Iceland falls short of electing Europe’s first female-majority parliament after recount
- Of the 63 seats in the Althing parliament, 30 were won by women, or 47.6 per cent, following the recount in one of Iceland’s constituencies
- Earlier on Sunday, projections based on final results had credited women with 33 seats, or 52 per cent

Iceland believed briefly on Sunday it had become the first country in Europe to have a women-majority parliament after its election a day earlier, but a recount showed it fell short, an election official told Agence France-Presse.
Of the 63 seats in the Althing parliament, 30 were won by women, or 47.6 per cent, following the recount in one of Iceland’s constituencies, the head of the electoral commission in the Northwest constituency, Ingi Tryggvason, said.
Earlier on Sunday, projections based on final results had credited women with 33 seats, or 52 per cent.
“We decided to hold a recount because the result was so close,” Tryggvason said, adding that no one had requested the recount.
Further recounts in other parts of Iceland were not ruled out.
