National electoral calendar 2013

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National electoral calendar 2013
2012 ←
→ 2014

2013 elections.png

Countries with national elections or referendums:

– Presidential (or head of state) – Parliamentary/legislative – Presidential and parliamentary/legislative – Referendum – Referendum and parliamentary/legislative

This national electoral calendar for the year 2013 lists the national/federal direct elections to be held in 2013 in all sovereign states. By-elections are excluded, though national referenda are included. Specific dates are given where they have been known, but most have not yet been scheduled.

Contents

January [edit]

February [edit]

March [edit]

April [edit]

May [edit]

June [edit]

July [edit]

September [edit]

October [edit]

November [edit]

December [edit]

2013 or later [edit]

References [edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Consortium for Elections and Political Process Strengthening. Calendar of Elections. International Foundation for Electoral Systems
  2. ^ Central Intelligence Agency (2008). The World Factbook. p. 156. 
  3. ^ Fondazione Medidea. "Monaco". p. 2. Retrieved 18 January 2012. 
  4. ^ Staff writers (31 December 2011). "Ecuador economy grows 9 percent in third quarter". Business Recorder. 
  5. ^ Government of the United States. "Background Note: Armenia". Department of State. Retrieved 18 January 2012. 
  6. ^ Huseynov, Tabib (5 December 2011). "Armenia, Azerbaijan should 'prepare public' for peace". News.Az. 
  7. ^ Boyle, Catherine (30 December 2011). "Elections Could Change the Game in Europe in 2012". CNBC.com (CNBC LLC). 
  8. ^ Central Intelligence Agency. "Italy". Government of the United States. Retrieved 18 January 2012. 
  9. ^ The Economist Intelligence Unit. "Paraguay". The Economist. Retrieved 18 January 2012. 
  10. ^ U.S. Agency for International Development (30 December 2011). "Public Policy Agendas and Presidential Elections". USAID Peru, Regional Office of Acquisition & Assistance. p. 4. 
  11. ^ Ireland, Judith (30 January 2013). "PM announces election for September 14". The Age (Australia). Retrieved 30 January 2013.