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1989 Paraguayan general election

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1989 Paraguayan general election

← 1988 1 May 1989 1991 →
Presidential election
 
Candidate Andrés Rodríguez Domingo Laíno
Party Colorado PLRA
Popular vote 882,957 241,829
Percentage 76.59% 20.98%

Results by department

President before election

Andrés Rodríguez
Colorado

President-elect

Andrés Rodríguez
Colorado

Parliamentary election

All 72 seats in the Chamber of Deputies
37 seats needed for a majority
Party Leader Vote % Seats +/–
Colorado Andrés Rodríguez 74.47 48 +8
PLRA Domingo Laíno 20.19 21 New
PRF Fernando Sánchez 2.10 2 New
Radical Liberal 1.32 1 −12
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.

Early general elections were held in Paraguay on 1 May 1989 to elect the president and Chamber of Deputies.[1] They were the first held since longtime president Alfredo Stroessner was toppled in a military coup on 3 February, seven months after being sworn in for an eighth term. For the first time in several years, the opposition was allowed to contest the elections more or less unmolested; the Communists were the only party that was banned from taking part.[2][3]

Andrés Rodríguez, who had led the coup and had been serving as provisional president since then, was elected president in his own right[3][2] running on the Colorado Party ticket. The Colorado Party also won 48 of the 72 seats in the Chamber of Deputies. Voter turnout was 52%.

The legislative elections were called after Rodríguez dissolved the previous Congress in February, citing a provision of the constitution that allowed the president to do so if they felt Congress had acted in a manner that distorted the separation of powers. Rodríguez used the new elections as a tool to purge pro-Stroessner "militants" from the Colorado caucus. The presidential elections were held because the constitution required new elections if a president died, resigned, or was permanently disabled less than two years into their term. That same provision stipulated that the winner would not serve a full five-year term, but only the remainder of the previous president's term.[3] In this case, Rodríguez won the right to serve the remainder of Stroessner's term, which was due to end in 1993.

Results

[edit]

President

[edit]
CandidatePartyVotes%
Andrés RodríguezColorado Party882,95776.59
Domingo LaínoAuthentic Radical Liberal Party241,82920.98
Fernando Vera Sánchez [es]Revolutionary Febrerista Party11,0070.95
Secundino Núñez MedinaChristian Democratic Party8,0320.70
Carlos Ferreira IbarraLiberal Party4,4230.38
Blas Manuel MangabeiraUnified Radical Liberal Party3,5450.31
Carlos Gustavo Callizo PariniParaguayan Humanist Party1,0580.09
Total1,152,851100.00
Valid votes1,152,85199.04
Invalid/blank votes11,1970.96
Total votes1,164,048100.00
Registered voters/turnout2,226,06152.29
Source: Justicia Electoral

Chamber of Deputies

[edit]
PartyVotes%Seats+/–
Colorado Party845,82074.4748+8
Authentic Radical Liberal Party229,32920.1921New
Revolutionary Febrerista Party23,8152.102New
Radical Liberal Party15,0831.331–12
Christian Democratic Party11,6741.030New
Liberal Party5,5440.490–7
Unified Radical Liberal Party3,4760.310New
Paraguayan Humanist Party1,0690.090New
Total1,135,810100.0072+12
Valid votes1,135,81098.10
Invalid/blank votes21,9711.90
Total votes1,157,781100.00
Registered voters/turnout2,226,06152.01
Source: Nohlen

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Dieter Nohlen (2005) Elections in the Americas: A data handbook, Volume II, p425 ISBN 978-0-19-928358-3
  2. ^ a b Nohlen, p416
  3. ^ a b c History Library of Congress Country Studies