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1908 Icelandic parliamentary election

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Parliamentary elections were held in Iceland on 10 September 1908, alongside a referendum on prohibition.[1]

Background

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The Althing was dissolved by King Frederik VIII in the early spring in order to elect a new parliament that would vote on a draft status law that would define the position of Iceland in the Danish realm.[2] The election campaign was one of the acrimonious in Icelandic political history due to the controversial nature of the draft.[2] The opposition was led by Skúli Thoroddsen, a member of the Independence Party.[3]

Electoral system

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The 36 members of the Althing were elected from a mix of single-member and two-member constituencies.[4] The elections were the first to take place since changes to the electoral system in 1904; they were the first to be held using the secret ballot,[5] and also saw the three-round majoritarian system replaced by plurality voting as multiple rounds of voting on the same day were no longer possible.[4] The tax qualification for voting was also reduced, increasing the proportion of people able to vote to around 14% of the population,[4] up from 7,786 in 1903 to 11,726.[6]

Results

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Candidates opposed to the draft law won a landslide majority, whilst voter turnout was 72.4%, nearly 20% more than the 1903 elections.[6] As a result, the law was voted down in 1909,[2] resulting in the resignation of Minister for Iceland Hannes Hafstein.[3]

References

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  1. ^ Sverrir Jakobsson & Gudmundur Halfdanarson (2016) Historical Dictionary of Iceland, Rowman & Littlefield, pxxiv
  2. ^ a b c Jakobsson & Halfdanarson, p54
  3. ^ a b Jakobsson & Halfdanarson, p223
  4. ^ a b c Dieter Nohlen & Philip Stöver (2010) Elections in Europe: A data handbook, pp953–954 ISBN 978-3-8329-5609-7
  5. ^ Lester B. Orfield (1953) The Growth of Scandinavian Law, The Lawbook Exchange, Ltd., p109
  6. ^ a b Nohlen & Stöver, p963