Léger
Tamedia
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Tamedia
1004 respondents
The next General election in Switzerland is expected in 2027.
In the latest opinion poll for the Swiss election, conducted by Léger on December 16, 2014, SVP/UDC leads with 23.8%. Trailing behind are SP/PS: 19.8%, FDP/PLR: 15.7%, CVP/PDC: 12.4%, G/LV: 8.2%, GLP/PVL: 7.4% and BDP/PBD: 7.2%. Other parties secure 5.5% of the votes.
Léger achieved a PolitPro Score of ? out of 100.
On average, Léger's figures deviate by percentage points between their final pre-election polls and actual election results.
There is no electoral threshold for the Swiss Federal Election.
Switzerland's bicameral Federal Assembly features the 200-seat National Council and the 46-seat Council of States. The National Council employs proportional representation across cantons, while the Council of States largely uses a majority vote system. A distinctive element is 'panachage' and 'cumulation,' allowing voters to mix candidates from various party lists or cast multiple votes for specific individuals. This empowers citizens with substantial influence over the legislature's composition, moving beyond strict party affiliations.
Switzerland's federal elections notably lack an explicit percentage-based electoral threshold, unlike Germany's 5% hurdle. Instead, the de facto barrier for National Council entry emerges from the number of seats allocated per canton. This dynamic means smaller cantons with fewer mandates demand a substantially higher vote share for a seat, while larger cantons like Zurich can see parties secure representation with a smaller percentage.
Swiss government formation defies the conventional coalition-opposition paradigm. The Federal Council, Switzerland's seven-member executive, is elected by the United Federal Assembly. For decades, its composition has adhered to the 'magic formula,' proportionally incorporating the nation's most powerful parties. This concordance system prioritizes achieving political solutions through broad consensus over transient majority coalitions.