1967 Spanish general election

General elections were held in Spain on 10 October 1967 where Spanish citizens elected 102 of the 564 members of the Cortes Españolas, the Spanish legislature. It was the first election held in Spain since the 1936 general election before the Spanish Civil War (1936–1939) and the first election held during the dictatorship of Francisco Franco.[1]

1967 Spanish general election

← 1936 10 October 1967 1971 →

102 of the 564 seats in the Cortes Españolas
Registered16,500,000
Turnout64.3%
  First party
 
Leader Francisco Franco
Party National Movement
Seats before 564
Seats won 564
Seat change Steady 0

Prime Minister before election

Francisco Franco
National Movement

Prime Minister after election

Francisco Franco
National Movement

Electoral procedure

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To be eligible to vote, citizens must be heads of families, married women, or widows. To be eligible to be a candidate, citizens must be born in a province they are running in, have resided in the province for at least seven years since the age of 14, be supported by 1,000 electors of 0.5 percent of the province's population, and be a member of the National Movement.[2]

Two members were elected from each province, including from Fernando Po, Río Muni, and Spanish Sahara; Ceuta and Melilla elected one member. The remaining seats were appointed by the Spanish government.[2]

Results

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PartyVotes%Seats
National Movement564
Total564
Registered voters/turnout16,500,00064.3
Source: Inter-Parliamentary Union

References

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  1. ^ "Spain Voting Today in Direct Elections" (PDF). The New York Times. Madrid, Spain. 10 October 1967. p. 6. Retrieved 18 February 2023.
  2. ^ a b "Spain" (PDF). Inter-Parliamentary Union. pp. 101–104. Retrieved 18 February 2023.