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Talk:2020 Croatian parliamentary election

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3 or 6 parties in the infobox

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The question is should we have 3 parties in the infobox or 6. The order should be based on the current seats number of by performance in the last elections. --Tuvixer (talk) 11:16, 5 May 2020 (UTC)[reply]

  • I support the first option since it seems likely that Škoro will lead a broader alliance, which could possibly even have a many as 15 or so incumbents among outgoing MPS (10 from Most, 1 from Bloc for Croatia, 1 from Independents for Croatia, 1 from HRAST, maybe Željko Glasnović and HDSSB as well). This would make it far bigger than any other potential alliance or individual party (besides the HDZ and the SDP), such as the Amsterdam Coalition (7 seats - 4 from Glas, 3 from IDS and 1 from the Democrats). If the Amsterdam Coalition is realized for this election maybe the infobox can be expanded to four parties. 93.138.127.97 11:36, 5 May 2020 (UTC)[reply]
    • I would suggest the best way of complying with WP:NPOV would be to include all parties that currently have seats, like 2020 Serbian parliamentary election or Next United Kingdom general election. The infobox would also be far more compact. Number 57 13:03, 5 May 2020 (UTC)[reply]
      • I think the new infobox looks good. But one question – why have the HDS and HSLS been included with the HDZ (and HSS, HSU and SNAGA been included with the SDP). Are they contesting the upcoming election in a formal alliance (as that is usually the only reason they're grouped)? Cheers, Number 57 12:00, 8 May 2020 (UTC)[reply]
        • SDP has a formal alliance with HSS, HSU and SNAGA. Also, Bloc for Croatia has an alliance with Škoro's Homeland Movement and the coalition's only current MP (Hasanbegović) is from the Bloc, but Škoro is the leader of the alliance. As for HDZ, it remains unclear whether they will contest alone or form a coalition, but HDS and HSLS are still part of the ruling coalition, while the HDZ's other partners from the previous election (HRAST) have left the alliance and joined the opposition. 93.138.127.97 09:36, 9 May 2020 (UTC) — Preceding unsigned comment added by 89.172.89.152 (talk) [reply]
          • UPDATES: SDP now has an alliance with HSS, HSU, Glas and SNAGA, which took the formal name Restart Coalition. Also, Škoro's existing alliance was expanded with the Croatian Sovereignists coalition (which is thus an alliance within an alliance) and now has 2 MPs (the second one is from HRAST, which is a member of the pre-existing Sovereignists). 93.138.127.97 10:11, 9 May 2020 (UTC) — Preceding unsigned comment added by 89.172.89.152 (talk) [reply]
            • I would say that just because parties are part of a coalition government, it does not mean they will contest the next election as a single list or party. Will the alliances in question present a single list at the next election, or will they run separately but agree to work together afterwards? Number 57 11:58, 9 May 2020 (UTC)[reply]
              • The Restart Coalition and Škoro's alliance will present single lists for the parties that are within them. So it will be impossible to vote for e.g. the Social Democratic Party's candidate without that vote automatically being counted as a vote for the alliance as a whole. The parties forming each alliance will distribute the 14 spots on the party list in each electoral district among themselves. So for example the Party of Pensioners (as part of the Restart alliance) could be given three spots in district X, while being given no spots on the list in district Y. These are all pre-election coalitions. As for the HDZ situation, stricktly speaking neither HSLS nor HDS is a member of the government because they have no ministers in the cabinet (the Plenković cabinet only has ministers from the HDZ and from the Croatian People's Party - Liberal Democrats (HNS), which only entered the government in 2017 after the Most party left, and there is no chance that HNS - as a centre-left party, will run with the HDZ). However, both HSLS and HDS ran with the HDZ in 2016 and in 2015, and they technically form a coalition until further notice. So I guess it's justified to leave the existing coalition intact until (or if) it is dissolved. I would compare this to the situation with the CDU and the CSU in Germany or the Liberal-National Coalition in Australia. They don't have to state before each election that they will run together because it is assumed from the current state of things. But, if the situation changed then it's no problem to list HDZ, HSLS and HDS separately 93.138.127.97 12:30, 9 May 2020 (UTC)[reply]

DPMŠ

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@Tuvixer: Can you tell me why purple is used? (because you changed it) Braganza (talk) 10:25, 16 June 2020 (UTC)[reply]

The color is used by main televisions in Croatia. This kind of questions are time wasting. --Tuvixer (talk) 11:29, 16 June 2020 (UTC)[reply]

Results with 99.54 percent being counted

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HDZ 66 seats// Restart 41 seats// DPMS 16 seats// MOST 8 seats// Green-left 7 seats// Others 5 seats// Minorities 8 seats

https://www.telegram.hr/parlamentarni-izbori-2020/

Massive victory for the center-right HDZ and a strong result for the right-wing conservative DPMS, pre-election polls indicating a neck and neck race with slight advantages for the SocialDemocrats turned out to be completly misleading.

80.131.48.76 (talk) 04:54, 6 July 2020 (UTC)[reply]

Alternative results table

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Rather than the footnotes explaining the seat division between parties, what do people think about this as an alternative to the current results table? I wasn't sure whether it was a bit too complicated. Cheers, Number 57 15:01, 4 January 2022 (UTC)[reply]

Party or allianceVotes%Seats
HDZ CoalitionCroatian Democratic Union621,03537.2662
Croatian Social Liberal Party2
Croatian Demochristian Party1
HDSSB1
Total66
Restart CoalitionSocial Democratic Party of Croatia414,64524.8735
Istrian Democratic Assembly3
Croatian Peasant Party2
Croatian Party of Pensioners1
Civic Liberal Alliance0
Total41
DPMŠ CoalitionMiroslav Škoro Homeland Movement181,49310.8910
Croatian Conservative Party4
Croatian Growth1
Bloc for Croatia1
Green List0
SU0
Bridge of Independent Lists123,1947.398
Green–LeftWe can!116,4836.995
Workers' Front1
New Left1
Sustainable Development of Croatia0
SIPPFocusParty with a First and Last Name66,3993.981
Intelligently1
Focus1
Enough of Robbery37,6282.260
Croatian People's Party – Liberal Democrats21,7271.301
People's Party – Reformists16,9001.011
Bandić Milan 365 – Labour and Solidarity Party9,8970.590
Croatian Civic Party7,3990.440
Right LeagueIndependents for Croatia7,2660.440
Croatian Party of Rights0
Democrats–HL–RIDemocrats6,5940.400
Croatian Labourists – Labour Party0
Lista za Rijeku – Lista per Fiume0
Authentic Croatian Party of Rights5,3430.320
Pensioners Together Bloc5,2680.320
Croatian Democratic Party2,4650.150
Strength of Slavonia and Baranja2,2940.140
Socialist Labour Party of Croatia2,1490.130
Union of Kvarner2,0440.120
Movement for a Modern Croatia1,3070.080
My Beloved Croatia9780.060
Authentic Croatian Peasant Party9580.060
BDSH–HBPSBDSH7680.050
HBPS0
Croatian Party of the Future7320.040
Croatian Civil Resistance Party7140.040
Independent List of Bura6260.040
Free Croatia6050.040
Croatian Perspective Party5760.030
Croatian Community Party4050.020
Croatian Party of Order3380.020
Alphabet of Democracy2190.010
Independents8,5240.510
National minorities8
Total1,666,973100.00151
Valid votes1,666,97397.73
Invalid/blank votes38,7132.27
Total votes1,705,686100.00
Registered voters/turnout3,672,55546.44
Source: Izbori
Not a fan, to be honest. How about using the sort of table used on the french speaking wiki? It allow for the total of seats per coalition to be shown. --Aréat (talk) 15:15, 4 January 2022 (UTC)[reply]
A total row for alliances can be added in (as I've done above for the HDZ and Restart coalitions). Number 57 16:31, 4 January 2022 (UTC)[reply]