Faroese general election, 2011

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Faroese general election, 2011
Flag of the Faroe Islands.svg
  2008 29 October 2011 2015  

Party Leader% Seats±
Union Kaj Leo Johannesen 24.7% 8 +1
People's Jørgen Niclasen 22.5% 8 +1
Republic Høgni Hoydal 18.3% 6 -2
Social Democratic Aksel V. Johannesen 17.8% 6 0
Progress Poul Michelsen 6.3% 2 New
Centre Jenis av Rana 6.2% 2 -1
Self-Government Kári P. Højgaard 4.2% 1 -1
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.
Prime Minister before Prime Minister
Kaj Leo Johannesen
Union
Kaj Leo Johannesen
Union
Coat of arms of the Faroe Islands.svg
This article is part of a series on the
politics and government of
the Faroe Islands

Early general elections were held in the Faroe Islands on 29 October 2011. [1] Faroese law states that new elections must be held at least once every four years; however, either the Prime Minister (Løgmaður) or a majority of the members of the Faroese Parliament (the Løgting) may call an election before the end of this period. The previous elections having been held on 20 January 2008, the latest date on which the next elections could have been held was 19 January 2012. However, the Prime Minister of the Faroe Islands, Kaj Leo Johannesen, announced on 27 September 2011 that elections would be held on 29 October 2011. He gave no particular reason for his decision. [2]

Faroe Islands Autonomus constituent country of the Kingdom of Denmark

The Faroe Islands, or the Faeroe Islands—a North Atlantic archipelago located 200 miles (320 km) north-northwest of the United Kingdom and about halfway between Norway and Iceland—are an autonomous country of the Kingdom of Denmark. Total area is about 1,400 square kilometres (540 sq mi) with a population of 50,322 in October 2017.

Kaj Leo Johannesen Prime Minister of the Faroe Islands since 2008

Kaj Leo Holm Johannesen is a Faroese politician. He was the prime minister of the Faroe Islands, representing the Faroese Unionist Party (Sambandsflokkurin). He took office, succeeding Jóannes Eidesgaard on 26 September 2008 and left office on 15 September 2015, after his party and coalition with Fólkaflokkurin and Miðflokkurin lost the general election on 1 September 2015. Johannesen is also a former international football player; he was goalkeeper for the Faroe Islands national football team.

Contents

Parliamentary elections must be held no earlier than four weeks and no later than five weeks after the announcement has been made. [3]

Results

The centre-right parties gained significantly, with both the pro-union Union Party and pro-independence People's Party gaining a seat each, while the new Progress movement (classical liberal) – formed seven months earlier as a breakaway from the People's Party – entered the Løgting with two seats. [4] The left-wing and centrist parties all lost ground in consequence. [5]

Union Party (Faroe Islands) political party in the Faroe Islands

The Union Party is a conservative-liberal and agrarian political party in the Faroe Islands. The party wants to maintain the Faroe Islands union with Denmark. On 24 October 2015 Bárður á Steig Nielsen succeeded Kaj Leo Johannesen as party leader.

Peoples Party (Faroe Islands) Political party in the Faroe Islands

The Faroese People's Party – Radical Self-Government is a pro-Faroese independence conservative and conservative-liberal political party in the Faroe Islands, led by Jørgen Niclasen. One of the four major parties, it has had eight seats in the Løgting since the 2011 election, making it the joint-largest party, but it has neither of the Faroes' seats in the Folketing.

Progress is a liberal and pro-Faroese independence political party on the Faroe Islands.

e    d  Summary of the results of the election to the Faroese Løgting
held on 29 October 2011
PartiesVotes%Seats
Union Party (Sambandsflokkurin)7,54624.78
People's Party (Fólkaflokkurin)6,88322.5 8
Republic (Tjóðveldi)5,58918.36
Social Democratic Party (Javnaðarflokkurin)5,42817.8 6
Progress (Framsókn)1,9336.32
Centre Party (Miðflokkurin)1,8836.2 2
Self-Government Party (Sjálvstýrisflokkurin)1,2904.21
Totals (electorate 35,447 : turnout 86.6% )30,552100.033
Source: logting.elektron.fo (turnout includes invalid votes; other figures exclude invalid votes)

See also

Related Research Articles

The politics of the Faroe Islands a "constituent country" of the Kingdom of Denmark, function within the framework of a parliamentary representative democratic dependency, whereby the Prime Minister of the Faroe Islands is the head of government, and of a multi-party system. The Faroe Islands are politically associated with the Kingdom of Denmark, but have been self-governing since 1948. Executive power is exercised by the government. Legislative power is vested in both the government and the Løgting. The judiciary is independent of the executive and the legislature and the responsibility of Denmark. As of October 25, 2007, the Faroe Islands became one electoral district.

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There are three types of elections in Denmark: elections to the national parliament, local elections and elections to the European Parliament. Referendums may also be called to consult the Danish citizenry directly on an issue of national concern.

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The Social Democratic Party is a social-democratic political party in the Faroe Islands, led by Aksel V. Johannesen.

LGBT rights in the Faroe Islands

Lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) rights in the Faroe Islands are relatively similar to that of Denmark. The progress of LGBT rights has been slower, however. While same-sex sexual activity has been legal in the Faroe Islands since the 1930s, same-sex couples never had a right to a registered partnership. In April 2016, the Løgting passed legislation legalizing civil same-sex marriage on the Faroes, recognizing same-sex marriages established in Denmark and abroad and allowing same-sex adoption. This was ratified by the Folketing in April 2017. The law went into effect on 1 July 2017.

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The Second Cabinet of Kaj Leo Johannesen was the government of the Faroe Islands from 14 November 2011 until 15 September 2015 with Kaj Leo Johannesen from Union Party (Sambandsflokkurin) as Prime Minister, making a coalition between Union Party (Sambandsflokkurin), People's Party (Fólkaflokkurin), Self-Government Party (Sjálvstýrisflokkurin) and Centre Party (Miðflokkurin). It is a majority government and the first completely right winged government on the islands since 1985. In September 2013 the Self Governing Party left the coalition and the ministry was closed, after their minister Kári P. Højgaard had been sacked after much discussion about a subsea tunnel between the two largest islands: Streymoy and Eysturoy, Eysturoyartunnilin, which Mr. Højgaard planned to let a private Danish company called Copenhagen Infrastructure Partners make. The plans about making the tunnel were aborted, but in February 2014 all political parties of the Løgting including the independent excluded former member of the Social Democratic Party (Javnaðarflokkurin), Gerhard Lognberg, agreed on making two subseatunnels: Eysturoyartunnilin and Sandoyartunnilin, both are planned to open in 2021 if everything works out as the politicians have planned, and they will be made by the Faroese government.

Aksel V. Johannesen Faroese politician

Aksel Vilhelmsson Johannesen is a Faroese lawyer and politician for the Social Democratic Party (Javnaðarflokkurin) and a former footballer. He is the current prime minister of the Faroe Islands.

Faroese independence movement

The Faroese independence movement or the Faroese national movement is a political movement which seeks the establishment of the Faroe Islands as a sovereign state outside Denmark. Reasons for complete autonomy include the linguistic and cultural divide between Denmark and the Faroe Islands as well as their lack of proximity to one another; the Faroe Islands are about 990 km from Danish shores.

General elections were held in the Faroe Islands on 1 September 2015. Elections for the Danish Folketing were held beforehand on 18 June.

Kristina Háfoss Faroese jurist, economist and politician

Kristina Háfoss is a Faroese economist, lawyer, politician (Tjóðveldi) and former national swimmer for the Faroe Islands. She is the current minister of finance of the Faroe Islands.

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