2018 Tyrolean state election Turnout 322,379 (60.0%) 0.4%
First party
Second party
Third party
Leader
Günther Platter
Elisabeth Blanik
Markus Abwerzger
Party
ÖVP
SPÖ
FPÖ
Last election
16 seats, 39.4%
5 seats, 13.7%
4 seats, 9.3%
Seats won
17
6
5
Seat change
1
1
1
Popular vote
141,691
55,223
49,727
Percentage
44.3%
17.2%
15.5%
Swing
4.9%
3.5%
6.2%
Fourth party
Fifth party
Sixth party
Leader
Ingrid Felipe
Andrea Haselwanter-Schneider
Dominik Oberhofer
Party
Greens
FRITZ
NEOS
Last election
5 seats, 12.6%
2 seats, 5.6%
Did not contest
Seats won
4
2
2
Seat change
1
0
2
Popular vote
34,168
17,471
16,670
Percentage
10.7%
5.5%
5.2%
Swing
1.9%
0.1%
5.2%
Results by municipality. The lighter shade indicates a plurality; the darker shade indicates a majority.
The 2018 Tyrolean state election was held on 25 February 2018 to elect the members of the Landtag of Tyrol.
The conservative Austrian People's Party (ÖVP) placed first with 44.3% of votes, a 4.9 percentage point swing. The centre-left Social Democratic Party of Austria (SPÖ) recovered somewhat from its worst ever result in 2013, rising 3.5 points to 17.2%. The Freedom Party of Austria (FPÖ) also made gains. The Greens took small losses, while Citizens' Forum Tyrol (FRITZ) stayed level. NEOS – The New Austria (NEOS) contested its first state election in Tyrol, debuting at 5.2%. Forward Tyrol , which won 9.5% in 2013, did not contest the election.[ 1]
Background
In the 2013 election , the ÖVP suffered its worst ever result in a Tyrolean state election, winning just 39.4%; prior to 2008, the party had always held a majority in the Landtag. The party subsequently formed a coalition with the Greens, who had achieved their best ever result in Tyrol at 12.6%.[ 2]
Electoral system
The 36 seats of the Landtag of Tyrol are elected via open list proportional representation in a two-step process. The seats are distributed between nine multi-member constituencies, corresponding to the districts of Tyrol . For parties to receive any representation in the Landtag, they must either win at least one seat in a constituency directly, or clear a 5 percent state-wide electoral threshold. Seats are distributed in constituencies according to the Hare quota , with any remaining seats allocated using the D'Hondt method at the state level, to ensure overall proportionality between a party's vote share and its share of seats.
Contesting parties
The table below lists parties represented in the previous Landtag.
Forward Tyrol , which contested the previous election and won 9.5% of votes and four seats, did not contest the 2018 election.
In addition to the parties already represented in the Landtag, three parties collected enough signatures to be placed on the ballot.
NEOS – The New Austria (NEOS )
Family – The Tyrolean Family Party (FAMILY )
Impulse Tyrol (IMPULS ) – on the ballot in all constituencies except Schwaz
Opinion polling
Polling firm
Fieldwork date
Sample size
ÖVP
SPÖ
Grüne
Forw.
FPÖ
FRITZ
NEOS
Impuls
Others
Lead
2018 state election
25 February 2018
–
44.3
17.2
10.7
–
15.5
5.5
5.2
0.5
1.1
27.1
IFAP
6–10 Feb 2018
600
40
16
12
–
17
6
7
–
2
23
Research Affairs
December 2017
600
38
14
12
–
24
3
5
–
4
14
GMK
December 2017
?
45
12
10
–
20
4
6
2
1
25
BrandSupport
June 2017
800
41.5
14
15
–
16.5
4
4
–
5
25.0
Market
May 2017
401
41
13
13
–
22
6
4
–
1
19
Research Affairs
December 2016
602
33
13
17
–
25
3
5
3
1
8
IFAP
December 2016
?
41
14
14
–
21
4
4
–
2
20
GMK
December 2016
?
41
12
14
–
25
3
3
–
1
16
Research Affairs
28 Nov–9 Dec 2015
608
35
12
16
–
19
5
6
–
7
16
GMK
7 Nov–11 Dec 2015
400
38
9
13
–
29
4
4
2
1
9
GfK
April 2015
500
39
13
16
1.5
13
5
4
1.5
7
26
GMK
December 2014
?
42
17
12
3
15
3
3
–
5
25
Gallup
December 2014
?
38
15
15
3
13
4
7
–
–
23
GMK
December 2013
?
41
11
16
2
15
2
8
–
3
25
Karmasin
22 Nov–11 Dec 2013
500
41
13
14
6
12
4
–
–
10
27
2013 state election
28 April 2013
–
39.4
13.7
12.6
9.5
9.3
5.6
–
–
9.8
25.7
Results
Party
Votes
%
+/−
Seats
+/−
Austrian People's Party (ÖVP)
141,691
44.26
+4.91
17
+1
Social Democratic Party of Austria (SPÖ)
55,224
17.25
+3.53
6
+1
Freedom Party of Austria (FPÖ)
49,727
15.53
+6.19
5
+1
The Greens – The Green Alternative (GRÜNE)
34,167
10.67
–1.92
4
–1
Citizens' Forum Tyrol (FRITZ)
17,471
5.46
–0.15
2
±0
NEOS – The New Austria (NEOS)
16,670
5.21
+5.21
2
+2
Family – The Tyrolean Family Party (FAMILY)
3,645
1.14
New
0
New
Impulse Tyrol (IMPULS)
1,539
0.48
New
0
New
Invalid/blank votes
2,245
–
–
–
–
Total
322,379
100
–
36
0
Registered voters/turnout
537,273
60.00
–0.40
–
–
Source: Tyrolean Government
Popular vote
ÖVP
44.26%
SPÖ
17.25%
FPÖ
15.53%
GRÜNE
10.67%
FRITZ
5.46%
NEOS
5.21%
Other
1.62%
Landtag seats
ÖVP
47.22%
SPÖ
16.67%
FPÖ
13.89%
GRÜNE
11.11%
FRITZ
5.56%
NEOS
5.56%
Results by constituency
Constituency
ÖVP
SPÖ
FPÖ
Grüne
FRITZ
NEOS
Others
Total seats
Turnout
%
S
%
S
%
S
%
S
%
S
%
S
%
Innsbruck City
25.9
1
22.8
1
16.2
1
19.0
1
7.9
7.3
1.0
4
58.4
Imst
53.1
1
12.4
14.8
7.8
5.1
5.3
1.5
1
60.2
Innsbruck-Land
39.8
3
18.8
1
16.4
1
11.8
1
6.6
5.5
1.2
6
63.8
Kitzbühel
52.8
1
14.6
14.2
8.8
4.0
4.5
1.1
1
57.7
Kufstein
44.7
2
15.3
17.5
10.2
5.3
4.2
2.7
2
58.1
Landeck
63.8
1
13.1
9.4
5.4
2.6
4.8
0.8
1
61.9
Lienz
49.2
1
21.9
13.3
5.5
2.8
3.7
3.4
1
58.9
Reutte
49.9
13.3
14.8
8.4
3.3
6.6
3.7
0
58.6
Schwaz
50.8
2
14.5
16.9
7.8
5.0
4.1
1.0
2
58.3
Remaining seats
5
4
3
2
2
2
18
Total
44.3
17
17.2
6
15.5
5
10.7
4
5.5
2
5.2
2
1.6
36
60.0
Source: Tyrolean Government
Aftermath
The ÖVP held exploratory discussions with all other parties, narrowing their options to the SPÖ and Greens after the first round of talks.[ 3] [ 4] On 8 March, Governor Platter announced formal negotiations with the Greens would take place.[ 5] On 20 March, they announced they had come to a coalition agreement. The government subsequently took office for a second term.[ 6]
References
External links
State elections
Municipal and mayoral elections