2021 Aduraszna General Election

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Next Aduraszna General Election
← 2017 No later than November 7, 2021 (2021-11-07)

320 members of parliament to the Aszar Chamber
161 seats needed for a majority
Opinion polls
 
Leader Harun Lunsdzhura Te'a Skárun Kestrel Sarikai
Party Democracy and Freedom Aszar Kharo / Ex Rei Solidarity
Last election 162 / 37% 129 / 35% 8 / 7%
Latest Forecast[1] 107 ( Decrease 55 )
27% ( Decrease 10% )
78 ( Decrease 51 )
26% ( Decrease 9% )
112 ( Increase 104 )
29% ( Increase 22% )

 
Leader Kánlun Renutaszra Areu'i Tsankur Sanjarai Eleris
Party Meaningful Change Movement for
Ecological Action
Kietul Njartikt -
Civic Renewal
Last election 7 / 6% 6 / 5% 6 / 4%
Latest Forecast[1] 0 ( Decrease 7 )
1% ( Decrease 5% )
13 ( Increase 7 )
7% ( Increase 2% )
9 ( Increase 3 )
5% ( Increase 1% )

 
Leader Lo Sadzhun none Sadzhra Leilikra
Party Attention! Reirenu'a Karus Aduraszna Sara'e'Tinjasrir
Last election 1 / 3% 1 / 1% 0 / 3%
Latest Forecast[1] 0 ( Decrease 1 )
3% ( Steady )
1 ( Steady )
1% ( Steady )
0 ( Steady )
1% ( Decrease 2% )

The 2021 Aduraszna General Election to determine the composition of the Aszar Chamber of Representatives will be held up to 256 Traditional Vaaran Calendar weeks (which are 6 days each, for a total of 1536 days) after the previous election. Voters will elect 320 members to the Chamber under a first-past-the-post voting system. Concurrently, they will also vote for 24 senators to the Federal Office of Aduraszna through Hare-Clark ranked voting.

At the 2017 election, the right-wing ReNDaF, led by Kasran Felaits, lost 22 seats but retained a slim majority in the Chamber. In 2018, a leadership spill led to a change of party leader (and therefore, prime minister), to moderate Harun Lunsdzhura.

The election will be held in the wake of the 7-11 tsunami, in which the government was widely criticised for its inability to properly deal with the aftermath and recovery, as well as several allegations of corruption and misuse of foreign financial aid. Much credit was given to trade unionist movement Solidarity, which organised the grassroots aid and is widely considered[2] to have contributed the most to the tsunami response.


  1. Forecast based on Transition Model and the lastest ASGTV-P polling data (September 2021)
  2. 85%; ASGTV poll, 9 August 2021