Senate elections for one-third of the Senate of the Czech Republic were held on 20âÂÂ21 September 2024, with a second round on 27âÂÂ28 September 2024. The first round was held alongside the regional elections.
With all votes counted, ANO 2011 won eight of the 27 contested seats (the most of any single party), while candidates backed by the governing parties won 15 seats and the governing coalition retained a majority in the 81-seat Senate. Voter turnout was 30.47% in the first round and 17.54% in the second round. The vote took place shortly after major flooding in Central Europe, and in some affected areas polling was organised in temporary venues such as tents or containers.
This Senate election is the second and last election to the Senate happening during the term of Petr Fiala's cabinet. The parties in the government coalition and their allies will defend 22 out of 27 seats. Opposition parties hold only two seats that are up for election, while three seats up for election are held by independents.
Immediately after the 2018 Senate elections, two senators elected as independents joined the Civic Democratic Party and TOP 09 caucus: Ladislav Faktor and Jitka Chalánková. Pavel Fischer remained formally independent.
During the 2018âÂÂ2024 Senate term, one by-election was held in electoral district No. 32 (Teplice) in 2020; Hynek Hanza was elected in the second round.
Several unsuccessful candidates in the 2018 and 2023 Czech presidential elections will have their seats up for re-election, including Jià ÂàDrahoà ¡, Pavel Fischer and Marek Hilà ¡er. The term of one member of the Fiala Cabinet, the Minister of Education MikulÃ¡à ¡ Bek, is ending; Bek however decided not to stand for re-election.
The Senate of the Czech Republic has 81 members elected in 81 single-member constituencies. One third of the seats is contested every two years, and senators serve six-year terms.
Senators are elected using a two-round system. A candidate who receives more than 50% of valid votes in the first round is elected. If no candidate reaches that threshold, a second round is held between the two candidates with the highest vote totals, and the candidate with the higher number of votes wins.
Candidates may be nominated by registered political parties or stand as independents, who must submit at least 1,000 signatures from voters in the constituency. The minimum age to stand for election is 40, and the voting age is 18.
Similar to the 2022 election, several parties have decided to form more or less formal alliances in some or all seats.
Unlike two years prior, parties of the Spolu alliance have not signed any pre-electoral memorandum and are standing candidates mostly individually. Exception is Jià ÂàDrahoà ¡ in Prague, who is supported by all parties in the Fiala government and Leopold Sukovský from Ostravak, whose candidacy is also supported by all three parties.
The Czech Pirate Party, SEN 21 and the Green Party agreed to cooperate and support mutually backed candidates in 10 of the 27 constituencies contested in 2024. The parties highlighted incumbent or prospective candidates including Pà Âemysl Rabas (Chomutov) and LukÃ¡à ¡ Wagenknecht (Prague 8), and said the Greens would field candidates in districts including LitomÃÂà Âice and Mladá Boleslav.
The coalition of PÃ ÂÃÂsaha and Motorists have agreed to stand the leader of PÃ ÂÃÂsaha as their joint candidate.
Most seats up for the election, 13 out of 27, are held by the Spolu aliance, with 10 of these being held by ODS, two by KDU-ÃÂSL and one by TOP 09. STAN lead bloc will defend seven seats and progressive pack composed of Pirates, SEN 21 and the Greens will be incumbent in two districts, with Pirates and SEN 21 defending one seat each
The opposition only holds two up the seats up in 2024, including the sole Senate seat held by SOCDEM in Karviná.
Three senators elected as independents will have their seats up for re-election, only two of them have chosen to contest the elections.
In the first round, 19 of the ANO's candidates to the Senate advanced to the runoff, while two others were elected outright, along with one KDU-ÃÂSL candidate, a TOP 09 candidate, and a member of Social Democracy. Twenty-two seats were to be contested in the second round.
At the end of the second round, the ANO won a total of eight seats, the party's strongest showing in a Senate election, while Spolu won 15.
Turnout was 30.47% in the first round and 17.54% in the second round. The highest turnout in the second round was in the Opava electoral district (23.30%), and the lowest was in the ProstÃÂjov district (12.15%). A record five candidates were elected in the first round.