Election Name: | 1848 Belgian general election |
Country: | Belgium |
Type: | parliamentary |
Previous Election: | 1847 Belgian general election |
Previous Year: | 1847 |
Next Election: | 1850 Belgian general election |
Next Year: | 1850 |
Seats For Election: | All 108 seats in the Chamber of Representatives |
Majority Seats: | 55 |
Leader1: | Charles Rogier |
Leader Since1: | Candidate for PM |
Party1: | Liberal Party (Belgium) |
Seats Before1: | 55 seats |
Seats1: | 83 |
Seat Change1: | 28 |
Popular Vote1: | 30,806 |
Percentage1: | 69.52% |
Party2: | Catholic |
Seats Before2: | 53 seats |
Seats2: | 25 |
Seat Change2: | 28 |
Popular Vote2: | 13,122 |
Percentage2: | 29.61% |
Color2: | FFFF00 |
Government | |
Posttitle: | Government after election |
Before Election: | Rogier I |
Before Party: | Liberal Party (Belgium) |
After Election: | Rogier I |
After Party: | Liberal Party (Belgium) |
Full general elections were held in Belgium on 13 June 1848.[1] They followed an equalisation of the tax qualifications for voters, which widened the franchise from 1.0% of the population to 1.8%.[2] Unlike the previous rules which had favoured Conservatives and Catholics (as the requirements were lower in the countryside),[2] this benefitted the Liberal Party and damaged the Catholics, who lost more than half their seats.[2] [3]
The existing electoral law differentiated in tax requirements between cities and countryside; cities (where Liberals were stronger) had to pay higher taxes in order to vote, compared to the countryside (where Catholics were stronger).
The Liberal Party held its founding congress two years earlier, on 13 June 1846, where it approved a proposal to lower the tax requirements in order to expand suffrage. By 1848, in the context of the Revolutions of 1848, reform was unavoidable. On the proposal of Liberal head of government Charles Rogier, the Parliament approved the law of 12 March 1848, which equalised and lowered the tax requirements to its constitutional minimum.
The new law benefited the Liberals, leading them to victory in these elections. The Liberals would retain their dominant position for the most part until 1884.
One Chamber seat was uncontested, and won by the Liberal Party.
The vote figures do not include the constituency of Oudenaarde.[4]
. Elections in Europe: A data handbook . Nohlen . Dieter . Dieter Nohlen . Stöver . Philip . 31 May 2010 . Nomos Verlagsgesellschaft . 271–271 . 978-3-8329-5609-7.