Belgian federal election, 2007

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Belgium federal election, 2007

← 2003 10 June 2007 (2007-06-10) 2010 →

All 150 seats in the Chamber of Representatives
40 of 71 seats in the Senate
respectively 76 and 36 seats needed for a majority
  First party Second party Third party
  Yves Leterme Didier Reynders Elio Di Rupo
Leader Yves Leterme Didier Reynders Elio Di Rupo
Party CD&V MR PS
Leader since Candidate for PM 2004 1999
Leader's seat Ieper Liège Mons
Last election 22 seats, 16.31% 24 seats, 11.41 25 Seats, 13.02%
Seats before 22 24 25
Seats won 30 23 20
Seat change Increase8 Decrease1 Decrease5
Popular vote 1,234,950 835,073 724,787
Percentage 18.51% 12.52% 10.86%
Swing Increase2.20% Increase1.12% Decrease2.16%

  Fourth party Fifth party Sixth party
  Guy Verhofstadt Frank Vanhecke Johan Vande Lanotte
Leader Guy Verhofstadt Frank Vanhecke Johan Vande Lanotte
Party Open Vld Vlaams Belang sp.a + Spirit
Leader since Candidate for PM 1996 2005
Leader's seat Gent Antwerp Ostend
Last election 25 Seats, 15.36% 18 Seats, 11.59% 23 Seats, 14.81%
Seats before 25 18 23
Seats won 18 17 14
Seat change Decrease7 Decrease1 Decrease9
Popular vote 789,455 799,844 684,390
Percentage 11.83% 11.99% 10.26%
Swing Decrease3.53% Increase0.40% Decrease4.65%

400px
Colours denote the winning party in each electoral district, as shown in the table of results.

Federal Government before election

Verhofstadt II Government

Elected Federal Government

Verhofstadt III Government (interim)

Belgium 2007–11 Belgian political crisis

Timeline
See also

The 2007 Belgian federal election took place on Sunday 10 June 2007. Voters went to the polls in order to elect new members for the Chamber of Representatives and Senate.

Eligible voters were Belgian citizens 18 years and older. There was a legal electoral threshold of 5% for political parties to meet to receive representation, but in several election districts the real electoral threshold is higher than the legal, due to the small number of seats to be elected in the particular district. The 150 members of the Chamber of Representatives were elected from 11 electoral districts. The 40 Senate members were elected from the Dutch (25) and Francophone (15) electoral colleges.

Of the Flemish parties, the alliance of Christian Democratic and Flemish party (CD&V) and the New-Flemish Alliance (N-VA) received an increased share of the vote from the previous election, held in 2003. The CD&V/N-VA list was headed by Yves Leterme, and became the largest political formation in Belgium, thus leading the coalition talks for a new government.[1] Flemish Interest (Vlaams Belang) received more votes than in the previous election, but lost one seat. Green! was able to return to parliament and newcomers List Dedecker (Lijst Dedecker) surprised most by immediately grabbing six seats, including one in the Senate. Prime minister Guy Verhofstadt's "purple coalition," consisting of his Open Flemish Liberals and Democrats (Open VLD) alliance list and Socialist Party – Different (SP.A/SPIRIT), was punished in the election, with the SP.A/SPIRIT alliance losing somewhat more than Verhofstadt's Open VLD alliance. The day after the election, Verhofstadt handed in the resignation of his government to King Albert II.[2][3] SP.A leader Johan Vande Lanotte resigned from his leadership position as well that day.[4]

The Francophone situation did not mirror its Flemish counterpart. While Verhofstadt's Open VLD struggled, its Francophone sister party Mouvement Réformateur managed to defeat the long-dominant Parti Socialiste (PS), although the PS remained strong in Hainaut and Liège. The Humanist Democratic Centre brought in a positive result as well, but the biggest gains were for the environmentalist party Ecolo.

The overall outcome of the elections was that the liberal fraction (MR, VLD) became the largest group in parliament with, followed by the Christian Democrats (CD&V, Cdh) and N-VA with 40 seats. The electoral alliance between the Flemish CD&V and N-VA parties became the biggest single parliamentary grouping (25 seats for CD&V and 5 for N-VA).

Background

The previous general election in 2003 had resulted in a coalition between the socialist parties SP.a/Spirit (Flemish) and the Parti Socialiste (Francophone), and the centrist liberal-democratic parties VLD/Vivant (Flemish) and MR (Francophone), with Guy Verhofstadt of the VLD to retaining his position of Prime Minister of Belgium until 2007.

Parties

Only parties who fielded candidates for the Belgian Senate are listed.

Flemish parties (Dutch speaking)

These Flemish parties field candidates in the regions of Flanders and the partially bilingual electoral district Brussels-Halle-Vilvoorde.

CD&V/N-VA

The Christian Democratic and Flemish party (CD&V) is a Christian Democratic party that has formed an alliance with the Flemish nationalist party New-Flemish Alliance (N-VA). Most polls in the run-up to the election suggested that the alliance would win the election and become the largest political force in Flanders. It is led by Yves Leterme, current prime minister of the Flemish Region and Community.

Having become the largest political party in the Belgian Chamber after the 2007 election, the alliance will become the fulcrum of the coalition talks for a new government. Commentators suggest that coalition talks will be difficult, as most Francophone parties see the alliance as being overly Flemish-dominated.

VB

It was the first time that the Flemish Interest (Vlaams Belang, VB) had taken part in federal elections under its new name. Ostracized by all other political parties because of its views on foreigners and immigration, the VB is unlikely to take part in a new government. The VB's lists also included members of the right-liberal Flemish Liberal Independent Tolerant and Transparent party (VLOTT) of Hugo Coveliers.

SP.a/Spirit

The Socialistische Partij Anders is a social-democratic party and has formed a cartel list with the Flemish regionalist and left liberal party Spirit. Like their coalition partner VLD, they lost heavily in the election, which prompted SP.A party leader Johan Vande Lanotte to step down. Vande Lanotte made it also clear that the alliance will not take part in a federal government whose sole concern is state reform.

Open VLD

Open Flemish Liberals and Democrats (Open VLD) is the alliance list of the Flemish Liberals and Democrats (VLD) of prime minister Guy Verhofstadt, and the small liberal political parties Vivant (left-liberal) and Liberal Appeal (Liberaal Appèl) (right-liberal).

The VLD has seen some infighting in the last years, resulting in two prominent members leaving the party, Hugo Coveliers (VLOTT) and Jean-Marie Dedecker (Lijst Dedecker). After the 2006 municipal elections, the party had tried to revamp itself with the newly named Open VLD cartel, under direction of noted political strategist Noël Slangen.

Groen!

Groen! is an ecological party, and the successor of Agalev. It hoped to make a return to the federal legislature after being wiped out in the 2003 general election. They managed to return to the Belgian parliament with four House seats and one senate seat, but their result of 6.3% was below expectations.[5]

LDD

List Dedecker (Lijst Dedecker) is a liberal offshoot of the Flemish Liberals and Democrats, founded by Belgian Senator Jean-Marie Dedecker and Boudewijn Bouckaert, chairman of the Nova Civitas think tank. The party surprised some who doubted it would clear the 5% electoral threshold by receiving 6.3% of the Flemish vote.

PVDA+

The Workers Party of Belgium (Partij van de Arbeid van België) is a radical left wing party, of Maoist origin. Its lists also contain independent candidates. The PVDA almost doubled their votes, from 0.5% to 0.9%.

CAP

The Committee for Another Policy (Comité voor een Andere Politiek) is a bilingual left wing political movement, consisting of trade union militants, and political militants of communist, Trotskyist and socialist origin. It was formed in 2006 as a reaction to the more centrist course of the SP.a. Former SP.a-representative Jef Sleeckx is one of the co-founders. These elections were the first the movement participated in. They got 0.4% of the votes in Flanders.

Francophone parties (French speaking)

These Francophone parties fielded candidates in the Walloon Region and in the electoral district Brussels-Halle-Vilvoorde.

PS

The Parti Socialiste (PS) is a social-democratic party that took part in the Verhofstadt I Government and the Verhofstadt II Government. It is unlikely that the PS will deliver Belgium's next prime minister, the last Francophone prime minister was Paul Vanden Boeynants in 1978-79. Largest competitor of the PS is the Mouvement Réformateur (MR), which just recently broke with the PS in Charleroi, after PS aldermen were charged with corruption.

MR

The Mouvement Réformateur is a liberal party. It is a fusion of the Liberal Reformist Party (PRL), the French-linguistic party Democratic Front of Francophones (FDF) and a breakaway fraction of the Christian democratic Citizens' Movement for Change (MCC). It had taken part in the federal government of Guy Verhofstadt, which included MR leader Didier Reynders as finance minister.

The MR clearly won the elections in the French-speaking Walloon region, and the bilingual Brussels-Capital Region, ousting the previously dominant Parti Socialiste. The MR campaigned on three major fronts: the need for an alternative to the PS, entangled in various scandals of corruption and accused of poor governance leading to unemployment and anachronistic political systems; the need for a new fiscal reform; lowering taxes and government grip on the economy; and finally friendliness and cooperation with its Flemish counterpart, Open VLD.

cdH

The Centre Démocrate Humaniste is a Christian democratic party. They made a small advance (0.4%) in these elections and finished with 15.8% of the votes.

Ecolo

Ecolo is a Green party. It made the largest gains of the 2007 election among Francophone parties and went from 7.5% to 12.8%.

FN

The Front National is a Franco-nationalist political movement known for its tough stances on immigration. They gained 5.6% of the vote, the same as in 2003.

CAP

The Committee for Another Policy (Comité pour une Autre Politique) is a bilingual left wing political movement, consisting of trade union militants, and political militants of communist, Trotskyist and socialist origin. It was formed in 2006 as a reaction to the more centrist course of the PS and the SP.a. Former FGTB-chairman Georges Debunne is one of the co-founders. These elections were the first the movement participated in. The party got 0.2% of the votes in Hainaut and Liège, the two provinces where its candidates stood.

Issues

Good governance

CD&V used the theme of good governance as a breaking point against SP.a and VLD. The party claimed that unlike in the Flemish Government, where CD&V leader Leterme heads a tripartite government, with CD&V, VLD and SP.a, the federal government lacked good governance. SP.a and VLD tried to counter this charge with similar examples in the Flemish Government of practices which CD&V accused them of.

Brussels-Halle-Vilvoorde and constitutionality

With the federal elections looming, the problem of the electoral district of Brussels-Halle-Vilvoorde (B-H-V) re-emerged. Because the federal government failed to comply with a ruling of the Court of Arbitration which declared the provincial electoral districts compared to the two remaining arrondisemental ones in the former province of Brabant unconstitutional. According to the ruling of the Court of Arbitration the current situation would make federal elections impossible after 24 June 2007, so the new government will have to solve the situation. Several mayors in the Brussels-Halle-Vilvoorde area have threatened and actually have refused to compile the lists of electors. The governor took over their task.

Professor and constitutional expert Paul Van Orshoven from the Katholieke Universiteit Leuven declared that the elections would be unconstitutional. According to Van Orshoven there were two problems:

  • As the previous election was held on Sunday 18 May 2003, the final date to hold elections (four years from the previous) would be Sunday, 13 May 2007.
  • The Court of Arbitration gave the government the time to fix the B-H-V problem until the next elections. That hasn't happened, which means that the election results could be declared void.

Corruption in the Walloon Region

During the campaign new irregularities and corruption in PS-lead Charleroi emerged. The MR started using this as an example of why things in Wallonia under PS management were bad. The campaign became hostile and personal attacks between various MR, CdH and PS leaders dominated the campaign.

Armenian Genocide

In the run-up to the election, Johan Vande Lanotte, leader of the Socialist Party – Different, refused to acknowledge the Turkish genocide on its Armenian minority in the midst of a controversy about the strong allegiance to Turkey expressed in Turkish at a meeting by a Turkish-Belgian CD&V Senate candidate, Ergün Top,[6][7] but also in the aftermath of a similar problem aroused during the campaign for the Dutch general election a few months earlier. The position of Yves Leterme (CD&V) on this issue was unclear at first, but he later confided to the Flemish parliament that he does acknowledge the Armenian Genocide.[8][9]

In 1998, the Belgian Senate had already passed a resolution acknowledging the Armenian Genocide, including the support of SP (later sp.a) and CVP (later CD&V) senators.[10][11]

Polls

The polls conducted by the Stemmenkampioen site of Het Laatste Nieuws and the Vrije Universiteit Brussel [1], yield the following overall result for Flanders, compared to the 2003 Senate elections. De Standaard and the VRT conducted a similar poll in November 2006, in March 2007 (the first poll in which Lijst Dedecker, a Flemish party founded in January 2007, was measured) and in May 2007.

The percentages are relative to that region.

Party/Alliance General elections 05/2003 (%) Het Laatste Nieuws 01/2007 (%) [2] De Standaard/VRT 11/2006 (%) [12] De Standaard/VRT 03/2007 (%) [13] Le Soir/RTBF 04/2007 (%)

[3]

De Standaard/VRT 21-05-2007 (%) [14] Le Soir/RTBF 06/2007 (%)

[4]

De Standaard/VRT 06/2007 (%)

[5]

Flanders
CD&V - N-VA 25 30 32,7 30,4 29,6 29,9 29,7 29,9
Vlaams Belang 17 20 21,9 20,8 21,9 20,7 21,6 21,4
SP.a - Spirit 25 17 19,7 20,7 20,3 20,4 19,7 19,4
VLD - Vivant 24 15 17,3 16,9 16,6 17,3 17,3 17,7
Groen! 3 5 7,6 7,6 6,7 8,4 7,4 7,7
Lijst Dedecker N/A N/A N/A 3,2 2,8 2,1 N/A 3,8
Wallonia
PS N/A N/A N/A 33,4 N/A 31,4 N/A
MR N/A N/A N/A 24,5 N/A 26,5 N/A
CDH N/A N/A N/A 19 N/A 19,2 N/A
Ecolo N/A N/A N/A 9,6 N/A 9,7 N/A
FN N/A N/A N/A 8,2 N/A 8,1 N/A
Brussels
MR N/A N/A N/A 27,9 N/A 27,4 N/A
PS N/A N/A N/A 25,9 N/A 25 N/A
CDH N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A 15,3 N/A
ECOLO N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A 10,5 N/A

Results

This graph shows the Belgian Chamber of Representatives 2007 election results (colour) compared to those of 2003 (grey).
This graph shows the Dutch-speaking Belgian Senate 2007 election results (colour) compared to those of 2003 (grey).
This chart shows the Belgian Chamber of Representatives 2007 election results (right) compared to those of 2003 (left). The bold line shows the majority coalition.

Chamber of Representatives

e • d Summary of the 10 June 2007 Belgian Chamber of Representatives election results
← 200320072010 →
Party Main ideology Leader(s) Votes  % +/– E.c. % Seats +/–
Christian Democratic & Flemish (CD&V) + New Flemish Alliance (N-VA) Christian democracy Johan Vandeurzen 1,234,950 18.51 * 2.20 Increase 29.6 30 * 8 Increase
Reformist Movement (MR) Liberalism Didier Reynders 835,073 12.52 1.12 Increase 31.2 23 1 Decrease
Flemish Interest (VB) Nationalism Frank Vanhecke 799,844 11.99 0.40 Increase 19 17 1 Decrease
Open Flemish Liberals and Democrats (OPEN VLD) Liberalism Bart Somers 789,455 11.83 3.53 Decrease 18.8 18 7 Decrease
Socialist Party (PS) Social democracy Elio Di Rupo 724,787 10.86 2.16 Decrease 29.5 20 5 Decrease
Socialist Party – Differently (SP.A) + Spirit (SPIRIT) Social democracy Johan Vande Lanotte 684,390 10.26 4.65 Decrease 16.3 14 9 Decrease
Humanist Democratic Centre (CDH) Christian democracy Joëlle Milquet 404,077 6.06 0.59 Increase 15.8 10 2 Increase
Ecolo Green politics 340,378 5.10 2.04 Increase 12.8 8 4 Increase
List Dedecker (LDD) Libertarianism Jean-Marie Dedecker 268,648 4.03 4.03 Increase 6.5 5 5 Increase
Green! (GROEN!) Green politics Vera Dua 265,828 3.98 1.51 Increase 6.3 4 4 Increase
National Front (FN) Nationalism Patrick Cocriamont 131,385 1.97 0.01 Decrease 5.6 1 0 Steady
Others (parties that received less than 1% of the national vote) 192,555 2.89 0
Valid votes 6,671,360 94.87
Blank and invalid votes 360,717 5.13
Totals 7,032,077 100.00 150
Electorate and voter turnout 7,720,796 91.08
Source: Federal Portal − Chamber Elections 2007.

Notes: E.c. = electoral college (Dutch- and French-speaking) / * The 2003 data are resp. CD&V and N-VA instead of CD&V/N-VA alliance.

The newly constituted Chamber met for the first time on Thursday 28 June 2007, when the Representatives took the oath of office.

Details

Results by party (seats by constituency)
Region Seats won per party Total seats
Constituency CD&V + N-VA OPEN VLD VB SP.A + SPIRIT LDD GROEN!
Flanders Flanders Antwerp (province) Antwerp
8 / 24
4 / 24
6 / 24
4 / 24
1 / 24
1 / 24
24 / 88
Brussels Brussels-H.-V.
3 / 9
2 / 9
2 / 9
1 / 9
N/A
1 / 9
9 / 88
East Flanders East Flanders
6 / 20
5 / 20
4 / 20
3 / 20
1 / 20
1 / 20
20 / 88
Belgium Leuven
2 / 7
2 / 7
1 / 7
1 / 7
1 / 7
N/A
7 / 88
Limburg (Belgium) Limburg
5 / 12
2 / 12
2 / 12
3 / 12
N/A N/A
12 / 88
West Flanders West Flanders
6 / 16
3 / 16
2 / 16
2 / 16
2 / 16
1 / 16
16 / 88
Total
30 / 88
18 / 88
17 / 88
14 / 88
5 / 88
4 / 88
88 / 88
MR PS CDH ECOLO FN
Wallonia Wallonia Brussels Brussels-H.-V.
6 / 13
3 / 13
2 / 13
2 / 13
N/A
13 / 62
Hainaut (province) Hainaut
6 / 19
7 / 19
3 / 19
2 / 19
1 / 19
19 / 62
Liège (province) Liège
5 / 15
6 / 15
2 / 15
2 / 15
N/A
15 / 62
Luxembourg (Belgium) Luxembourg
2 / 4
1 / 4
1 / 4
N/A N/A
4 / 62
Namur (province) Namur
2 / 6
2 / 6
1 / 6
1 / 6
N/A
6 / 62
Walloon Brabant Walloon Brabant
2 / 5
1 / 5
1 / 5
1 / 5
N/A
5 / 62
Total
23 / 62
20 / 62
10 / 62
8 / 62
1 / 62
62 / 62

Senate

e • d Summary of the 10 June 2007 Belgian Senate election results
Parties Senate
Votes +/−  % +/− Seats +/−
Christian Democratic and Flemish / New-Flemish Alliance (Christen-Democratisch & Vlaams / Nieuw-Vlaamse Alliantie) 1,287,389 Increase254,267 19.42% Increase3.65% 9 Increase3
Open Flemish Liberals and Democrats (Open Flemish Liberals and Democrats) 821,980 Decrease185,888 12.40% Decrease2.98% 5 Decrease2
Reformist Movement (Mouvement Réformateur) 815,755 Increase19,998 12.31% Increase0.16% 6 Increase1
Flemish Interest (Vlaams Belang) 787,782 Increase45,842 11.89% Increase0.57% 5 Steady 0
Socialist Party (Parti Socialiste) 678,812 Decrease162,096 10.24% Decrease2.60% 4 Decrease2
Socialist Party – DifferentSpirit (Socialistische Partij – Anders – Spirit) 665,342 Decrease348,218 10.04% Decrease5.43% 4 Decrease3
Humanist Democratic Centre (Centre Démocrate Humaniste) 390,852 Increase28,147 5.90% Increase0.36% 2 Steady 0
Ecolo 385,466 Increase176,598 5.82% Increase2.63% 2 Increase1
Groen! 241,151 Increase80,127 3.64% Increase1.18% 1 Increase1
List Dedecker (Lijst Dedecker) 223,992 Increase223,992 3.38% Increase3.38% 1 Increase1
National Front (Front National) 150,461 Increase3,156 2.27% Increase0.02% 1 Steady 0
Others 179,145 2.69%
Total (turnout 91.1%) 6,628,127 100.00% 40
Source: Verkiezingen 2007.

The 2003 data are resp. CD&V and N-VA instead of CD&V NVA alliance, Vlaams Blok instead of Vlaams Belang and Agalev instead of Groen!.

21 Community Senators and 10 Coopted Senators were also be appointed. The definite distribution is not known. On Thursday 28 June 2007, the directly-elected Senators took the oath of office. One week later, on 5 July 2007, the Community Senators took the oath, and two weeks later, on 12 July 2007, the Coopted Senators took the oath. On that day, the Senate was fully constituted.[15][16]

Government formation

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Due to differences in view with regards to constitutional reform between the Flemish and Francophone parties, the negotiations to form a new government proceeded with much difficulty.

On 13 June 2007, King Albert II appointed MR leader Didier Reynders informateur,[17][18] (someone who assesses the possibilities for government coalitions). Prior to his appointment, in his position as party leader, Reynders had indicated his preference for a coalition of Christian Democratic parties CD&V (Flanders) and cdH (Wallonia) and liberal parties MR (Wallonia) and Open VLD (Flanders).[19] Reynders presented his final report to the King on 4 July 2007. Following the report, King Albert II appointed former Prime Minister Jean-Luc Dehaene as mediator to prepare the ground for the formateur and to look into the possibility of a state reform.[20]

The King then appointed Yves Leterme of the CD&V as formateur (giving him the task of forming a coalition). Negotiations were temporarily halted on 17 August to give the King the possibility to mediate. Upon the further failure of the negotiations, on 23 August Leterme resigned as formateur.[21] As no acceptable mediator could be found, on 27 August, the King took the unusual step to consult 13 Ministers of State to find way out of the political crisis. At the end of August, the King appointed Herman Van Rompuy (also CD&V and President of the Belgian Chamber of Representatives since July) as explorateur (scout). Following Rompuy's report, Leterme was again appointed formateur on 15 September. After two months of further negotiations, Leterme was still unable to form a coalition and resigned as formateur for a second time on 1 December.[22]

See also

References

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  6. Mehmet Koksal, Ergün Top : "En cas de guerre, je me battrai contre la Belgique si nécessaire", Humeur allochtone, 3 June 2007
  7. Mehmet Koksal, Futur soldat turc Ergün Top fera "face à la Belgique" en cas de guerre, Humeur allochtone, 6 June 2007
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  14. http://www2.vrtnieuws.net/cm/vrtnieuws.net/verkiezingen07/peilingen/070521_Algemeen
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External links