Valencia_City_Council_elections

Valencia City Council elections

Valencia City Council elections

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Valencia city council elections have taken place every four years since 1979 to elect the 33 members of the local government for the city of Valencia, Spain.

The elections are held using closed list proportional representation in a single electoral district covering the entire city council area. Only parties which receive 5% or more of the total votes cast are eligible for seats which are then allocated on a proportional basis using the D'Hondt method of allocation. The Mayor of Valencia is chosen by the 33 councillors.

From 1979 to 1991 the Mayor came from the Spanish Socialist Workers' Party (PSOE). From 1991 the Mayor was Rita Barberá Nolla of the People's Party (PP), the party which held an absolute majority of seats on the city council from the 1995 to 2011 local elections, until 2015. After 2015 elections, Joan Ribó (Compromís), who came second in the elections, was elected mayor with the support of two other parties. In 2019 elections Joan Ribó came first and was elected again as mayor of Valencia.

Results

1979 Local Election

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Out of a total electorate of 552,034, the turnout was 344,145 (62.3%.)

Candidates for Mayor were:-

  • Fernando Martínez Castellanos (PSOE)
  • Miguel Pastor (UCD)
  • Vicente Blasco Ibáñez (URV)

Martínez was elected Mayor with the support of the PCE. When Felipe González decided to eliminate any residual Marxism from the party's constitution he resigned in protest in September 1979.[1] He was replaced in October 1979 by Ricard Pérez Casado.

1983 Local Election

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*The People's Coalition was an electoral alliance which consisted of 4 parties: the Popular Alliance, Valencian Union, Democratic Popular Party and Liberal Union.

Out of a total electorate of 553,067, the turnout was 386,699 (69.9%), a 7.6% increase on the previous election.

A few months prior to the elections, the UCD, which had won the most votes in the 1979 elections, had disbanded. In their absence, the People's Coalition took most of the right wing vote, while the PCE declined and URV lost their solitary seat. This was the only occasion to date when the PSOE won a majority of seats on Valencia City Council. Ricard Pérez Casado was re-elected Mayor.

1987 Local Election

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Out of a total electorate of 552,473, the turnout was 389,214 (71.4%), a 1.5% increase on the previous election.

The electoral alliance between the Popular Alliance, the Valencian Union and the Democratic Popular Party broke up in 1986 and all three parties contested the elections in their own right with Valencian Union finishing ahead of the Popular Alliance in terms of votes. The Communist Party of Spain (PCE) had formed an electoral alliance, United Left, with other left wing groupings the previous year and United Left in turn ran in the elections in a joint list with Unity of the Valencian People, however they were unable to increase the number of seats that the PCE had won in 1983. The main gains were made by CDS who won their first seats on the council.

Candidates for Mayor were:-

Though PSOE had lost their overall majority, they regained the mayoralty with the support of IU and the CDS. In January 1989 Ricard Pérez Casado was replaced as Mayor by Clementina Ródenas also of the PSOE. In 1989 the Popular Alliance and the Democratic Popular Party merged with other right wing parties to form the People's Party.

1991 Local Election

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Out of a total electorate of 591,157, the turnout was 374,946 (63.4%), an 8% decrease on the previous election.

One of the main features of the election was the collapse in support for the CDS, who lost their representation on the council. As a result, all the main four groupings, the PSOE, IU, PP and UV, increased their vote share, with PP gaining 2 seats relative to the Popular Alliance's 1987 performance and both UV and IU gaining a seat.

Candidates for Mayor were:-

Although the PSOE had had a slight increase in their vote share, UV councillors voted for the PP candidate, Rita Barberà. Both parties governed Valencia with a one-seat majority.

1995 Local Election

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Out of a total electorate of 627,784, the turnout was 485,649 (73.1%), a 9.7% increase on the previous election.

The election saw both the People's Party and United Left making gains at the expense of the PSOE and Valencian Union. The People's Party almost doubled its share of the vote and made enough gains to hold an absolute majority on the city council.

Candidates for Mayor were:-

  • Rita Barberà (PP)
  • Aurelio Martínez (PSOE)
  • Manuel Moret (EUPV)
  • Juan Vicente (UV)

Rita Barberà was re-elected Mayor.

1999 Local Election

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Out of a total electorate of 643,516, the turnout was 403,583 (62.7%), a 10.4% decrease on the previous election.

The election saw both the People's Party and PSOE making gains at the expense of the Valencian Union and United Left. For the first time the People's Party polled a majority of votes. Valencian Union narrowly missed the 5% threshold for representation on the council and lost its remaining seats.

Candidates for Mayor were:-

  • Rita Barberà (PP)
  • Ana Noguera (PSOE)
  • Antonio Montalbán (IU)
  • Társilo Piles (UV)

Rita Barberà was re-elected Mayor.

2003 Local Election

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Out of a total electorate of 631,225, the turnout was 432,336 (68.5%), a 5.8% increase on the previous election.

The election saw little change relative to the previous election. PSOE made a small increase at the expense of the People's Party and gained a seat from them.

Candidates for Mayor were:-

Rita Barberà was re-elected Mayor.

2007 Local Election

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Out of a total electorate of 608,976, the turnout was 416,802 (68.4%), a 0.1% decrease on the previous election.

The election saw a continuation of the trend towards a Two-party system with United Left losing their representation on the council due to them falling below the 5% threshold for representation. This was the first occasion on which either United Left or their predecessors the Communist Party would be unrepresented. Though both main parties increased their vote share, the main beneficiaries were the People's Party who gained both the United Left seats.

Candidates for Mayor were:-

Rita Barberà was re-elected Mayor.

2011 Local Election

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The turnout was 69.4%, an increase of 1% on the previous election.

The result was considered a surprise by the largest circulation daily newspaper El País,[3] as Coalició Compromís, an electoral alliance led by the Valencian Nationalist Bloc, won their first seats on the council, while United Left returned to the council after a four-year absence.

Candidates for Mayor were:-

Rita Barberà was re-elected Mayor.

2015 Local Election

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The turnout was 72.1%, the highest turnout since the 1995 election. The election saw Rita Barberá's PP lost its majority for the first time since the 1990s. Compromís had its highest number of votes in history and came second in the election. Citizens won representation on the council for the first time. PSOE lost almost half its representation and Podemos, as part of València en Comú, won representation for the first time. United Left lost its representation.

Candidates for Mayor were:

Joan Ribó (Compromís) was elected Mayor, with the support of PSOE and València en Comú

2019 Local Election

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The turnout was 66.3%, a decrease on the previous election.[5]

Compromís received the most votes for the first time, with an increase on the previous election. PP's decline continued, losing two seats to the far-right party Vox, who won its first seats. PSOE gained two seats, its first increase in representation since the 2003 elections. Citizens repeated the same results. The Podemos-United Left coalition lost its representation, having stood as part of València en Comú at the previous election.

Candidates for Mayor were:

  • Joan Ribó (Compromís)
  • María José Catalá (PP)
  • Sandra Gómez (PSOE)
  • Fernando Giner (Ciudadanos)
  • José Gosalbez Paya (Vox)
  • Maria Oliver (Podemos-IU)

Joan Ribó (Compromís) was re-elected Mayor, with the support of PSOE.

2023 Local Election

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The turnout was 68.5%, an increase on the previous election.

The election saw the collapse of Citizens, who lost all their 6 seats. The PP regained their status as largest party.

Candidates for Mayor were:

With no candidate able to secure a majority on the first ballot, Catalá became mayor on the second ballot as lead candidate of the party with most votes.


References


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