2022 Bosnian general election

2022 Bosnian general election

← 2018 2 October 2022 2026 →
Turnout51.45% (presidential) Decrease 2.57 pp
51.45% (parliamentary) Decrease 2.58 pp
Bosniak member of the Presidency
 
Candidate Denis Bećirović Bakir Izetbegović
Party SDP BiH SDA
Popular vote 330,238 214,412
Percentage 57.37% 37.25%
Croat member of the Presidency
 
Candidate Željko Komšić Borjana Krišto
Party DF HDZ BiH
Popular vote 227,540 180,255
Percentage 55.80% 44.20%
Serb member of the Presidency
 
Candidate Željka Cvijanović Mirko Šarović
Party SNSD SDS
Popular vote 327,720 224,912
Percentage 51.65% 35.45%

Presidency members before election

Šefik Džaferović (Bosniak)
Željko Komšić (Croat)
Milorad Dodik (Serb)

Elected Presidency members

Denis Bećirović (Bosniak)
Željko Komšić (Croat)
Željka Cvijanović (Serb)


All 42 seats in the House of Representatives
22 seats needed for a majority
Party Leader % Seats +/–
SDA Bakir Izetbegović 17.23 9 0
SNSD Milorad Dodik 16.34 6 0
HDZ BiH Dragan Čović 8.75 4 −1
SDP BiH Nermin Nikšić 8.15 5 0
SDS Mirko Šarović 7.07 2 −1
DFGS Željko Komšić 6.41 3 0
NiP Elmedin Konaković 5.01 3 +3
PDP Branislav Borenović 4.63 2 0
NS Edin Forto 3.12 2 0
NESZNG Nermin Ogrešević 2.97 2 +1
ZPR Nebojša Vukanović 2.08 1 New
DEMOS Nedeljko Čubrilović 1.93 1 New
US Nenad Stevandić 1.55 1 New
BHI Fuad Kasumović 1.28 1 New
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.
Most voted-for party by municipality
Chairman before Chairman after
Zoran Tegeltija
SNSD
Borjana Krišto
HDZ BiH

General elections were held in Bosnia and Herzegovina on 2 October 2022. They decided the makeup of Bosnia and Herzegovina's Presidency as well as national, entity, and cantonal governments.

Christian Schmidt, the High Representative for Bosnia and Herzegovina, imposed changes to the country's electoral law after voting hours ended for the election. The changes prominently included an expansion of the Federal House of Peoples from 56 to 80 members, changes in the election process for the house as well as changes in the election process for the president and vice presidents of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina.[1][2]

The elections for the House of Representatives were divided into two; one for the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina and one for Republika Srpska. In the presidential election, voters in the Federation elected Bosniak Denis Bećirović and re-elected Croat Željko Komšić, while voters in Republika Srpska elected Serb Željka Cvijanović. Komšić was re-elected to the Presidency for a record fourth term, while Cvijanović became the first woman to be elected to the Presidency as established after the Bosnian War.[3]

Despite Denis Bećirović, who was a candidate of the Social Democratic Party (SDP BiH), beating the Party of Democratic Action (SDA) president Bakir Izetbegović for the Bosniak spot in the Presidency, the SDA repeated its result from the previous general election in 2018, emerging as the largest party in the House of Representatives, winning 9 of the 42 seats. The Alliance of Independent Social Democrats (SNSD) came in second with 6 seats, repeating its result from the previous election as well. The SDP BiH and the Croatian Democratic Union (HDZ BiH) came in third and fourth, winning 5 and 4 seats respectively. The Serb Democratic Party (SDS) won two seats, its lowest number ever, prompting SDS president Mirko Šarović to resign the following month.[4]

In spite of the SDA emerging as the largest party, its failure to form a functional coalition led to the SNSD, the HDZ BiH and the liberal alliance Troika to form a coalition, with Borjana Krišto getting appointed as the new Chairwoman of the Council of Ministers in January 2023, becoming the first woman to serve as Bosnia and Herzegovina's head of government.[5]

  1. ^ "Schmidt nametnuo izmjene Izbornog zakona BiH: Evo o čemu se radi". Oslobođenje (in Bosnian). 2 October 2022. Retrieved 5 October 2022.
  2. ^ "Objavljujemo detalje: Pročitajte koje je izmjene Izbornog zakona večeras donio Schmidt". Radio Sarajevo (in Croatian). 2 October 2022. Retrieved 5 October 2022.
  3. ^ "Željka Cvijanović će biti prva žena u Predsjedništvu BiH od završetka rata". fokus.ba (in Bosnian). 2 October 2022. Retrieved 2 October 2022.
  4. ^ S.S. (3 November 2022). "Mirko Šarović i kompletno rukovodstvo SDS-a podnijeli ostavke u stranci" (in Bosnian). Dnevni avaz. Retrieved 3 November 2022.
  5. ^ "Borjana Krišto - prva žena na čelu Vijeća ministara BiH" (in Bosnian). Radio Free Europe. 27 December 2022. Retrieved 27 December 2022.

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