2024 Belgian regional elections

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The 2024 Belgian regional elections will take place on Sunday 9 June, the same day as the 2024 European Parliament election[1] as well as the Belgian federal election.

In the regional elections, new representatives are chosen for the Flemish Parliament, Walloon Parliament, Brussels Parliament and the Parliament of the German-speaking Community. The Parliament of the French Community is composed of all elected members of the Walloon Parliament (German-speaking members are replaced) and 19 of the French-speaking members of the Brussels Parliament.

Electoral system[edit]

The regional parliaments have limited power over their own election; federal law largely regulates this and the federal government organises the elections, which occur per Article 117 of the Constitution on the same day as the European Parliament elections.

As such, all regional parliaments are elected using proportional representation under the D'Hondt method.

Flemish Parliament[edit]

2024 Flemish parliamentary election

← 2019 9 June 2024 (2024-06-09) 2029 →

All 124 seats in the Flemish Parliament
63 seats needed for a majority

Flemish Government before election

Jambon Government
N-VACD&VOpen Vld coalition

Elected Flemish Government

TBD

124 members of the Flemish Parliament will be elected. The five Flemish provinces (West Flanders, East Flanders, Antwerp, Flemish Brabant and Limburg) each were a constituency, plus the Brussels-Capital Region where those voting for a Dutch-language party could also vote in the Flemish election.

Every ten years, the 124 seats are reallocated among the six constituencies on the basis of population data. The Flemish Parliament approved the new distribution in December 2022, which removed a seat in West Flanders in favour of an extra seat in Flemish Brabant.[2]

  • Antwerp: 33 seats
  • Brussels: 6 seats
  • Limburg: 16 seats
  • East Flanders: 27 seats
  • Flemish Brabant: 21 seats (+1)
  • West Flanders: 21 seats (-1)

The incumbent government is made up of a coalition of Flemish nationalists (N-VA), Christian democrats (CD&V) and liberals (Open Vld).

Main candidates[edit]

The following candidates are the first on the respective party list (lijsttrekker) per constituency.

Party  Antwerp  East Flanders  Flemish Brabant  Limburg  West Flanders  Brussels
CD&V Katrien Schryvers [nl] Nicole de Moor Peter Van Rompuy Jo Brouns [nl] Hilde Crevits Bianca Debaets [nl]
Groen Kim Buyst [nl] Mieke Schauvliege [nl] Aimen Horch [nl] Bright Adiyia [nl] Jeremie Vaneeckhout Nadia Naji
N-VA Jan Jambon Matthias Diependaele Ben Weyts Zuhal Demir Sander Loones Karl Vanlouwe
Open Vld Tom Ongena [nl] Stephanie D'Hose Gwendolyn Rutten Lydia Peeters [nl] Jasper Pillen [nl] Chloë Van Hoegaerden
PVDA Jos D'Haese Onno Vandewalle [nl] Line De Witte [nl] Gaby Colebunders [nl] Ilona Vandenberghe [nl] Anna Milojkowic
Vooruit Caroline Gennez Freya Van den Bossche Bieke Verlinden Kris Verduyckt [nl] Pablo Annys [nl] Hannelore Goeman [nl]
Vlaams Belang Tom Van Grieken Guy D'haeseleer Klaas Slootmans Chris Janssens Immanuel De Reuse Dominiek Lootens-Stael
Volt[3] Jeroen Van Loock Richard Kelder


Retiring incumbents:

Walloon Parliament[edit]

75 members of the Walloon Parliament are elected. The members are elected in multi-member arrondissement-based constituencies; the Walloon Parliament is the only parliament in Belgium still using this geographical level for constituencies.

The following candidates are the first on the respective party list (tête de liste) per constituency.

Party Liège Verviers Huy-Waremme Nivelles Namur Dinant - Philippeville Luxembourg Tournai - Ath - Mouscron Charleroi - Thuin Mons Soignies
DéFI
Ecolo Veronica Cremasco [fr] Freddy Mockel [fr] Rodrigue Demeuse  [fr] Céline Tellier [fr] Stéphane Hazée [fr] Christina Dewart Jean-Philippe Florent [fr] Bénédicte Linard [fr] Christophe Clersy [fr] Charlotte De Jear Arnaud Guérard
Les Engagés Olivier de Wasseige Jean-Paul Bastin [fr] Marie Jacqmin Vincent Blondel Benoît Dispa [fr] Christophe Bastin [fr] François Huberty Mathilde Vandorpe [fr] Jean-Jacques Cloquet [fr] François Desquesnes [fr]
MR Diana Nikolic [fr] Charles Gardier [fr] Caroline Cassart Valérie De Bue [fr] Vincent Maillen Richard Fournaux Willy Borsus Marie-Christine Marghem Adrien Dolimont [fr] Jacqueline Galant Maxime Daye
PS Christie Morreale [fr] Valérie Dejardin [fr] Christophe Collignon Anne Lambelin [fr] Eliane Tillieux Eddy Fontaine [fr] Mélissa Hanus [fr] Bruno Lefebvre [fr] Thomas Dermine [fr] Nicolas Martin [fr] Laurent Devin [fr]
PTB

Brussels Parliament[edit]

All 89 members of the Parliament of the Brussels-Capital Region are elected. They are elected at-large, but there are separate Dutch-language party lists (electing 17 members) and French-language party lists (electing 72 members). Those voting for a Dutch-language party can also cast a vote for the Flemish Parliament election.

German-speaking Community Parliament[edit]

All 25 members of the Parliament of the German-speaking Community are elected in one constituency (at-large).

References[edit]

  1. ^ Article 117 of the Belgian Constitution
  2. ^ "Verkiezingen Vlaams Parlement in 2024: West-Vlaanderen verliest zetel, Vlaams-Brabant krijgt zetel bij". Het Laatste Nieuws. 2 December 2022.
  3. ^ "Volt Belgium elects lead-candidates for the June 2024 elections". Volt België. Retrieved 2024-04-05.
  4. ^ "Mercedes Van Volcem (Open VLD) trekt kandidatuur in voor Vlaamse lijst: "Na overleg met mijn dochter heb ik de knoop doorgehakt"". Focus WTV. 27 October 2023.
  5. ^ "Vlaams fractieleider Schiltz trekt kandidatuur in en haalt uit naar Open VLD-top: "Partij liet zich van slechtste kant zien"". VRT NWS. 25 October 2023.