1998 Czech presidential election explained

Election Name:1998 Czech presidential election
Country:Czech Republic
Type:presidential
Ongoing:no
Previous Election:1993 Czech presidential election
Previous Year:1993
Next Election:2003 Czech presidential election
Next Year:2003
Election Date:20 January 1998
Nominee1:Václav Havel
Party1:Independent (politician)
Electoral Vote1:146
(final round)
Percentage1:52.3%
President
Before Election:Václav Havel
Before Party:Independent (politician)
After Election:Václav Havel
After Party:Independent (politician)

Indirect presidential elections were held in the Czech Republic on 20 January 1998 to elect a new president. The Parliament re-elected incumbent President Václav Havel in the second round. The arrest of an opposition candidate, Miroslav Sládek, was criticised by Havel's opponents.[1] [2] [3]

Electoral system

President of the Czech Republic was elected indirectly by a joint session of the Czech Parliament. Each ballot can have at most three rounds. In the first round, a victorious candidate requires an absolute majority in both the Chamber of Deputies and the Senate. Given a 200-seat Chamber and an 81-seat Senate, a successful first-round candidate requires 101 deputies and 41 senators.

If no single candidate gets a majority of both the Chamber and the Senate, a second round is then called for. At this stage, a candidate requires an absolute majority of merely those actually present at the time of voting in both the Chamber of Deputies and the Senate. The actual number of votes required in the second round might be the same as in the first round, but it can be a little less, due to the absence of a few parliamentarians. Nevertheless, in this second round, a single candidate would need to win a majority in both the Chamber and the Senate.

Should no single candidate achieve a majority of both houses then present, a third round is necessitated. In this final round, which can happen within 14 days of the first round, an absolute majority of deputies and senators present suffices. At this stage, the individual houses of parliament are not considered separately. Assuming that all members of parliament are present, all that is required to win is 141 votes, regardless of the house of origin. If no candidate wins in the third round, another ballot has to be considered in a subsequent joint session of parliament. The process continues under the same rules until a candidate prevails.

Parties in parliament

PartyChamber of DeputiesSenateEndorsed candidate
Czech Social Democratic Party (ČSSD)Václav Havel
Civic Democratic Party (ODS)Václav Havel
Freedom Union (US)Václav Havel
Communist Party of Bohemia and Moravia (KSČM)Stanislav Fischer
Christian and Democratic Union – Czechoslovak People's Party (KDU-ČSL)Václav Havel
Rally for the Republic – Republican Party of Czechoslovakia (SPR-RSČ)Miroslav Sládek
Civic Democratic Alliance (ODA)Václav Havel
Democratic Union (DEU)Václav Havel
Independents

Candidates

Results

Václav Havel received 130 votes in the first round and was the only candidate who qualified for the second round, as he gained the most votes in both chambers of parliament. There he received 146 votes of 279 and won by seven votes, but in the Chamber of Deputies he won by only one vote. This was controversial as Miroslav Sládek couldn't vote in the election due to his arrest. If Sládek had participated in the vote, Havel would probably have been elected in the third round. Sládek's Republican Party called Havel's victory illegal and refused to acknowledge it. The First Lady Dagmar Havlová whistled during a speech of a Republican MP Jan Vik.[5] [6]

CandidateFirst roundSecond round
DeputiesSenatorsTotal%DeputiesSenatorsTotal%
Václav Havel913913070.659947146100
Stanislav Fischer2653116.85
Miroslav Sládek2212312.50
Total139451841009947146100

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Občan Havel: Kouteckého nasládlá propaganda, kterou měla naštěstí rozum odmítnout i Česká televize. blisty.cz. 4 August 2016.
  2. Web site: Dvoje prezidentské volby. Bohumil Doležal. 4 August 2016.
  3. Web site: Havel byl zvolen prezidentem nezákonně, tvrdí dělníci. EuroZprávy.cz. 4 August 2016.
  4. Book: Lutišan. Vojtěch. VOLBA PREZIDENTA REPUBLIKY V ČESKÉ REPUBLICE. Masaryk University. Brno. 24–25.
  5. Web site: Deset let poté: Dagmar Havlová pískala v Parlamentu. TN.cz. 4 August 2016. 19 January 2008.
  6. Web site: 1998 - Volba prezidenta 2008 (Český rozhlas). Rozhlas.cz. 4 August 2016. 14 March 2019. https://web.archive.org/web/20190314161233/http://www.rozhlas.cz/prezident08/prezidentskevolby/_zprava/427279. dead.