Lettuce general election 2023

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Lettuce general election 2023
Lettuce
2020 ←
9 July 2023 (2023-07-09)
→ 2025

All 45 seats in the Lettucian National Assembly
23 seats needed for a majority
  First party Second party Third party
 
Leader Kawanishi Takumi Iván Moreira Laura Pausini
Party Lettucian Asian Front United Socialist Party of Lettuce Liberty, Justice and Development
Last election 5 seats, 11.18% 18 seats, 40.32% 10 seats, 22.41%
Seats before 5 18 10
Seats won 15 11 10
Seat change 10 7 0
Popular vote 1,128,595 824,511 752,279
Percentage 32.03% 23.40% 21.35%
Swing 20,95% 16.92% 1.06%

  Fourth party Fifth party
 
Leader Omar Borkan Camila Vallejo
Party Lettucian Pan-Arabic Party Communist Party of Lettuce
Last election 4 seats, 7.99% 2 seats, 3.21%
Seats before 4 2
Seats won 6 3
Seat change 2 1
Popular vote 451,357 229,735
Percentage 12.81% 6,52%
Swing 4.82% 3.31%

Prime Minister before election

Iván Moreira
United Socialist Party of Lettuce

Elected Prime Minister

Yonashiro Sho
Lettucian Asian Front

The 2023 Lettuce extraordinary general election was held on Sunday 9 July 2023. Voters went to the polls to elect the full 45 assemblymen to serve an two-year term in the National Assembly.

This election is due to the lack of trust between the different parties that make up the National assembly, as well as the corruption cases associated with the ruling United Socialist Party of Lettuce. As a solution to the critical situation, a transversal agreement was signed in March 2023 between the legislative and executive powers to bring forward the election process to July 9, 2023.

Following an election reform in 2022, an electoral floor of 5% was established to obtain representation in the National Assembly. This was based on the need to ensure governability, as well as to avoid the growing political fragmentation that was occurring in the assembly.

More than 4 million people were called to vote, of which only 3.5 million cast their ballots. This represents the lowest turnout since the creation of the Bolivarian Republic in 2010.