Gibraltar elects on the national level a legislature. The Gibraltar Parliament has 17 members, all elected for a four-year term in one constituency with each voter getting to vote for their selection of ten candidates. Gibraltar forms a single constituency but voters have only ten votes. Hence the electoral bloc with the most votes will normally get ten seats and the runners up seven.
Eligibility to vote
editPeople must be qualified to vote and listed on the Register of Electors in order to cast a ballot.
British nationals (this includes all forms of British nationality) who have lived in Gibraltar for a continuous period of six months and who intend to live in Gibraltar either permanently or indefinitely are entitled to register to vote in general elections to the Gibraltar Parliament if they will be aged 18 or over on polling day.[1]
Gibraltar, along with the UK, joined the EEC (the predecessor of the European Union) in 1973, and from 2004 eligible voters in Gibraltar were able to vote in elections to the European Parliament.[2] British, European Union and qualifying Commonwealth citizens (those who had a permit or certificate to enter/remain in Gibraltar, or who did not require such a permit/certificate on the date of their electoral registration application) living in Gibraltar were entitled to register to vote in European Parliament elections if they were aged 18 or over on polling day.[3][4] In 2020 Gibraltar left the European Union as a result of Brexit.[5]
British nationals and Commonwealth citizens living outside Gibraltar can register as an 'overseas voter' and vote in elections to the European Parliament provided that they were on the Register of Electors in Gibraltar within the past 15 years (the 15 years period begins when they no longer appeared in the Register of Electors, not the date they moved abroad). For British nationals and Commonwealth citizens who moved abroad before they were 18 years old, they can still qualify for registration as an 'overseas elector' in elections to the European Parliament, with the 15 years period calculated from the date their parent(s)/guardian ceased to appear in the Register of Electors in Gibraltar.[6]
Latest elections
editGeneral elections to the Gibraltar Parliament (House of Assembly)
editBelow is a series of results from elections to the Gibraltar Parliament and its predecessor, the House of Assembly (which was created upon the publication of the Gibraltar Constitution 1969). Elections take place roughly every four years, 17 members (15 before 2007) are elected at each election, using partial bloc voting. Each voter has ten votes (eight before 2007) meaning that parties usually stand ten candidates, and the winning party is that which manages to get all their candidates elected.
1969 election
editThis election took place on 30 July 1969.
AACR - 7 members
IWBP - 5 members
Independents (Isola Group) - 3 members
1972 election
editAACR - 52%, 8 members
IWBP - 7 members
1976 election
editAACR - 75.3%, 8 members
GDM - 4 seats
Independents - 3 members (Robert Peliza, Maurice Xiberras and Peter Isola)
1980 election
editAACR - 8 members
DPBG - 6 members
GSLP - 1 members
1984 election
editAACR - 44.4%, 8 members
GSLP - 34.2%, 7 members
DPBG - 18.9%, 0 members
Others - 2.5%, 0 members
1988 election
editGSLP - 58.2%, 8 members
AACR - 29.4%, 7 members
Independent Democrats - 12.4%, 0 members
1992 election
editGSLP - 73.1%, 8 members
GSD - 20.2%, 7 members
GNP - 4.7%, 0 members
AACR - 2.1%, 0 members
1996 election
editGSD - 52.2%, 8 members
GSLP - 43.0%, 7 members
GNP - 4.7%, 0 members
Others - 0.2%
2000 election
editGSD - 58.4%, 8 members
GSLP/Liberal Alliance - 40.6%, 7 members
Others - 1.0%, 0 members
2003 election
editGSD - 51.5%, 8 members
GSLP/Liberal Alliance - 39.7%, 7 members
GLP - 8.3%
2007 election
editGSD - 49.3%, 10 members
GSLP/Liberal Alliance - 45.5%, 7 members
PDP - 3.8%
NGD - 0.78%
2011 election
editGSLP/Liberal Alliance - 48.88%, 10 members
GSD - 46.76% - 7 members
PDP - 4.36%
2015 election
editGSLP/Liberal Alliance - 68.4%, 10 members
GSD - 31.6% - 7 members
2019 election
editGSLP/Liberal Alliance - 52.5%, 10 members
GSD - 25.5% - 6 members
TG - 20.5% - 1 member
2023 election
editGSLP/Liberal Alliance - 50.04%, 9 members
GSD - 48.15% - 8 members
Key
edit- Note: Percentages can be misleading for parties with fewer than eight candidates
- AACR = Association for the Advancement of Civil Rights (defunct)
- DPBG = Democratic Party of British Gibraltar (defunct)
- GLP = Gibraltar Labour Party (merged with the GSD in 2005)
- GNP = Gibraltar National Party (now termed 'Liberals' (LPG))
- GDM = Gibraltar Democratic Movement (Now GSLP)
- GSLP = Gibraltar Socialist Labour Party
- GSD = Gibraltar Social Democrats
- PDP = Progressive Democratic Party (defunct)
- NGD = New Gibraltar Democracy (currently inactive)
- TG = Together Gibraltar (currently inactive)
- IWBP = Integration with Britain Party (defunct)
UK elections
editUnlike other overseas territories, Gibraltar has taken part as a UK counting area in three European elections and one UK-wide referendum as part of the South West England electoral region.
- 2004 European Parliament election in Gibraltar
- 2009 European Parliament election in Gibraltar
- 2014 European Parliament election in Gibraltar
- European Union Referendum 2016 (Gibraltar)
- 2019 European Parliament election in Gibraltar
Some people have advocated, including individual MPs, UKIP, the Liberal Democrats and the Gibraltar in Westminster Movement that Gibraltar should be extended the franchise of voting in UK general elections as a Westminster constituency.[7][8][9][10]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ "HM Government of Gibraltar: Notice 2015 Register of Electors" (PDF).
- ^ Bartlett, Debbie (24 May 2019). "Gibraltar goes to the polls for the EU elections". Sur in English.
- ^ "European Parliament (Representation) Act 2003". www.legislation.gov.uk.
- ^ "European Parliamentary Elections Act 2004" (PDF).
- ^ "Guidance to Citizens: No UK-EU Treaty on the Future of Gibraltar" (PDF). HM Government of Gibraltar. Retrieved 11 January 2024.
- ^ "The European Parliamentary Elections Regulations 2004". www.legislation.gov.uk.
- ^ "404 Error, UKIP". www.ukip.org.
{{cite web}}
: Cite uses generic title (help) - ^ "Gibraltar should have its own MP, say Lib Dems". www.gbc.gi.
- ^ Giannangeli, Marco (April 9, 2017). "'Give us our own Westminster MP' Gibraltar pleads to Britain". Express.co.uk.
- ^ "HOME". gibraltar.
External links
edit- Finlayson, Thomas James. "The Struggle for Democracy". Gibraltar Chronicle. Archived from the original on 2004-04-28. Retrieved 2008-10-21.