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2024 Belgian federal election

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2024 Belgian federal election
Belgium
← 2019 9 June 2024 (2024-06-09)

All 150 seats in the Chamber of Representatives
76 seats needed for a majority
Turnout87.42%
Party Leader Vote % Seats +/–
N-VA Bart De Wever 16.7 24 −1
Vlaams Belang Tom Van Grieken 13.8 20 +2
MR Georges-Louis Bouchez 10.3 20 +6
PS Paul Magnette 8.0 16 −4
PVDA-PTB Raoul Hedebouw 9.9 15 +3
LE Maxime Prévot 6.8 14 +5
Vooruit Melissa Depraetere 8.1 13 +4
CD&V Sammy Mahdi 8.0 11 −1
Open Vld Tom Ongena 5.4 7 −5
Groen Nadia Naji &
Jeremie Vaneeckhout
5.4 6 −2
Ecolo Rajae Maouane &
Jean-Marc Nollet
2.9 3 −10
DéFI François De Smet 1.2 1 −1
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.
Federal Government before Federal Government after
De Croo Government TBA

Federal elections were held in Belgium on 9 June 2024.[1] The 150 members of the Chamber of Representatives will be elected for a five-year term. European and regional elections took place on the same day.[2]

Electoral system

The 150 members of the Chamber of Representatives are elected in 11 multi-member constituencies, being the ten provinces and Brussels, with between 4 and 24 seats. Seats are allocated using the D'Hondt method, with an electoral threshold of 5% per constituency.

Representatives elected from the five Flemish Region provinces, Antwerp (24), East Flanders (20), Flemish Brabant (15), Limburg (12) and West Flanders (16), automatically belonged to the Dutch-speaking language group in parliament, whereas those elected from the five provinces of Wallonia, Hainaut (17), Liège (14), Luxembourg (4), Namur (7) and Walloon Brabant (5), formed the French-speaking language group. The 16 members elected in Brussels can choose to join either group. Apportionment of seats is done every ten years in accordance with population data, last by royal order in 2022, when Brussels and Namur each gained a seat while Hainaut and Liège lost a seat.[3]

The 60-member Senate is composed of 50 representatives from the regional and community parliaments, plus 10 co-opted senators proportionally divided among parties based on the result of the federal election.

All Belgian citizens aged 16 or over are obligated to participate in the election. Non-Belgian citizens residing in Belgium (regardless of EU citizenship) cannot vote, whereas Belgian citizens living abroad can register to vote.

Voting is done electronically in all 19 Brussels and nine German-speaking municipalities as well as in 159 Flemish municipalities. Voting is done by paper ballot in 141 Flemish municipalities as well as in all 253 (non-German-speaking) Walloon municipalities.

Timetable

9 February Start of the "waiting period" (sperperiode) running until the day of the election, during which political propaganda and expenses are strictly regulated
1 April The electoral roll is fixed by municipal authorities
13 April Deadline for submitting candidate lists
TBD The Parliament is formally dissolved
25 May Final day for the official announcement of the election and the convocation letter to voters
5 June Polling day for Belgians residing abroad in the embassies and consular posts
9 June Polling day (from 8am until 2pm, or until 4pm where voting is done electronically)
TBD Constitutive session of the newly elected Chamber of Representatives

Parties and leaders

Parties running

The following parties running have seats in the Chamber of Representatives.

Party Ideology Political position Leader 2019 result Status
N-VA Conservatism
Flemish nationalism
Centre-right to
right-wing
Bart De Wever
25 / 150
Opposition
PS Social democracy Centre-left Paul Magnette
20 / 150
Governing coalition
Vlaams Belang Right-wing populism
Flemish nationalism
Right-wing to far-right Tom Van Grieken
18 / 150
Opposition
Reformist Movement Liberalism Centre-right Georges-Louis Bouchez
14 / 150
Governing coalition
Ecolo Green politics Centre-left Rajae Maouane and Jean-Marc Nollet [fr]
13 / 150
Governing coalition
Christian Democratic and Flemish Christian democracy Centre to centre-right Sammy Mahdi
12 / 150
Governing coalition
Workers' Party of Belgium Socialism Left-wing to far-left Raoul Hedebouw
12 / 150
Opposition
Open Vld Liberalism Centre-right Tom Ongena
12 / 150
Governing coalition
Vooruit Social democracy Centre-left Melissa Depraetere
9 / 150
Governing coalition
Groen Green politics Centre-left Nadia Naji and Jeremie Vaneeckhout
8 / 150
Governing coalition
Les Engagés Social liberalism Centre Maxime Prévot
5 / 150
Opposition
DéFI Regionalism
social liberalism
Centre to centre-right François De Smet [fr]
2 / 150
Opposition

Other political parties

Party Ideology Political position Constituency
Blanco Party Single-issue Centrism Flemish and Walloon constituencies
Belgische Unie – Union Belge Royalism

Unitarism

Centrism Flemish and Walloon constituencies
L'Unie Unitarism Centrism Flemish and Walloon constituencies
Alternatief 2024 Participatory democracy Centrism Only in Flemish Brabant
BoerBurgerBelangen Agrarianism Centre-right Flemish constituencies
DierAnimal Animal welfare

Enviromentalism

Centre-left Only in Antwerp
Gezond Verstand Liberalism

Anti-Flemish independence

Centre-right Only in East Flanders
Volt Social liberalism

European federalism

Centre-left All constituencies
VoorU Liberalism

Libertarianism

Right Flemish constituencies
Collectif Citoyen Participatory democracy Centre Walloon constituencies
Chez Nous Anti-immigration

National conservatism

Far-right Walloon constituencies
Team Fouad Ahidar Minority interests Centre Only in Brussels
Agora Participatory democracy Centre Walloon constituencies
Lutte Ouvrière Trotskyism Far-left Walloon constituencies

Lead candidates

The following candidates are the first on the respective party list (lijsttrekker / tête de liste) per constituency.

Dutch-speaking constituencies

Party  Antwerp  East Flanders  Flemish Brabant  Limburg  West Flanders  Brussels
CD&V[4] Annelies Verlinden Vincent Van Peteghem Sammy Mahdi Nawal Farih [nl] Nathalie Muylle [nl] Together with Les Engagés
Groen[4] Meyrem Almaci Petra De Sutter Dieter Van Besien [nl] Dirk Opsteyn Matti Vandemaele Together with Ecolo
N-VA[4] Bart De Wever Anneleen Van Bossuyt Theo Francken Steven Vandeput Jean-Marie Dedecker
Open Vld[4] Paul Van Tigchelt Alexander De Croo Irina De Knop [nl] Steven Coenegrachts Vincent Van Quickenborne Together with MR
PVDA[4] Peter Mertens Robin Tonniau Kemal Bilmez Kim De Witte Natalie Eggermont Together with PTB
Vlaams Belang[4] Lode Vereeck Barbara Pas Britt Huybrechts Annick Ponthier Wouter Vermeersch
Vooruit[4] Jinnih Beels Joris Vandenbroucke Frank Vandenbroucke Funda Oru Melissa Depraetere Together with PS
Volt[5] Jasper Coosemans Emeric Massaut
VoorU[4] Frank Wouters Michael Verstraeten Els Ampe [nl] Dirk Vijnck [nl] Ivan Sabbe [nl] Rachid El Hajui
l'Unie Alexandra Bernaert Charles de Groot

French-speaking constituencies

Hainaut will feature three party chairmen (Bouchez for MR, Magnette for PS and Nollet for Ecolo) as well as popular ex-MR ex-minister Crucke for Les Engagés. In Namur, three federal deputy prime ministers will run against each other (Dermagne for PS, Gilkinet for Ecolo and Clarinval for MR).[6] The right-wing Flemish nationalist N-VA party is also fielding candidates in Wallonia for the first time.[7]

Party  Hainaut  Liège  Luxembourg  Namur  Walloon Brabant  Brussels
DéFI [citation needed] Mikhaël Jacquemain Freddy Debarsy Julien Lemoine Pierre Pinte François De Smet [fr]
Ecolo [citation needed] Jean-Marc Nollet [fr] Sarah Schlitz Olivier Vajda [fr] Georges Gilkinet Simon Moutquin [fr] Zakia Khattabi
Les Engagés [citation needed] Jean-Luc Crucke [fr] Vanessa Matz Benoît Lutgen Maxime Prévot Yves Coppieters Elisabeth Degryse
MR [citation needed] Georges-Louis Bouchez Pierre-Yves Jeholet Benoît Piedboeuf David Clarinval Florence Reuter Sophie Wilmès
PS [citation needed] Paul Magnette Frédéric Daerden Philippe Courard Pierre-Yves Dermagne Dimitri Legasse [fr] Caroline Désir
PTB [citation needed] Sofie Merckx Raoul Hedebouw Farah Jacquet Amaury Laridon Nabil Boukili
N-VA[8] Michel De Wolf Evelien Barbieux Anne Laure Mouligneaux Laurence Genot Drieu Godefridi
Chez Nous Jérôme Munier Noa Pozzi Nicolas Dielman Eric Doucet Michaël Lefèvere
l'Unie Andrew Scrivener Charles de Groot

Retiring incumbents

The following members of the federal parliament are not standing for election in June 2024.

Opinion polls

Flanders

Wallonia

Brussels

Results

The results saw the New Flemish Alliance remain the largest party in parliament, while the incumbent coalition government led by Prime Minister Alexander De Croo and his Open Flemish Liberals and Democrats lost its majority. The Reformist Movement emerged as the largest party in Brussels and Wallonia.[11]

99.91% reporting
PartyVotes%+/–Seats+/–
New Flemish Alliance1,166,18716.71Increase 0.6824Steady 0
Vlaams Belang960,53513.76Increase 1.8120Increase 2
Reformist Movement716,93410.27Increase 2.7120Increase 6
Socialist Party561,6028.05Decrease 1.4116Decrease 3
Workers' Party of Belgium687,8999.86Increase 1.2415Increase 3
The Committed Ones472,7556.77Increase 3.0814Increase 9
Vooruit565,7868.11Increase 1.4013Increase 4
Christian Democratic and Flemish556,9757.98Decrease 0.9011Decrease 1
Open Flemish Liberals and Democrats379,5735.44Decrease 3.117Decrease 5
Groen323,2234.63Decrease 1.486Decrease 2
Ecolo204,4382.93Decrease 3.213Decrease 10
DéFI84,0241.20Decrease 1.011Decrease 1
Blanco Party75,5881.08New0New
Chez Nous64,0580.92New0New
Voor U43,2670.62New0New
Collectif Citoyen35,7060.51Increase 0.200Steady 0
Team Fouad Ahidar24,8260.36New0New
Belgische Unie – Union Belge15,7480.23New0New
DierAnimal10,3410.15Decrease 0.560Steady 0
Volt Europa7,2450.10Increase 0.080Steady 0
Lutte Ouvrière6,5520.09Increase 0.010Steady 0
L'Unie5,6400.08New0New
RMC4,0250.06New0New
Agora3,4730.050
Gezond Verstand2,3050.03New0New
Total6,978,705100.001500
Source: IBZ

Aftermath

Following the release of the election results, Alexander De Croo announced his resignation as Prime Minister effective 10 June. The New Flemish Alliance's Bart De Wever claimed victory.[11]

References

  1. ^ "Quand auront lieu les prochaines elections". IBZ Elections. Archived from the original on 2023-12-04. Retrieved 2023-05-07.
  2. ^ Belga (17 May 2023). "Kogel is door de kerk: op zondag 9 juni 2024 trekken we naar de stembus". vrtnws.be (in Dutch). Archived from the original on 17 May 2023. Retrieved 26 May 2023.
  3. ^ "Brussel krijgt extra volksvertegenwoordiger bij verkiezingen 2024". BRUZZ. 23 November 2022. Archived from the original on 2023-05-17. Retrieved 2023-10-21.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h "Definitieve afsluiting van de kandidatenlijsten". Ministry of the Interior (in Dutch). Archived from the original on 2024-04-19. Retrieved 2024-04-19.
  5. ^ "Candidates 2024". Volt België. Archived from the original on 2024-04-09. Retrieved 2024-04-05.
  6. ^ "Ces combats qui vont animer les élections du 9 juin". L'Echo. 13 January 2024. Archived from the original on 28 January 2024. Retrieved 28 January 2024.
  7. ^ Clapson, Colin (2023-12-04). "N-VA to stand in Wallonia: "Belgium is not a democracy"". vrtnws.be. Retrieved 2024-05-19.
  8. ^ "EXCLUSIEF. N-VA wil in Wallonië opkomen". Het Laatste Nieuws. 2023-12-02. Archived from the original on 2023-12-03. Retrieved 2023-12-05.
  9. ^ a b c "Deze politici kondigden al aan dat ze niet terugkeren in het Parlement". De Standaard. 21 April 2023. Archived from the original on 16 May 2023. Retrieved 28 January 2024.
  10. ^ "Kristof Calvo (Groen) wordt lijstduwer van zusterpartij Ecolo in Henegouwen: "Ik ambieer geen zetel"". VRT NWS. 22 January 2024. Archived from the original on 28 January 2024. Retrieved 28 January 2024.
  11. ^ a b O'Carroll, Lisa. "Belgium headed for new government as PM set to resign after general election". The Guardian. Retrieved 10 June 2024.