1971 Dutch general election

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1971 Dutch general election
Netherlands
← 1967 28 April 1971 1972 →
Turnout 79.1% (Decrease 15.8 pp)
Party Leader % Seats ±
PvdA 24.6% 39
KVP 21.8% 35
VVD 10.3% 16
Anti-Revolutionary Party 8.6% 13
D66 6.8% 11
CHU 6.3% 7
DS'70 5.3% 8
CPN 3.9% 6
SGP 2.3% 3
PPR 1.8% 2
GPV 1.6% 2
NMP 1.5% 2
PSP 1.4% 2
BP 1.1% 1
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.
File:TK Samenstelling 1971.jpg
Seats
Prime Minister before Prime Minister after
Piet de Jong Piet de Jong
KVP
Barend Biesheuvel
Anti-Revolutionary Party
Barend Biesheuvel

General elections were held in the Netherlands on 28 April 1971.[1] The Labour Party (PvdA) emerged as the largest party, winning 39 of the 150 seats in the House of Representatives.[2] The elections were the first without compulsory voting, causing a sharp fall in voter turnout, down to 79.1% from 94.9% in the 1967 elections.[3] Barend Biesheuvel of the Anti-Revolutionary Party (ARP) became Prime Minister, leading the first Biesheuvel cabinet.

His cabinet contained a broad coalition of parties, with ministers from ARP, Christian Historical Union (both Protestant), the Catholic People's Party, the conservative-liberal People's Party for Freedom and Democracy and moderate socialist Democratic Socialists '70 (DS'70), which had just split off from the PvdA.

However, Biesheuvel's government was short-lived; following a decision to cut government spending, DS'70 withdrew from the government, causing it to lose its majority and fresh elections to be held after just a year and seven months.

Results

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Popular Vote
PvdA
  
24.60%
KVP
  
21.84%
VVD
  
10.34%
ARP
  
8.59%
D66
  
6.78%
CHU
  
6.32%
DS70
  
5.33%
CPN
  
3.90%
SGP
  
2.35%
PPR
  
1.84%
GPV
  
1.61%
NMP
  
1.51%
PSP
  
1.44%
BP
  
1.10%
Other
  
2.46%

References

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  2. Nohlen & Stöver, p1414
  3. Nohlen & Stöver, p1397