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1962 Austrian legislative election

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1962 Austrian legislative election

← 1959 18 November 1962 1966 →

165 seats in the National Council of Austria
83 seats needed for a majority
  First party Second party Third party
 
Leader Alfons Gorbach Bruno Pittermann Friedrich Peter
Party ÖVP SPÖ FPÖ
Last election 44.19%, 79 seats 44.79%, 78 seats 7.70%, 8 seats
Seats won 81 76 8
Seat change Increase 2 Decrease 2 Steady
Popular vote 2,024,501 1,960,685 313,895
Percentage 45.43% 44.00% 7.04%
Swing Increase 1.24 pp Decrease 0.79 pp Decrease 0.66 pp

Results by constituency

Chancellor before election

Alfons Gorbach
ÖVP

Elected Chancellor

Alfons Gorbach
ÖVP

Parliamentary elections were held in Austria on 18 November 1962.[1] The result was a victory for the Austrian People's Party, which won 81 of the 165 seats. Voter turnout was 94%.[2] Although the People's Party had come up only two seats short of an outright majority, Chancellor Alfons Gorbach (who had succeeded Julius Raab a year earlier) retained the grand coalition with the Socialists under Vice-Chancellor Bruno Pittermann.

Results

[edit]
PartyVotes%Seats+/–
Austrian People's Party2,024,50145.4381+2
Socialist Party of Austria1,960,68544.0076–2
Freedom Party of Austria313,8957.0480
Communists and Left Socialists135,5203.0400
European Federal Party of Austria21,5300.480New
Total4,456,131100.001650
Valid votes4,456,13198.89
Invalid/blank votes49,8761.11
Total votes4,506,007100.00
Registered voters/turnout4,805,35193.77
Source: Nohlen & Stöver

Results by state

[edit]
State ÖVP SPÖ FPÖ KLS EFP
 Burgenland 48.7 46.3 4.0 1.0 -
 Carinthia 34.2 49.7 12.5 3.2 0.4
 Lower Austria 52.2 41.7 3.4 2.6 0.1
 Upper Austria 48.6 41.3 8.0 1.8 0.2
 Salzburg 46.1 38.5 13.7 1.8 -
 Styria 46.5 43.2 6.8 3.4 -
 Tyrol 61.9 30.0 6.5 1.0 0.6
 Vorarlberg 55.9 28.0 14.9 1 -
 Vienna 34.5 52.4 6.6 5.0 1.4
 Austria 45.4 44.0 7.0 3.0 0.5
Source: Institute for Social Research and Consulting (SORA)[3]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Nohlen, Dieter; Stöver, Philip (31 May 2010). Elections in Europe: A data handbook. Nomos Verlagsgesellschaft. p. 196. ISBN 978-3-8329-5609-7.
  2. ^ Nohlen & Stöver, p214
  3. ^ "National election results Austria 1919 - 2017 (OA edition)", Institute for Social Research and Consulting (SORA) (in German), Austrian Social Science Data Archive (AUSSDA), 2019-07-24, doi:10.11587/EQUDAL