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Lithuania: following the first round of the parliamentary election, the Social Democrats are well-positioned to assume power

In the parliamentary election held on 13 October, six parties surpassed the 5% electoral threshold. The Social Democratic party (LSDP) emerged as the winning party, securing 19.36% of the vote, which translated into 18 seats. The conservative Homeland Union/Lithuanian Christian Democrats (TS-LKD), which had governed for the past four years, came second with 17.96% of the vote and 17 seats. The populist Dawn of Nemunas party (PPNA), founded in 2024, came third with 14.99% of the vote, earning 14 seats. The opposition Union of Democrats “For Lithuania” (DSVL) secured 9.24% of the vote, giving them eight seats in the Seimas. The Liberals’ Movement, the current coalition partner of the conservatives, secured seven seats with 7.7% of the vote, while the opposition Lithuanian Farmers and Greens Union (LVŽS) captured six seats with 7.02%.

Another coalition partner of the conservatives, the Freedom Party, failed to cross the electoral threshold (4.50%). The same applies to the Electoral Action of Poles in Lithuania – Christian Families Alliance (LLRA–KŠS; AWPL–ZCHR [Polish]), which received 3.89% of the vote. However, it secured two seats in the Seimas through single-member districts, and three of its representatives have advanced to the second round of the election.

In the first round, under a proportional representation system in a single multi-member constituency covering all of Lithuania, 70 out of 141 MPs were elected. Additionally, voters elected representatives to eight of the 71 seats that are chosen in single-member constituencies. This year, successful candidates had to garner more than half of the votes with the minimum turnout of 40% in a specific constituency, or at least 20% of the votes cast by all registered voters in a constituency with a lower turnout. In the second round (on 27 October), two candidates who obtained the best results in the first round will compete in 63 single-member constituencies. In the 13 October election, the turnout was 52.04%, compared to 47.80% in 2020.

Although the Social Democrats’ victory allows them to plan a new centre-left coalition, the results of the second round will determine their coalition partners. Regardless of the future government’s composition, Lithuania’s pro-Western orientation and support for Ukraine will continue.

Commentary

Chart. Division of seats in the Seimas of the Republic of Lithuania following the first round of the parliamentary election

Source: the author’s own analysis based on the election results published by vrk.lt.

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