1953 Yugoslavian parliamentary election

Background

A new electoral law was adopted in September 1953, introducing several reforms. Candidates no longer being nominated by the Socialist Alliance but could self-nominate with either the support of a voters' meeting or 200 signatures. It was also required that there be at least two candidates in each constituency.[2] For the first time, paper ballots were used, with voters marking their ballot paper in closed booths.[2]

The 282 deputies of the Federal Assembly included 116 from Serbia, 66 from Croatia, 48 from Bosnia and Herzegovina, 24 from Slovenia, 21 from Macedonia and 7 from Montenegro.[3]

Results

With multiple candidates allowed, the elections saw some serious contests, with 14 non-Alliance candidates running in Macedonia, although two of them were withdrawn shortly before election day. However, candidates supported by the Alliance won in every seat and it was reported that Alliance candidates had received 95.3% of the vote, with voter turnout at 89%. Milovan Đilas received the highest vote share of any candidate (98.8%), with Josip Broz Tito receiving 97.7%.[2]

After losing by a narrow margin, former diplomat Ljubo Drndić requested a recount. However, he was publicly admonished and threatened with legal action.[2]

References

  1. Ibrahim Latifić (1976) Yugoslavia Thirty Years After Liberation and the Victory Over Fascism: 1945-1975, p139
  2. Fred Warner Neal (1958) Titoism in Action: The Reforms in Yugoslavia After 1948 pp222–223
  3. Dolf Sternberger; Bernhard Vogel; Dieter Nohlen (July 1969). Europa. Walter de Gruyter. p. 775. ISBN 978-3-11-001156-2.
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