Ideology Leader
Democratic Rally (DISY) Liberal conservatism, Christian democracy Averof Neophytou
Progressive Party of Working People (AKEL) Communism, Marxism-Leninism Andros Kyprianou
Democratic Party (DIKO) Greek-Cypriot nationalism, Centrism Nikolas Papadopoulos
Movement for Social Democracy (EDEK) Greek-Cypriot nationalism, Social democracy Marinos Sizopoulos
Ecological and Environmental Movement (KOP) Green politics, Social democracy George Perdikes
National Popular Front (ELAM) Ultra-nationalism, Greek nationalism Christos Christou
Citizens' Alliance (SYPOL) Populism, Social democracy Giorgos Lillikas
Solidarity Movement (KA) National conservatism, Euroscepticism Eleni Theocharous

Electoral campaigns

A televised debate of DISY leader Averof Neophytou, AKEL leader Andros Kyprianou and DIKO leader Nicolas Papadopoulos on 18 May 2016 turned into a heated exchange on economy issues and the question of reunification. Papadopoulos claimed that "behind closed doors", AKEL was trying to resurrect the 2004 Annan plan that was turned down by the Greek side in a referendum. While Neophytou and Papadopoulos criticized AKEL's judgment of the economic situation ahead of the 2012–13 Cypriot financial crisis, Kyprianou recalled his two rivals' assessments at that time. Back then in October 2008, Neophytou had expected things to go "very well", though "based on overconsumption", while Papadopoulos had gone even further off the mark stating: "Yes, our economy will be impacted, but certainly not our financial system, which is one of the most resilient in the world."[8]

Opinion polls

Polling for 2016 Cyprus election
Date Polling Firm DISY AKEL DIKO EDEK EVROKO KOP ELAM SYPOL KA Others Lead
13 May 2016 Symmetron / Marc 31.8 26.0 13.7 5.7 with KA 5.2 3.3 6.1 5.6 2.6 5.8
5–11 May 2016 Cypronetwork 32.2 25.5 14.2 5.7 with KA 5.4 3.2 6.1 4.2 3.5 6.7
5–10 May 2016 IMR 35.8 29.2 13.1 5.1 with KA 4.4 2.2 5.1 5.1 0.0 6.6
4–7 May 2016 PMR & C 31.5 24.9 14.3 6.0 with KA 4.4 3.3 6.6 4.3 4.7 6.6
26 Apr–3 May 2016 IMR 31.7 26.6 13.7 6.3 with KA 4.8 2.0 6.7 6.3 2.0 5.1
14–20 Apr 2016 IMR 33.8 26.2 12.7 6.2 with KA 4.0 2.7 6.6 5.3 2.5 7.6
8–18 Apr 2016 IMR 35.1 25.4 13.4 6.7 with KA 4.5 2.2 6.0 4.5 2.2 9.7
16 Apr 2016 Kathimerini 34.7 24.0 14.1 6.1 with KA 5.3 2.9 7.3 3.8 1.8 10.7
11–16 Apr 2016 PMR & C 31.9 24.8 13.8 6.0 with KA 4.7 2.6 6.8 4.4 5.0 7.1
3 Apr 2016 IMR 37.0 27.8 11.1 5.6 with KA 3.7 1.9 7.4 3.7 1.8 9.2
14–19 Mar 2016 PMR & C 31.9 25.9 12.8 6.3 with KA 5.0 2.5 6.5 4.4 4.7 6.0
25 Feb–2 Mar 2016 IMR 33.1 25.5 10.0 5.5 1.7 4.1 2.8 6.4 6.6 4.3 7.6
15–19 Feb 2016 PMR & C 34.0 24.7 13.7 6.0 2.1 4.6 3.3 6.2 5.4 9.3
13–17 Jul 2015 GPO 33.1 30.8 12.5 7.2 1.5 3.0 1.8 7.8 2.3 2.3
22 May Election 2011 34.3 32.7 15.8 8.9 3.9 2.2 1.1 1.1 1.6

Exit polls

Election day exit polls[9]
TV channel DISY AKEL DIKO EDEK KOP KA SYPOL ELAM
CyBC 29.5 – 32.5 26.5 – 29.5 12 – 14 5 – 7 4 – 5 4 – 7 5 – 7 3.5 – 4.5
ANT1 29.5 – 33.5 25.5 – 29.5 12.5 – 14.5 5.3 – 6.7 3.3 – 4.7 3.8 – 5.2 4.5 – 5.7 3.5 – 4.5
MEGA 30.5 – 33.5 26 – 29 11.5 – 14 4.5 – 6.6 3.5 – 4.5 3.5 – 4.5 4.5 – 6.6 2.5 – 4.5
Sigma 29 – 34 24 – 29 12 – 15 4 – 6.5 3.5 – 6 4.5 – 7 4.5 – 7 3 – 5.5

Results

e • d Summary of the 22 May 2016 House of Representatives of Cyprus election results
Cyprus 2016.png
Party Vote Seats
Votes  % ±pp Won +/−
Democratic Rally (Dimokratikos Sinagermos) 107,825 30.69 Decrease 3.66 18 Decrease 2
Progressive Party of Working People (Anorthotiko Komma Ergazomenou Laou) 90,204 25.67 Decrease 7.07 16 Decrease 3
Democratic Party (Dimokratiko Komma) 50,923 14.49 Decrease 1.25 9 Steady 0
Movement for Social Democracy (Kinima Sosialdimokraton) 21,732 6.18 Decrease 2.75 3 Decrease 2
Citizens' Alliance (Simmachia Politon) 21,114 6.01 New 3 Increase 3
Solidarity Movement (Kinima Allileggiis) 18,424 5.24 New 3 Increase 11
Ecological and Environmental Movement (Kinima Oikologon - Sinergasia Politon) 16,909 4.81 Increase 2.59 2 Increase 1
National Popular Front (Ethniko Laiko Metopo) 13,041 3.71 Increase 2.63 2 Increase 2
Animal Party Cyprus (Kinima gia ta zoa tis Kiprou) 4,088 1.16 New 0 Steady 0
People's Breath 3,072 0.87 New 0 Steady 0
Flag Social Movement 2,033 0.58 New 0 Steady 0
Union of Fighters for Justice 983 0.28 New 0 Steady 0
Independents 1,041 0.29 0
Reserved seats for minorities 3
Total 351,389 100.00 59
Valid votes 351,389 96.92 Increase 0.19
Invalid votes 7,675 2.12 Increase 0.04
Blank votes 3,478 0.96 Decrease 0.23
Voted/turnout 362,542 66.74 Decrease 11.96
Absenteeism 180,644 33.26 Increase 11.96
Registered voters 543,186
Source: results.elections.moi.gov.cy

Analysis and reception

The election had the lowest turnout for a legislative election in the history of the Republic of Cyprus. "General apathy with public affairs, but likewise frustration with the credit crunch and disappointment with politicians" was cited in the Cyprus Mail for the low turnout, whilst political analyst Hubert Faustmann cited "dissatisfaction of the public with the bigger parties" and "that parliamentary elections in Cyprus are not that important, given the weakness of the Cypriot parliament". AKEL was seen as the biggest loser of the election, possible reasons being cited as the party's failure to take up a "proactive" role and continued disillusionment with the Christofias administration. In contrast, an AKEL member, Irini Charalambidou, gained the highest number of votes for any candidate, following her stark critique of and fight against failing banks. The results were interpreted as a weakening of the front calling for a federal solution by the Turkish Cypriot press and political analyst Louis Igoumenides. Whilst the pro-solution parties, DISY and AKEL, still received a combined 56% of the votes against 40% obtained by anti-solution parties, in the case of a referendum the "yes" vote was expected by Igoumenides to be much lower, partly due to the refusal of fanatic voters of DISY and AKEL to collaborate.[10][11]

In terms of economics, the Anastasiades government became dependent on smaller parties in order to pass important reforms. This was expected to impede the ability of the government to pass these reforms, economic analyst Fiona Mullen said "I think we can forget privatization altogether".[12] This was also the first time the far-right party ELAM entered the parliament. Anti-racist NGO KISA called upon political parties in the parliament to counter ELAM and stated its "concern over the number of absentee voters and the rightward drift of the electorate towards political parties that espouse racism and nationalism" and Turkish Cypriot daily Diyalog called the party "terrorist".[13][11]

Cypriot electoral expert Yiannis Mavris said: "The electoral results herald a new political era for Cyprus. New small parties seem to be here to stay and will be exerting continuous pressure on traditional parties, which may find it difficult to win back their voters."[14]

References

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  2. Electoral system IPU
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  5. http://paperroom.ipsa.org/papers/paper_11548.pdf
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