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  1. General elections were held in Mexico in 1861. Although incumbent president Benito Juárez received a majority (53%) of the popular vote, [1] opponents claimed his margin of victory was not enough and a Congressional vote was required. The Congressional election committee released two reports, one produced by the majority declaring Juárez the ...

  2. General elections were held in Costa Rica in 2018 to elect both the President and Legislative Assembly.The first round of the presidential election was held on 4 February 2018, with the two highest-ranked candidates being Christian singer and Congressman Fabricio Alvarado Muñoz from the conservative National Restoration Party and writer and former Minister Carlos Alvarado Quesada from the ...

  3. Mexican presidential election, 2012 → Mexican general election, 2012 – This article should be renamed to match the naming convention used for previous Mexican elections, such as Mexican general election, 2006 and Mexican general election, 2000 David Baron 17:08, 3 July 2011 (UTC) Reply

  4. General elections were held in Sweden on 9 September 2018 to elect the 349 members of the Riksdag. Regional and municipal elections were also held on the same day. The incumbent minority government, consisting of the Social Democrats and the Greens and supported by the Left Party, won 144 seats, one seat more than the four-party Alliance ...

  5. General: 2006, 2012 and 2018 Legislative: 2003, 2009, 2015 and 2021 Gubernatorial: 2010 and 2021; ... General elections were held in Mexico in 1884.

  6. General elections were held in Turkey on 24 June 2018. Presidential elections were held to elect the President of Turkey using a two-round system. Parliamentary elections took place to elect 600 Members of Parliament to the Grand National Assembly of Turkey . The elections had originally been scheduled for 3 November 2019, until the Erdoğan ...

  7. t. e. General elections were held in Mexico on 6 July 1958. [1] The presidential elections were won by Adolfo López Mateos, who received 90.4% of the vote. In the Chamber of Deputies election, the Institutional Revolutionary Party won 153 of the 162 seats. [2] These were the first Mexican presidential elections in which women were allowed to vote.