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The 2022 Nepalese local elections were held on 13 May 2022 in 6 metropolitan cities, 11 sub-metropolitan cities, 276 municipalities and 460 rural municipalities. [3] These were the second set of local-level elections to be held since the promulgation of the new constitution in 2015 . [ 4 ]
A party with an overall majority (more seats than all other parties combined) following an election forms the government. If a party has no outright majority, parties can seek to form coalitions. The first provincial assembly elections in Nepal were held on 26 November and 7 December 2017.
The House of Representatives of Nepal is the lower house of the country's Federal Parliament. It is housed at the International Convention Centre, in Kathmandu, the capital. The current House of Representatives was elected by the general elections held on 20 November 2022, and its first session convened on 9 January 2023. [1] [2] [3]
Prior to 2006, the previous elections was held in 1997 with a mandate of five years. Elections were supposed to be held on 2002 but were delayed due to the then ongoing Nepal Civil War. With the promulgation of the new constitution in 2015, a three-tier governance system was introduced, with national, provincial and local levels of governance.
General elections were held in Nepal on 20 November 2022 to elect the 275 members of the House of Representatives. [2] There were two ballots in the election; one to elect 165 members from single-member constituencies via FPTP , and the other to elect the remaining 110 members from a single nation-wide constituency via party-list proportional ...
Provincial assembly elections were held in Nepal on 20 November 2022 along with the general election. 330 seats in the seven provincial assemblies will be elected by first-past-the-post voting and 220 by proportional representation.
After election At present FPTP PR [13] Total [14] FPTP PR Total CPN (UML) 15 8 23 16 8 24 Nepali Congress: 13 9 22 13 9 22 People's Socialist Party, Nepal: 9 7 16 13 7 20 Janamat Party: 6 7 13 6 7 13 Loktantrik Samajwadi Party: 7 2 9 7 2 9 CPN (Maoist Centre) 4 4 8 5 4 9 CPN (Unified Socialist) 4 3 7 4 3 7 Rastriya Prajatantra Party: 0 1 1 0 1 1
Constituent Assembly elections were held in Nepal on 19 November 2013. [1] The vote was repeatedly delayed, [2] having previously been planned for 22 November 2012 following the dissolution of the 1st Constituent Assembly on 27 May 2012, but it was put off by the election commission. [3]