1918 Dutch general election

General elections were held in the Netherlands on 3 July 1918. They were the first elections held after a series of reforms that introduced universal male suffrage and pure proportional representation, replacing the previous two-round system in single member constituencies. This change was known as the Great Pacification, which also included the introduction of state financing of religious schools, and led to the start of consociational democracy.

1918 Dutch general election

3 July 1918

All 100 seats in the House of Representatives
51 seats needed for a majority
PartyLeader % Seats +/–
ABRKK Willem Hubert Nolens 30.03 30 +6
SDAP Pieter Jelles Troelstra 21.95 22 +7
ARP Abraham Kuyper 13.43 13 +1
CHU Alexander de Savornin Lohman 6.56 7 −2
LU Eduard Ellis van Raalte 6.19 6 −15
VDB Henri Marchant 5.27 5 −3
BVL Alibert Cornelis Visser van IJzendoorn 3.80 4 −6
EB Willem Treub 3.11 3 New
SDP David Wijnkoop 2.31 2 New
MP Abraham Staalman 0.94 1 New
CDP Andries Staalman 0.79 1 New
PB Michelle Larson 0.68 1 New
SP Harm Kolthek 0.67 1 New
BCS Willy Kruyt 0.63 1 New
CSP Adolf van der Laar 0.61 1 New
NP Henri ter Hall 0.53 1 New
VDW Willem Wijk 0.51 1 New
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.
Prime Minister before Prime Minister after
Pieter Cort van der Linden
LU
Charles Ruijs de Beerenbrouck
ABRKK

The change in the electoral system led to major changes in the political makeup of the House of Representatives. The confessional right-wing parties, the General League of Roman Catholic Caucuses, the Anti-Revolutionary Party and the Christian Historical Union, together won 50 seats. Along with two Christian splinter-parties (the Christian Democratic Party and the Christian Social Party) they were able to gain a majority of 52 seats.

The liberal parties lost the most seats. While in 1917, two of the liberal parties, the Liberal Union and the League of Free Liberals, had won 31 seats, they were now reduced to 10 seats. Together with three smaller liberal parties, liberals now held only 15 seats in the House of representatives.

The fragmentation of the House was caused by the low electoral threshold of just 0.5%, with the smallest party, the Alliance for the Democratisation of the Army, managing to win a seat with only 6,828 votes.

The elections were the first in which Dutch women could run for office, despite still not being allowed to vote. Suze Groeneweg was elected as the first female member of the House of Representatives.

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