2010 Venezuelan parliamentary election

The 2010 parliamentary election in Venezuela took place on 26 September 2010 to elect the 165 deputies to the National Assembly. Venezuelan opposition parties, which had boycotted the previous election thus allowing the governing Fifth Republic Movement (MVR) to gain a two-thirds super majority, participated in the election through the Coalition for Democratic Unity (MUD). In 2007 the Fifth Republic Movement dissolved and the United Socialist Party of Venezuela was formed as the leading government party. Nationally, the popular vote was split equally between PSUV and MUD, but PSUV won a majority of the first-past-the-post seats and consequently retained a substantial majority in the Assembly, although falling short of both two-thirds and three-fifths super majority marks.

2010 Venezuelan parliamentary election

26 September 2010

All 165 seats of the National Assembly
83 seats needed for a majority
Turnout66.45%
  First party Second party
 
Leader Diosdado Cabello Ramón Guillermo Aveledo
Party PSUV MUD
Leader since 9 March 2007 23 January 2008
Leader's seat Monagas Did not stand
Last election 118 seats 18 seats
Seats won 96 64
Seat change 22 46
Popular vote 5,451,419 5,334,309
Percentage 48.2% 47.2%
Swing 7.2 pp 39.0 pp

Of the 165 deputies, 110 were constituency representatives elected on a first-past-the-post, the system in 87 electoral districts, 52 elected on a party list system (two or three deputies per state of Venezuela, depending on population), and 3 seats were reserved for indigenous peoples, with separate rules.

Additionally, 12 representatives were chosen for the Latin American Parliament.

There was initially a dispute between alliances that participated in the election as to which alliance received a plurality of votes. Each coalition was allowed to invite 30 foreign officials to observe the elections.

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