January 2015 Greek legislative election

Legislative elections were held in Greece on Sunday 25 January 2015 to elect all 300 members of the Hellenic Parliament in accordance with the constitution. The election was held earlier than scheduled due to the failure of the Greek parliament to elect a new president on 29 December 2014.

January 2015 Greek legislative election

25 January 2015

All 300 seats in the Hellenic Parliament
151 seats needed for a majority
Opinion polls
Registered9,949,684
Turnout63.62% (1.13pp)
  First party Second party Third party
 
XA
Leader Alexis Tsipras Antonis Samaras Nikolaos Michaloliakos
Party Syriza ND ΧΑ
Last election 26.89%, 71 seats 29.66%, 129 seats 6.92%, 18 seats
Seats won 149 76 17
Seat change 78 53 1
Popular vote 2,245,978 1,718,694 388,387
Percentage 36.34% 27.81% 6.28%
Swing 9.45pp 1.85pp 0.64pp

  Fourth party Fifth party Sixth party
 
Leader Stavros Theodorakis Dimitris Koutsoumpas Panos Kammenos
Party To Potami KKE ANEL
Last election 4.50%, 12 seats 7.51%, 20 seats
Seats won 17 15 13
Seat change New 3 7
Popular vote 373,924 338,188 293,683
Percentage 6.05% 5.47% 4.75%
Swing New 0.97pp 2.76pp

  Seventh party
 
Leader Evangelos Venizelos
Party PASOK
Last election 12.28%, 33 seats
Seats won 13
Seat change 20
Popular vote 289,469
Percentage 4.68%
Swing 7.60pp

Most-voted for party by electoral district

Prime Minister before election

Antonis Samaras
ND

Prime Minister after election

Alexis Tsipras
Coalition of the Radical Left

Syriza won a legislative election for the first time, winning 36% of votes and 149 seats, just two short of an absolute majority. The centre-right New Democracy (ND), the outgoing party of government, saw only a small decline from 30% to 28%, but in falling to second place suffered its worst showing to date in terms of seats. Five other parties passed the 3% electoral threshold to gain representation, all winning 5–6% of votes: the far-right Golden Dawn (XA), social-liberal To Potami, the Communist Party of Greece (KKE), right-wing populist Independent Greeks (ANEL), and centre-left PASOK. XA became the third largest party for the first time, while Potami debuted in fourth place. Formerly one of Greece's two major parties, PASOK collapsed even further to become the smallest party in Parliament, winning just 4.7% of votes and 13 seats.

Syriza was in a clear position to lead a new government, winning close to a majority thanks to the majority bonus system. Though they had been expected to seek an agreement with Potami, Syriza instead formed a coalition with the right-wing, anti-austerity ANEL on September 26. Syriza leader Alexis Tsipras subsequently became Prime Minister.

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