Republic of China National Assembly election, 1912

Republic of China National Assembly elections, 1912

December 1912 − January 1913

870 seats to the National Assembly
(274 seats to the Senate + 596 seats to the House of Representatives)

  First party Second party
 
Leader Song Jiaoren Li Yuanhong
Party Nationalist Republican
Senate 132 46
House 269 120

  Third party Fourth party
 
Leader Zhang Binglin Tang Hualong
Party Unity Democratic
Senate 6 8
House 18 16

Premier before election

Zhao Bingjun
Nonpartisan

Elected Premier

Zhao Bingjun
Nonpartisan

The 1912 Republic of China National Assembly elections, held in December 1912 to January 1913, were the first elections for the new founded Republic of China Senate and House of Representatives.

Overview

The poll was indirect as voters chose some 30,000 electors who chose about 2,000 members of the provincial assemblies and 596 members of the House of Representatives. which caused instances of bribery. The 274-member Senate was elected by the provincial assemblies which had themselves been elected in 1909 during the Qing dynasty. Adult males over the age of 21 who were educated or owned property and paid taxes and who could prove two-year residency in a particular county could vote.[1] An estimated 40 million, 4-6% of China's population were registered for the election.[2] The president had to pick the 64 members representing Tibet, Outer Mongolia, and Overseas Chinese due to practical reasons. However, these elections had the participation of over 300 civic groups and were the first and most competitive nationwide elections in Chinese history.

The Nationalist Party (Kuomintang) led by Song Jiaoren won a plurality in both houses of the assembly and expected to become the Premier.[2] By order of seats, the Republican, Unity, and Democratic (formerly Constitutionalist) parties later merged into the Progressive Party under Liang Qichao, became the main rival to the Nationalists.

Song was assassinated on March 20, 1913. When the assembly convened for the first time on April 8 amid heated debate over the assassination, the Nationalists were divided over solutions on how to deal with Yuan Shikai, the provisional president who was suspected of the crime. Sun Yat-sen led a faction to rebel against Yuan on July 12 but was completely defeated within two months. The National Assembly members were compromised by threats and bribes from Yuan. He confined them and forced them to elect him formal president. Next, he outlawed the Nationalists and expelled them from the assembly. Without a quorum, it could not convene so Yuan disbanded it on 10 January 1914.

Voter and membership statistics

ProvincePopulationVoters%House
Members
Senate
Members
Chihli25,932,1339,195,75735.464610
Fengtian12,133,303896,4087.391610
Kiren5,580,030108,8351.951010
Heilungkiang2,028,776288,23414.211010
Kiangsu32,282,7811,939,3866.014010
Anhwei16,229,0521,450,9018.942710
Kiangsi23,987,3174,986,88320.793510
Chekiang21,440,1511,184,6295.533810
Fukien15,849,2961,283,3488.102410
Hupeh25,590,3085,670,37022.162610
Hunan27,390,2301,277,4144.662710
Shantung30,987,8531,368,1844.423310
Honan35,900,0381,688,6324.703210
Shansi12,269,3862,588,06821.102810
Shensi10,271,0961,395,6222.982110
Kansu4,989,907148,5262.981410
Szechwan48,129,5961,729,3683.593510
Kwantung28,010,5601,966,5167.023010
Kwangsi8,746,7472,731,71731.231910
Yunnan9,466,965233,3988.202210
Kweichow9,665,227792,2908.201310
Sinkiang2,000,0009,5060.481010
Mongolia & Tsinghai---3030
Tibet---1010
Oversea Chinese----6
Central Society----8
Total406,880,48642,933,99210.50596274

Results

Party Senate House Total
seats
Seat %
Nationalist Party 132 269 392 45.06
Republican Party 46 120 175 20.11
Unity Party 6 18 24 2.76
Democratic Party 8 16 24 2.76
Multi-party candidates 38 147 185 21.26
Nonpartisan 44 26 70 8.05
Totals 274 596 870 100

See also

References

Bibliography

  • Twitchett, Denis; Fairbank, John K, eds. (1983). The Cambridge History of China. Volume 12, Part 1. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-23541-9.
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