Northern Ireland Assembly Election, 1998

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Image:Logo of the Northern Ireland Assembly.gif The first elections to the Northern Ireland Assembly were held on June 25, 1998. Six members were elected by Single Transferable Vote from each of Northern Ireland's eighteen Westminster Parliamentary constituencies, giving a total of 108 MLAs, or Members of the Legislative Assembly.

Results

The result was (first preference votes only):

Template:Party name with colourTemplate:Party name with colourTemplate:Party name with colourTemplate:Party name with colourTemplate:Party name with colourTemplate:Party name with colourTemplate:Party name with colourTemplate:Party name with colourTemplate:Party name with colourTemplate:Party name with colourTemplate:Party name with colourTemplate:Party name with colourTemplate:Party name with colourTemplate:Party name with colour
Party Leader Seats Number % of vote Rank
John Hume 24 177,963 21.99 1
David Trimble 28 172,225 21.28 2
Ian Paisley 20 145,917 18.03 3
Gerry Adams 18 142,858 17.65 4
David Ford 6 52,636 6.5 5
Robert McCartney 5 36,541 4.52 6
Independent Unionists 3 24,339 3.0 7
David Ervine 2 20,634 2.55 8
Monica McWilliams 2 13,019 1.61 9
Ulster Democratic Gary McMichael 0 8,651 1.07 10
0 5,392 *
Labour NI 0 2,729 0.34 11
0 1,989 0.25 12
0 1,835 0.23 13
Ulster Independence Movement 0 1,227 0.15 17 *
0 832 0.10 18
0 789 0.10 19
0 710 0.09 20
 Total 108 786,132 100.0

All parties with over 500 votes listed.

¹ Independent candidates were ranked 14, 15 and 16; other independents won fewer than 500 votes.

Details

Although the SDLP won the most first preference votes, the Ulster Unionists won the most seats in the Assembly. This has been attributed to several reasons, including:

  • Slightly differential turnouts across the province, with the result that in the more staunchly unionist east fewer votes were required to elect an MLA than in the SDLP's heartlands in the west.
  • The Ulster Unionists proved better at "vote balancing" whereby in the rounds of transfers their candidates were less likely to be eliminated earlier on.
  • The Ulster Unionists proved better at attracting transfers from other parties (and due to the vote balancing mentioned above, were more likely to be a position to benefit from this)

See also

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