- Source: 1919 Belgian general election
General elections were held in Belgium on 16 November 1919. Although the Belgian Labour Party received the most votes in the Chamber of Representatives elections, the Catholic Party remained the largest party in both the Chamber and the Senate. Voter turnout was 88.5% in the Chamber elections.
They were the first elections after the First World War, and the first with universal single-vote suffrage (for men), a change that was sought by and benefited the Belgian Labour Party. The voting age was also lowered from 25 to 21, and the system of proportional representation was modified to use apparentment (combining votes of different arrondissements within a province).
Results
= Chamber of Representatives
== Senate
=Constituencies
The distribution of seats among the electoral districts was as follows:
Notes
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- 1919 Belgian general election
- 1919 in Belgium
- List of elections in 1919
- 1914 Belgian general election
- 1921 Belgian general election
- Belgian general strike of 1893
- Eupen-Malmedy
- Voting rights in Belgium
- Elections in Belgium
- Belgium