1939 Hungarian parliamentary election

Parliamentary elections were held in Hungary on 28 and 29 May 1939. The result was a victory for the Party of Hungarian Life, which won 181 of the 260 seats in Parliament (72 percent of the parliament's seats) and won 49 percent of the popular vote in the election. Pál Teleki remained Prime Minister. This was a major breakthrough for the far-right in Hungary; between them, far-right parties were officially credited with 49 seats and 25 percent of the vote.

1939 Hungarian parliamentary election

28–29 May 1939

All 260 seats in the Diet
131 seats needed for a majority
Turnout89.72%
PartyLeader % Seats +/–
Hungarian Life Pál Teleki 49.49 181 +17
FKGP Tibor Eckhardt 15.44 14 −8
NYKP Ferenc Szálasi 14.39 29 New
MSZDP Árpád Szakasits 3.42 5 −6
KNSZF Károly Maróthy 2.37 3 New
EMNSZP Fidél Pálffy 2.14 4 New
National Front János Salló 1.75 3 New
Civic Freedom Károly Rassay 1.59 5
United Christian János Zichy 1.54 4 −11
MNSZFMP 0.98 3 New
People's Will 0.24 1 New
Far-right independents 2.95 6 New
Independents 0.69 2 −8
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.
Prime Minister before Prime Minister after election
Pál Teleki
MÉP
Pál Teleki
MÉP

This was the closest thing to a free election that Hungary had seen at that point. According to historian Stanley G. Payne, the far-right bloc would have almost certainly won more seats had the election been conducted in a truly fair manner, and possibly garnered an "approximately equal" seat count and vote share with the Party of Hungarian Life.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.