Spinter tyrimai
Delfi
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Delfi
1012 respondents
The next General election in Lithuania is expected in 2028.
Based on the Spinter tyrimai projection, the incumbent governing parties would currently secure 24.1% of the parliamentary seats.
In the latest opinion poll for the Lithuanian election, conducted by Spinter tyrimai on December 25, 2021, TS-LKD leads with 17%. Trailing are LSDP: 17%, LRLS: 11.3%, LVŽS: 10.6%, Laisvės: 7.4% and DP: 6.6%. Other parties secure 30.1% of the votes.
Spinter tyrimai achieved a PolitPro Score of 63 out of 100.
On average, Spinter tyrimai's figures deviate by 1.7 percentage points between their final pre-election polls and actual election results.
In 60% of polls, Spinter tyrimai rated Laisvės higher than the PolitPro Election Trend (average of all institutes).
In 27% of polls, Spinter tyrimai rated LS higher than the PolitPro Election Trend (average of all institutes).
In 27% of polls, Spinter tyrimai rated Nemuno Aušra higher than the PolitPro Election Trend (average of all institutes).
In 34% of polls, Spinter tyrimai rated TS-LKD higher than the PolitPro Election Trend (average of all institutes).
In 35% of polls, Spinter tyrimai rated DP lower than the PolitPro Election Trend (average of all institutes).
In 46% of polls, Spinter tyrimai rated DSVL lower than the PolitPro Election Trend (average of all institutes).
In 64% of polls, Spinter tyrimai rated LSDP lower than the PolitPro Election Trend (average of all institutes).
In 52% of polls, Spinter tyrimai rated LVŽS lower than the PolitPro Election Trend (average of all institutes).
In 53% of polls, Spinter tyrimai rated Nemuno Aušra lower than the PolitPro Election Trend (average of all institutes).
The electoral threshold for the election in Lithuania is 5%.
According to Spinter tyrimai data, 6 parties are projected to surpass the electoral threshold and enter the Lithuanian parliament: TS-LKD with 35 representatives, LSDP with 34 representatives, LRLS with 23 representatives, LVŽS with 21 representatives, Laisvės with 15 representatives and DP with 13 representatives.
Lithuania's Parliament, the Seimas, comprises 141 members elected for a four-year term under a mixed-member electoral system. Seventy-one members are chosen in single-member constituencies via a majoritarian system, often requiring two rounds if no candidate secures an absolute majority in the first. The remaining 70 seats are allocated through proportional representation from national party lists. This hybrid system aims to ensure both strong local representation and a proportional reflection of the nation's political currents.
To enter the Seimas via the national party list, individual parties in Lithuania must clear a 5% electoral threshold. For electoral alliances and coalitions, this hurdle stands at 7%. Parties failing to meet these quotas can still secure parliamentary representation if their candidates win a direct mandate in one of the 71 single-member constituencies. This rule consolidates the national party landscape while allowing space for locally entrenched figures and regional interest representatives.
Forming a government in Lithuania requires a Seimas majority to elect the Prime Minister and approve the government's program. Given that the mixed electoral system rarely grants any single party an absolute majority, coalition governments are the norm. The President of the Republic plays an active role, nominating a Prime Ministerial candidate after consultations with parliamentary factions. Resulting coalitions often bridge ideological divides, with negotiations typically centering on social security, economic growth, and the geopolitical situation in the Baltics.