Costa Rica

Legislative Assembly

Political system
Presidential system
Structure of parliament
Unicameral
IPU membership
Yes

Election results

Data on parliamentary elections, including the background, candidates, voter turnout, results and the formation of the new legislature. By default the latest election results are displayed. Select a date to view results from previous elections.

Background

Election date(s)
04 Feb 2018
Date of dissolution of the outgoing legislature
No information available
Timing of election
Upon normal expiry
Number of seats at stake
57
Scope of elections
Full renewal

Candidates

Number of parties contesting the election
26
Total number of candidates
1,048
Number of male candidates
531
Number of female candidates
517
Percentage of women candidates
49.3%

Voter turnout

Registered voters
3,290,465
Voters
2,178,096
Voter turnout
66.2%

Results

About the election

As in the previous elections, no party won an outright majority in the 57-member Legislative Assembly. Only three parties secured more than 10 seats: National Liberation Party (PLN, which governed the country between 2006 and 2014), the National Restoration Party (PRN, comprising evangelical Christians) and outgoing President Luis Guillermo Solís' Citizens' Action Party (PAC). He was constitutionally barred from seeking a second consecutive presidential term.

In the presidential elections, no candidate secured the required 40 per cent of the votes to be elected in the first round, held in parallel with the parliamentary polls. On 1 April, Mr. Carlos Alvarado Quesada (PAC) defeated Mr. Fabricio Alvarado Muñoz (PRN) in the runoff election. On 8 May, the 38-year-old former Labour Minister was sworn in, thereby becoming the youngest ever President of Costa Rica. His deputy, Ms. Epsy Campbell, is the country's first Afro-Costa Rican Vice President.

President Alvarado Quesada formed a five-party coalition government comprising the PAC, the Social Christian Unity Party (PUSC), the PLN, the Broad Front (FA) and the 21st Century Curridabat (Curridabat Siglo XXI, which does not hold any seats in the Legislative Assembly). The Cabinet is made up of 16 men and 15 women. Meanwhile, on 1 May, Ms. Carolina Hidalgo Herrera (PAC), 35, became the youngest Speaker of the Legislative Assembly.

The 2018 elections were held shortly after a decision on 9 January by the Inter-American Court of Human Rights that signatories – including Costa Rica – must guarantee same-sex couples equal rights to marriage and property ownership. The decision pushed debate on gay marriage to the centre of the election campaign. Mr. Quesada (PAC) pledged to implement the decision while Mr. Muñoz (PRN) vowed to restore what he called traditional values by preventing gay marriage and restricting women's access to abortion. PLN's presidential candidate, Mr. Antonio Álvarez, promised to reform public salaries and to introduce a value-added tax.

In addition to "vertical parity" (men and women alternating within each list to ensure 50-50% gender parity), starting from the 2018 elections, political parties are expected (see note) to respect "horizontal parity" for the heads of the lists through their internal regulations. The parties fielding candidates in all seven provinces should submit lists headed by the less represented gender in at least three provinces.

Note:

The May 2016 resolution (3603-E8-2016) of the Election Commission (Tribunal Supremo de Elecciones) provided an unofficial interpretation of articles 2, 52 and 148 of the Electoral Code on the scope of the principle of parity for the head of the lists of candidates (without amending the Electoral Code itself), thereby indicating that all parties should adjust their candidate lists according to the principles of vertical and horizontal parity. A subsequent Electoral Commission resolution in September 2017 (5876-E1-2017) clarified that political parties should define mechanisms to ensure horizontal parity in their internal regulations, thereby making horizontal parity non-compulsory.

Number of parties winning seats
7
Percentage of parties winning seats
26.9%
Percentage of seats won by largest party or coalition
29.8%
Alternation of power after elections
No
Number of parties in government
5
Names of parties in government
Citizens' Action Party (PAC), Social Christian Unity Party (PUSC), National Liberation Party (PLN), Broad Front (FA) and 21st Century Curridabat (Curridabat Siglo XXI, which itself does not hold any seat in the Legislative Assembly)

Parties or coalitions winning seats

Parties or coalitions winning seats
Political group Total
National Liberation Party (PLN) 17
National Restoration Party (PRN) 14
Citizens' Action Party (PAC) 10
Social Christian Unity Party (PUSC) 9
National Integration Party (PIN) 4
Social-Christian Republican Party (PRSC) 2
Broad Front (FA) 1
Members elected, by sex
Number of men elected
31
Number of women elected
26
Percentage of women elected
45.6%
Women Directly Elected
26
Sources

Legislative Assembly (20.02.2018)

Tribunal Supremo de Elecciones (03.05.2018)

La Nación

Q Costa Rica

The Economist

France 24

New legislature

Total number of men after the election
31
Total number of women after the election
26
Percentage of women after the election
45.6%
First-term parliamentarians
52
Percentage of first-term parliamentarians
91.2%
Date of the first session
01 May 2018

First Speaker of the new legislature

Personal details for the first Speaker of the new legislature
Carolina Hidalgo Herrera (Female)
Political party
Citizens' Action Party (PAC)
Date of election
01 May 2018

Historical data for IPU membership

Historical data for IPU membership
Year IPU membership
2020-09
List of values for 2020-09
No
2019-04
List of values for 2019-04
No
2018-06
List of values for 2018-06
No