1998 Monegasque general election|
|
| All 18 seats in the National Council
 10 seats needed for a majority
 | 
| This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below. | 
 General elections were held in Monaco on 1 February 1998, with a second round of voting on 8 February.[1] The result was a victory for the National and Democratic Union, which won all 18 seats in the National Council. 
  Electoral system
 Voters can either choose a party list or choose candidates from various lists ("panachage") for the 18 seats. To be elected, a candidate must receive a majority of valid votes, and if the 18 seats are not filled in the first round, the remaining seats are elected in a second round by a simple majority. 
 Results
 | Party | First round | Second round | Total seats
 | +/– | 
|---|
| Votes | % | Seats | Votes | % | Seats | 
|---|
|  | National and Democratic Union | 32,531 | 67.40 | 15 | 3,999 | 49.50 | 3 | 18 | +3 | 
|  | National Union for the Future of Monaco | 11,285 | 23.38 | 0 | 3,196 | 39.56 | 0 | 0 | New | 
|  | Rally for the Monegasque Family | 4,446 | 9.21 | 0 | 883 | 10.93 | 0 | 0 | New | 
| Total | 48,262 | 100.00 | 15 | 8,078 | 100.00 | 3 | 18 | 0 | 
|  | 
| Valid votes | 3,453 | 95.07 |  | 3,149 | 97.19 |  |  | 
|---|
| Invalid votes | 138 | 3.80 |  | 77 | 2.38 |  |  | 
|---|
| Blank votes | 41 | 1.13 |  | 14 | 0.43 |  |  | 
|---|
| Total votes | 3,632 | 100.00 |  | 3,240 | 100.00 |  |  | 
|---|
| Registered voters/turnout | 4,931 | 73.66 |  | 4,932 | 65.69 |  |  | 
|---|
| Source: Journal de Monaco,[2][3] Nohlen & Stöver[1] | 
 By candidate
 First round
 | Party | Candidate | Votes | % | 
|---|
|  | National and Democratic Union | Henry Rey | 2,008 | 58.15 | 
| Jean-Joseph Pastor | 1,939 | 56.15 | 
| Michel Grinda | 1,928 | 55.84 | 
| Michel Boeri | 1,872 | 54.21 | 
| Jean-Louis Campora | 1,868 | 54.10 | 
| Guy Magnan | 1,855 | 53.72 | 
| Rainier Boisson | 1,842 | 53.34 | 
| Patrick Medecin | 1,839 | 53.26 | 
| Marie-Thérèse Escaut-Marquet | 1,812 | 52.48 | 
| Michel Boisson | 1,807 | 52.33 | 
| Robert Scarlot | 1,796 | 52.01 | 
| Christophe Steiner | 1,778 | 51.49 | 
| Christine Pasquier-Ciulla | 1,759 | 50.94 | 
| Alain Michel | 1,747 | 50.59 | 
| Marianne Bertrand-Reynaud | 1,731 | 50.13 | 
| Jean Tonelli | 1,686 | 48.83 | 
| Florence Sosso | 1,674 | 48.48 | 
| Francis Palmaro | 1,590 | 46.05 | 
|  | National Union for the Future of Monaco | Michel-Yves Mourou | 1,100 | 31.86 | 
| Claude Boisson | 964 | 27.92 | 
| Jean-Charles Gardetto | 955 | 27.66 | 
| Bruno Blanchy | 931 | 26.96 | 
| Claude Cellario | 895 | 25.92 | 
| Gerard Borgia | 881 | 25.51 | 
| Rodolphe Berlin | 844 | 24.44 | 
| Pierre-Yves Canton | 816 | 23.63 | 
| Michèle Dittlot | 812 | 23.52 | 
| Monique Gastaud | 807 | 23.37 | 
| Nathalie Amoratti-Blanc | 773 | 22.39 | 
| Sylvie Calais | 759 | 21.98 | 
| Nicole Vaccarezza | 748 | 21.66 | 
|  | Rally for the Monegasque Family | René Giordano | 972 | 28.15 | 
| Gerard Bertrand | 743 | 21.52 | 
| Jean-Pierre Licari | 728 | 21.08 | 
| Jean-Luc Nigioni | 721 | 20.88 | 
| Gabrielle Grassi | 664 | 19.23 | 
| Blanche Medecin | 618 | 17.90 | 
| Total | 48,262 | 100.00 | 
|  | 
| Valid votes | 3,453 | 95.07 | 
|---|
| Invalid votes | 138 | 3.80 | 
|---|
| Blank votes | 41 | 1.13 | 
|---|
| Total votes | 3,632 | 100.00 | 
|---|
| Registered voters/turnout | 4,931 | 73.66 | 
|---|
| Source: Journal de Monaco[2] | 
 Second round
  References