2015 Swiss federal election

2015 Swiss federal election

National Council
18 October 2015

All 200 seats in the National Council
101 seats needed for a majority
Turnout47.62% ( 0.88pp)
Party Leader Vote % Seats +/–
Swiss People's Toni Brunner 29.43 65 +11
Social Democrats Christian Levrat 18.86 43 −3
FDP.The Liberals Philipp Müller 16.39 33 +3
Christian Democrats Christophe Darbellay 11.61 27 −1
Greens Adèle Thorens
Regula Rytz
7.06 11 −4
Green Liberals Martin Bäumle 4.63 7 −5
BDP Martin Landolt 4.11 7 −2
Evangelical People's Marianne Streiff 1.90 2 0
Ticino League Attilio Bignasca 0.99 2 0
Labour Gavriel Pinson 0.81 1 +1
CSP Obwalden Sepp Stalder 0.40 1 0
Geneva Citizens' Roger Golay 0.32 1 0
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.
Council of States
18 October–22 November 2015

All 46 seats in the Council of States
24 seats needed for a majority
Party Seats +/–
Christian Democrats 13 0
FDP.The Liberals 13 +2
Social Democrats 12 +1
Swiss People's 5 0
Greens 1 −1
BDP 1 0
Independents 1 0
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.

Federal elections were held in Switzerland on 18 October 2015 for the National Council and the first round of elections to the Council of States, with runoff elections to the Council of States being held in various cantons until 22 November.

Results showed a shift, due to voter concerns regarding refugee immigration, to the right and increased support for the three largest parties, with the strong showing of Swiss People's Party and FDP.The Liberals possibly affecting future reforms of energy, social security and tax issues, as well as the make-up of the seven-member government.

The Swiss People's Party won a record number of seats, taking a third of the 200-seat lower house. The SVP received the highest proportion of votes of any Swiss political party since 1919, when proportional representation was first introduced, and it received more seats in the National Council than any other political party since 1963, when the number of seats was set at 200.

The federal election was followed by the 2015 Swiss Federal Council election on 9 December 2015, where the SVP won a second seat on the Federal Council.