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Parliamentary constituencies as of 2018 by number of seats. The Greece constituency for elections to the European Parliament. This is a list of electoral constituencies returning Members of Parliament to the Parliament of Greece. The list reflects the changes which were made to Athens B and Attica in December 2018. [1]
Athens Alpha (Greek: Α΄ Αθηνών) is a parliamentary constituency [1] in Attica represented in the Hellenic Parliament. In its present form it dates to 1958, when the Athens B constituency was split off, leaving Athens A with the Municipality of Athens. It elects fourteen Members of Parliament (MPs) by reinforced proportional representation.
Following the census of 2021, the largest constituencies can be found in the metropolitan areas of Athens and Thessaloniki. These are Athens B3 (19 seats), Thessaloniki A (17 seats), Athens B1 (16 seats), Athens A (13 seats), Athens B2 (12 seats) and East Attica (12 seats). The remaining constituencies elect single-digit numbers of MPs.
English: Electoral constituencies of Greece since 2018 (Athens A and Athens B split into smaller constituencies, Thessaloniki A includes a larger area than shown in the previous map, Patra is no its own constituency)
Pages in category "Parliamentary constituencies of Greece" The following 29 pages are in this category, out of 29 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
The B1 North Athens electoral constituency (Greek: Β1' Εκλογική Περιφέρεια Βόρειου Τομέα Αθηνών) is a parliamentary constituency of Greece, created after the breakup of Athens B in 2018.
Constituency and party votes Full name Notes Nationwide (457,623) Georgios Kaminis: Athens A (12,255) Konstantinos Skandalidis: Athens B1 (18,615) Andreas Loverdos: Athens B2 (13,262) Nadia Giannakopoulou: Athens B3 (20,958) Fofi Gennimata until 25 October 2021 Tonia Antoniou (from 1 November 2022) Fofi Gennimata passed away. She replaced from ...
The first national parliament of the independent Greek state was established in 1843, after the 3 September Revolution, which forced King Otto to grant a constitution.The constitution of 1844 established a semi-constitutional monarchy under the decisive power of the monarch, who exercised legislative power jointly with the elected house of representatives and the appointed senate.