User:Kahlores/Sandbox/Choropleth maps

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

The case for Choropleth maps on Wikipedia election articles

Note: "Choropleth" means "cluster zones". A Choropleth map is a map that uses different hues of the same color, for the clustered variable.


Typically, election maps on Wikimedia Commons and Wikipedia display the jurisdiction's constituencies ("districts", "ridings", "wards", etc.) colored by the party that won it. This makes perfect sense: under Plurality (First-past-the-post), whoever tops the district, gets the seat.

However, under the various forms of

Proportional Representation
, no-one "wins" a district: districts are multi-member, and coming first is no more meaningful than coming second, only the share of votes is (which by design gives the share of seats).

As a reminder, PR methods are in use in:

  • almost all of continental Europe and Latin America, in elections of legislative assemblies (exceptions: the French Parliament, the Polish and Czech Senates, and a number of countries using FPTP in parallel with PR seats).
  • in English-speaking countries, this includes: the lower houses of Ireland, Northern Ireland (STV), New Zealand, Scotland, Wales (MMP), and the upper houses of Australia.

(That is, in summary, most liberal democracies and jurisdictions!)

As the examples below show, using maps of district winners for PR elections has many shortcomings:

  • lack of information provided:
    • in a two-party system, a big *victory for one party is a big loss for the other ; but in a multi-party PR system, it is impossible to tell with a district winner map, areas in which the party came second, from areas where it is completely excluded
    • in PR, district victory is arbitrary: the party coming first may have received as little as 20%, and may be followed by a series of like-minded parties that collectively outweigh the first party in the district
  • meaninglessness:
    • due to
      Duverger's Law
      , PR methods tend to increase the number of parties in competition, division being much less detrimental ; but this doesn't mean there can't be pre-declared left-right alliances, which in this case is the meaningful division to show
    • under FPTP, parties tend to be catch-all parties ; under PR, coalitions may be formed after the election and can aggregate catch-all parties with smaller parties appealing to a fraction of the electorate, and sometimes one-issue parties
  • lack of legibility:
    • the number of colors needed in a multi-party system makes maps uneasy to read and of little use

Illustrating the absurdity

Most electoral maps on Wikipedia show district winners even under Proportional Representation, despite it is in such case meaningless, potentially deceptive for election analyses, and illegible overall:

Some designers prefer to color small dots or squares representing seats, instead of representing zones. Their legibility is questionable:

Solution

If one wants to analyze an election under PR, then one should better use party-specific

choropleth maps, which use hue progression to show the varying degrees of success in the various districts. The degrees should be divided in 4 or 5 natural breaks
(Jenks): this method allows readers to extract the most meaning (unlike arbitrary intervals, or standard deviation) while staying very close to the distribution of data.

I have often seen these maps in use by political pundits, "

psephologist"s, and sociologists in continental Europe, in particular France and Germany. The English Wikipedia
is largely written by users who do not live in countries using PR, and this probably explains why it hasn't caught up on that particular custom of political science in non-English-speaking countries.

As a sidenote, it could be argued that

choropleth ones, especially when a state has districts with largely unpopulated areas, such as the Australian Outback
(for upper house elections), the Scandinavian polar circle, the Kazakh Steppe, Russian Siberia etc.

Illustrations

Here's a list of

choropleth
election maps posted on Wikimedia:

Bulgaria

Excellent map made this year by User:Ivonster04. Uses 5 hues with a rough clustering adapted to each party, that works very well. With maps like this you can understand Bulgarian politics very quickly!

Beautiful summary of the April 2021 Bulgarian parliamentary election

Czechia

Czech Wikipedia User MrGreg has created about a hundred maps, solely for Czech elections (legislative since 1992, presidential runoffs since 2013).

  • For legislative elections, he always uses the same scale of 8 hues, each corresponding to 5% intervals (range [0-5;35-40]). In some cases he has to manually label districts that are above 40%.
  • For presidential run-off elections, he also uses 8 hues but with a larger interval of 10% (range [<20;>80]).

He also has two maps of district turnout variations, using 9 hues corresponding to 2.5% intervals [<-10;>10], and two maps of district turnout, using the range of presidential run-off elections.

All in all, they are very legible, and provide immediate insight of each party's strong areas.

Complete gallery of MrGreg's maps

Presidential elections

Volba 2018
Volba 2013

Legislative elections

Volby 2021
  • Volební účast
    Volební účast
  • Rozdíl volební účasti
    Rozdíl volební účasti
  • SPOLU
  • ANO
  • PirSTAN
    PirSTAN
  • SPD
    SPD
  • Přísaha
  • ČSSD
    ČSSD
  • KSČM
    KSČM
Volby 2017
  • Volební účast
    Volební účast
  • Rozdíl volební účasti
    Rozdíl volební účasti
  • ANO
  • ODS
    ODS
  • Piráti
    Piráti
  • SPD
    SPD
  • KSČM
    KSČM
  • ČSSD
    ČSSD
  • KDU-ČSL
    KDU-ČSL
  • TOP 09
  • STAN
Volby 2013
Volby 2010
Volby 2006
  • ODS
    ODS
  • ČSSD
    ČSSD
  • KSČM
    KSČM
  • KDU-ČSL
    KDU-ČSL
  • SZ
Volby 2002
  • ČSSD
    ČSSD
  • ODS
    ODS
  • KSČM
    KSČM
  • Čtyřkoalice (KDU-ČSL)
    KDU-ČSL
    )
Volby 1998
Volby 1996
Volby 1992

Finland

Made by commons:User:Stadscykel in 2011. Used 5% intervals (except for the first 10 percent, and the last interval), which means there were from 7 to 10 hues for the 4 bigger parties. Did not contribute later. PS 2015 was made by commons:User:URunICon.

See also: commons:Maps of Finland - general elections by year and party.

Germany

de:User:Wahlatlas, apparently the owner of the website of the same name, made these wonderful maps, with 5 degrees and (seemingly) natural breaks.

  • CDU-CSU 2013
    CDU-CSU 2013
  • SPD 2013
    SPD 2013
  • Grüne 2013
    Grüne 2013
  • Linke 2013
    Linke 2013
  • FDP 2013
    FDP 2013
  • AfD 2013
    AfD 2013
  • Piraten 2013
    Piraten 2013
  • NPD 2013
    NPD 2013
  • CDU-CSU 2017
    CDU-CSU 2017
  • SPD 2017
    SPD 2017
  • AfD 2017
    AfD 2017
  • Grüne 2017
    Grüne 2017
  • FDP 2017
    FDP 2017
  • Linke 2017
    Linke 2017
  • NPD 2017
    NPD 2017
  • Turnout 2017
    Turnout 2017

User:Furfur made these maps for the 2009 election. The number of intervals range from 4 to 9 (!) because of the 5%-interval chosen arbitrarily.

  • CDU-CSU 2009
    CDU-CSU 2009
  • SPD 2009
    SPD 2009
  • FDP 2009
    FDP 2009
  • Grüne 2009
    Grüne 2009
  • Linke 2009
    Linke 2009
  • Piraten 2009
    Piraten 2009

User:Hilarus von Baerenstein uploaded just one beautiful map, with 6 intervals adapted to each party chosen manually:

  • 1990 Volkskammer election
    1990 Volkskammer election

Here, the use of hues for different intervals provides many clues to our understanding of Germany before WWII:

Ireland (Republic of)

Excellent maps were made by User:JandK87 for Ireland's Dail elections (since 1921) and Northern Assembly (since 1973). However, he stopped editing after 2011, came back for the 2016 election, and never edited again. It turns out that another user made and imposed his own maps starting in 2011, where seats won are shown as tiny dots on a dark grey map. see Category:Election maps of the Republic of Ireland on Commons

  • 1921
    1921
  • 1922
    1922
  • 1923
    1923
  • Jun 1927
    Jun 1927
  • Sep 1927
    Sep 1927
  • 1932
    1932
  • 1933
    1933
  • 1937
    1937
  • 1938
    1938
  • 1943
    1943
  • 1944
    1944
  • 1948
    1948
  • 1951
    1951
  • 1954
    1954
  • 1957
    1957
  • 1961
    1961
  • 1965
    1965
  • 1969
    1969
  • 1973
    1973
  • 1977
    1977
  • 1981
    1981
  • Feb 1982
    Feb 1982
  • Nov 1982
    Nov 1982
  • 1987
    1987
  • 1989
    1989
  • 1992
    1992
  • 1997
    1997
  • 2007
    2007
  • 2011 (not used) [1]
    2011 (not used) [1]
  • 2016 (not used) [2]
    2016 (not used) [2]
  • 2020 (missing)
    2020 (missing)

Ireland (Northern)

Made by User:RaviC:

Japan

commons:User:沁水湾 made many electoral maps, including one that defines as a choropleth map using 5 hues:

In 2022, she crafted 7 maps for the 2021 Japanese general election, one for each party that won seats through the PR method:

  • Liberal Democratic Party, PR vote share 2021
    Liberal Democratic Party, PR vote share 2021
  • Constitutional Democratic Party, PR vote share 2021
    Constitutional Democratic Party, PR vote share 2021
  • Nippon Ishin no Kai, PR vote share 2021
    Nippon Ishin no Kai, PR vote share 2021
  • Kōmeitō, PR vote share 2021
    Kōmeitō, PR vote share 2021
  • Japanese Communist Party, PR vote share 2021
    Japanese Communist Party, PR vote share 2021
  • Democratic Party for the People, PR vote share 2021
    Democratic Party for the People, PR vote share 2021
  • Reiwa Shinsengumi, PR vote share 2021
    Reiwa Shinsengumi, PR vote share 2021

...she even added them on the election page with a switcher!

Kazakhstan

commons:User:ShadZ01 recently produced these awesome maps of the most recent Kazakh elections (2019 and 2021). There are 4 intervals for the minor parties and 5 for the dominant party, which makes sense. The ranges do not seem to be broken with a statistical tool, but rather manually. No legend whatsoever is included; it has to be written somewhere else.

Although this map is quite old, it remains that Kazakhstan's peculiar population density would make the case for the use of Chorochromatic maps (using the data patterns) rather than choropleth (using political boundaries)

2021 Kazakh legislative election:

Performance by the People's Party by region.
     0–5%          5–10%        10–15%
     15–17%
Performance by the Auyl People's Democratic Patriotic Party by region.
     0–4%          4–8%        8–12%
     12–13%

Korea (Republic of)

made by commons:User:沁水湾

Netherlands

Nepal

Made by commons:User:Vanished user 1932142 in 2020. Used 6 hues, corresponding to 3-percent-intervals:

Congress at the 2017 provincial elections

Poland

Made by Robert Wielgórski, known by the username Barry Kent (commons) (also wp:pl wp:en) right after the 2007 elections. He made use of varying interval numbers and lengths for each party.

Portugal

User:Welkend (commons) has just made awesome maps for the 2022 Portuguese legislative election, using 5 intervals for each party. Intervals are all of equal size (except PS's first one?) which highlights voter concentration:

  • Share of the Socialist Party (PS) by municipality
    Share of the Socialist Party (PS) by municipality
  • Share of the Social Democratic Party (PSD) by municipality
    Share of the Social Democratic Party (PSD) by municipality
  • Share of CHEGA (CH) by municipality
    Share of CHEGA (CH) by municipality
  • Share of the Liberal Initiative (IL) by municipality
    Share of the Liberal Initiative (IL) by municipality
  • Share of the Left Bloc (BE) by municipality
    Share of the Left Bloc (BE) by municipality
  • Share of the Unitary Democratic Coalition (CDU) by municipality
    Share of the Unitary Democratic Coalition (CDU) by municipality
  • Share of the CDS-People's Party (CDS-PP) by municipality
    Share of the CDS-People's Party (CDS-PP) by municipality
  • Share of the People–Animals–Nature (PAN) by municipality
    Share of the People–Animals–Nature (PAN) by municipality
  • Share of the Livre (L) by municipality
    Share of the Livre (L) by municipality

Scandinavia: Sweden, Norway, Denmark

Sweden

Several interesting maps were done by User:Avopeas who was mostly active in 2017, and blanked his talk page in 2019. He is still active on commons (User page) where he updates average polling graphs for Scandinavian countries.

Christian Democrats results in the 2014 Swedish general election. The Christian Democrats obtained considerable support in the Christian area in southern Sweden.
  • (+) we can clearly see the best and worst areas for each party
  • (-) All the maps use the same orange tone.
  • (-) More problematic, the maps use 14 equal intervals and different hues! Impossible to process quickly.
  • (-) the equal intervals are not adapted to each party (ranges are too large for smaller parties, too small for larger ones)

The author did much better with this map of population density, although the intervals are quite arbitrary.

2014 Swedish general election § Results by municipality

  • Social Democratic
    Social Democratic
  • Moderate
    Moderate
  • Sweden Democrats
    Sweden Democrats
  • Green
    Green
  • Centre
    Centre
  • Left
    Left
  • Liberal People's Party
    Liberal People's Party
  • Christian Democrats
    Christian Democrats
  • Feminist Initiative
    Feminist Initiative
  • Shaded, red (S+V+MP) to blue (M+C+FP+KD)
    Shaded, red (S+V+MP) to blue (M+C+FP+KD)

Results of the 2018 Swedish general election

  • Social Democratic
    Social Democratic
  • Moderate Party
    Moderate Party
  • Sweden Democrats
    Sweden Democrats
  • Centre Party
    Centre Party
  • Left Party
    Left Party
  • Christian Democrats
    Christian Democrats
  • Liberals
    Liberals
  • Green
    Green
  • Shaded, red (S+V+MP) to blue (M+C+KD+L)
    Shaded, red (S+V+MP) to blue (M+C+KD+L)

2002 Swedish general election and 2006 Swedish general election (the two blocs received >97%):

  • Votes by municipality as a scale from red/Left-wing bloc to blue/Centre-right bloc.
    Votes by municipality as a scale from red/Left-wing bloc to blue/Centre-right bloc.
  • Votes by municipality as a scale from red/Red-green bloc to blue/Alliance for Sweden.
    Votes by municipality as a scale from red/Red-green bloc to blue/Alliance for Sweden.

Feminist Initiative and Sweden Democrats:

  • FI 2014-6
    FI 2014-6
  • FI 2014-9
    FI 2014-9
  • SD 2002
    SD 2002
  • SD 2006
    SD 2006
  • SD 2010
    SD 2010
  • SD 2014
    SD 2014
  • SD 2018
    SD 2018

Norway

2017 Norwegian parliamentary election.

  • Labour
    Labour
  • Conservative
    Conservative
  • Progress
    Progress
  • Centre
    Centre
  • Socialist
    Socialist
  • Liberal
    Liberal
  • Christian
    Christian
  • Green
    Green
  • Red
    Red

2021 Norwegian parliamentary election.

  • Labour
    Labour
  • Conservative
    Conservative
  • Centre
    Centre
  • Progress
    Progress
  • Socialist Left
    Socialist Left
  • Red
    Red
  • Liberal
    Liberal
  • Green
    Green
  • Christian Democratic
    Christian Democratic
  • Patient Focus
    Patient Focus

Denmark

Denmark 2015 (blocs)

Slovakia and others

Australian User:Erinthecute, who has made countless illustration maps for election pages on Wikipedia, recently began to notice the usefulness of choropleth maps, beginning with Slovakia, the city of Graz (see § Cities) and Portugal. She is using 4 to 6 hues by party, usually 5:

commons:User:Liqid1010 made a handful of maps following the 2020 Slovak parliamentary election, using nine 5%-intervals.

sk:User:Mikulas1 crafted many maps in 2017, but sadly, stopped contributing. His maps, using for each party a variable number of (mostly) 5%-intervals, have not yet been integrated into Wikipedia's English articles on Slovak parties and elections:

  • SMER-SD 2010 (18.29%)
    SMER-SD
    2010 (18.29%)
  • SDKÚ-DS 2010 (15.42%)
    SDKÚ-DS 2010 (15.42%)
  • SaS 2010 (12.15%)
    SaS 2010 (12.15%)
  • KDH 2010 (8.53%)
    KDH 2010 (8.53%)
  • Most-Híd 2010 (8.13%)
    Most-Híd
    2010 (8.13%)
  • SNS 2010 (5.08%)
    SNS 2010 (5.08%)
  • SMER-SD 2012 (44.42%)
    SMER-SD
    2012 (44.42%)
  • KDH 2012 (8.82%)
    KDH 2012 (8.82%)
  • SaS 2012 (8.56%)
    SaS 2012 (8.56%)
  • Most-Híd 2012 (6.90%)
    Most-Híd
    2012 (6.90%)
  • SDKÚ-DS 2012 (6.10%)
    SDKÚ-DS 2012 (6.10%)
  • OĽaNO 2012 (5.88%)
    OĽaNO
    2012 (5.88%)
  • SNS 2012 (4.56%)
    SNS 2012 (4.56%)
  • SMER-SD 2016 (28.28%)
    SMER-SD
    2016 (28.28%)
  • SaS 2016 (12.10%)
    SaS 2016 (12.10%)
  • OĽaNO-NOVA 2016 (11.03%)
    OĽaNO-NOVA
    2016 (11.03%)
  • SNS 2016 (8.64%)
    SNS 2016 (8.64%)
  • ĽSNS 2016 (8.04%)
    ĽSNS 2016 (8.04%)
  • Sme Rodina 2016 (6.63%)
    Sme Rodina 2016 (6.63%)
  • Most-Híd 2016 (6.50%)
    Most-Híd
    2016 (6.50%)
  • #SIEŤ 2016 (5.61%)
    #SIEŤ 2016 (5.61%)
  • KDH 2016 (4.94%)
    KDH 2016 (4.94%)

Other choropleth maps of elections in Slovakia found:

South Africa

commons:User:沁水湾 attempted to mix two types of maps, one large with bullet points for seats, the others are small party-specific choropleth maps with number. I am not sure the first one is necessary at all, and removing it would increase the size of choropleth maps, making the numbers legible.

  • 1994 General Election
    1994 General Election
  • 1999 General Election
    1999 General Election
  • 2004 General Election
    2004 General Election
  • 2009 General Election
    2009 General Election
  • 2014 General Election
    2014 General Election
  • 2019 General Election
    2019 General Election

Turkey

Turkish User:Nub Cake made these choropleth maps of the performance of Turkish political parties over the recent years. There are 7 hues, but the margins are not provided:

With the help of User:Nub Cake, User:Mondolkiri, who is now banned from editing, made these maps using 10% intervals:

Previously, User:Emreculha made other maps for Turkish parties' performance, using a wide palette of hues, representing 5% intervals (which leads to similar legibility issues as for Swedish/Norwegian maps).

User:QuartierLatin1968 made these maps in 2007 using a color gradient instead of discrete hues. The result is more legible than 10 or 20 hues. The user is still contributing to Wikipedia projects.

User:MustafaKurt and User:Bibilili

Ukraine

Made by commons:User:Tohaomg (also uk:Користувач:Tohaomg) following the 2019 snap elections. The number of intervals varies between 5 and 9. The ranges are ad hoc. Excellent to understand where parties are strong and weak. The hues are not, however, standardized (leaving the impression that the 3rd party came in front of the 1st).

The first modern Ukrainian election per se:

Maps for the period between 1994 and 2002 (besides turnout) were made by commons:User:Nazar.galitskyj in 2013-14 and 2019. Uses few hues, but very informative:

commons:User:DemocracyATwork contributed solely to Wikipedia between 2008 and 2010 to upload content about Ukrainian elections:

Well-done maps at the district level were made back in 2006 by User:Olegzima:

commons:User:DemocracyATwork made the same maps twice -- one highlighting regional strongholds (using the shares of the parties' nationwide votes), the other showing regional success (relative to other parties in the region):

2007 Rada elections
Maps showing the top six parties support - percentage of total national vote (minimal text)
Party of Regions results (34.37%)
Party of Regions results (34.37%)
Bloc Yulia Tymoshenko results (30.71%
Bloc Yulia Tymoshenko results (30.71%
Our Ukraine People's Self-Defence results (14.15%)
Our Ukraine People's Self-Defence results (14.15%)
Communist Party of Ukraine results (5.39%)
Communist Party of Ukraine results (5.39%)
Bloc Lytvyn Party results (3.96%)
Bloc Lytvyn Party results (3.96%)
Socialist Party of Ukraine results (2.86%)
Socialist Party of Ukraine results (2.86%)
2007 Rada elections
Maps showing the top six parties support - percentage per region
Party of Regions results (34.37%)
Party of Regions results (34.37%)
Bloc Yulia Tymoshenko results (30.71%
Bloc Yulia Tymoshenko results (30.71%
Our Ukraine People's Self-Defence results (14.15%)
Our Ukraine People's Self-Defence results (14.15%)
Communist Party of Ukraine results (5.39%)
Communist Party of Ukraine results (5.39%)
Bloc Lytvyn Party results (3.96%)
Bloc Lytvyn Party results (3.96%)
Socialist Party of Ukraine results (2.86%)
Socialist Party of Ukraine results (2.86%)


User:Green Zero (commons:User:Green Zero) made these maps for the 2014 Ukrainian presidential election:

Порошенко Petro Poroshenko (54.70%) Тимошенко Yulia Tymoshenko (12.81%) Ляшко Oleh Liashko (8.32%)
Гриценко Anatoliy Hrytsenko (5.48%) Тігіпко Serhiy Tihipko (5.23%) Добкін Mykhailo Dobkin (3.03%)
Рабінович Vadim Rabinovich (2.25%)
Olga Bogomolets
(1.91%)
Симоненко Petro Symonenko (1.51%)
Тягнибок Oleh Tyahnybok (1.16%) Ярош (0.70%) Гриненко (0.40%)
Коновалюк (0.38%) Бойко (0.19%) Маломуж (0.13%)
Кузьмін (0.10%) Куйбіда (0.06%) Клименко (0.05%)
Цушко (0.05%) Саранов (0.03%) Шкіряк (0.02%)

United Kingdom

Scotland

commons:User:Brythones and commons:User:MrPenguin20 made these maps in 2016-2017, using 5% or 2.5% intervals:

commons:User:沁水湾 just made these pretty maps, using 5% intervals, which in this case works very fine:

United States

Although you would think that the USA, not using Proportional Representation in any circumstance, do not need choropleth maps, commons:User:沁水湾 has found a very good use, with multi-candidate primaries. She uses 5% intervals, which makes extremes very legible:

Similarly,

User:MisterElection2001
made choropleth maps for minor presidential candidates, by county:

  • 1972 presidential election - Percentage of votes cast for John Schmitz by county
    1972 presidential election - Percentage of votes cast for John Schmitz by county
  • 2016 presidential election - Percentage of votes cast for Gary Johnson by county
    2016 presidential election - Percentage of votes cast for Gary Johnson by county
  • 2016 presidential election - Percentage of votes cast for Jill Stein by county
    2016 presidential election - Percentage of votes cast for Jill Stein by county

Cities

Other interesting uses and types

Choropleth maps unrelated to elections

  • Poland's most denser gminy (by commons:User:Klarigi a.k.a. NerdyMaps)
    Poland's most denser gminy (by commons:User:Klarigi a.k.a. NerdyMaps)
  • Austria
    Austria
  • Ukraine
    Ukraine
  • Italy
    Italy
  • Hungary
    Hungary
  • Switzerland
    Switzerland
  • Germany
    Germany
  • Belgium
    Belgium
  • The Netherlands
    The Netherlands
  • Central Europe
    Central Europe

Multi-colored areas

Mostly used on Wikipedia for the

United Kingdom local elections
(as each ward has multiple seats)

  • Northern Ireland 1999
    Northern Ireland 1999
  • West Lothian 2007
    West Lothian 2007
  • Glasgow City 2007
    Glasgow City 2007

Cartograms (anamorphosis)

  • 2002 Cartogram with each municipality rescaled to the number of valid votes cast. The municipalities are the color of the party that got the most votes within the coalition that won relative majority.
    2002 Cartogram with each municipality rescaled to the number of valid votes cast. The municipalities are the color of the party that got the most votes within the coalition that won relative majority.
  • 2002 Cartogram of vote with each municipality rescaled in proportion to number of valid votes cast. Deeper blue represents a relative majority for the centre-right coalition, brighter red represents a relative majority for the left-wing coalition.
    2002 Cartogram of vote with each municipality rescaled in proportion to number of valid votes cast. Deeper blue represents a relative majority for the centre-right coalition, brighter red represents a relative majority for the left-wing coalition.
  • 2006 Cartogram of the vote with each municipality rescaled in proportion to the number of valid votes. Deeper blue represents a relative majority for Alliance for Sweden, brighter red represents a relative majority for the Red-Green bloc.
    2006 Cartogram of the vote with each municipality rescaled in proportion to the number of valid votes. Deeper blue represents a relative majority for Alliance for Sweden, brighter red represents a relative majority for the Red-Green bloc.
  • Map showing the voting shifts from the 2002 to the 2006 election. Darker blue indicates a municipality voted more towards the parties that form Alliance for Sweden. Darker red indicates a municipality voted more towards the parties that form the red-green bloc.
    Map showing the voting shifts from the 2002 to the 2006 election. Darker blue indicates a municipality voted more towards the parties that form Alliance for Sweden. Darker red indicates a municipality voted more towards the parties that form the red-green bloc.
  • 2002 Votes by municipality as a scale from red/Left-wing bloc to blue/Centre-right bloc.
    2002 Votes by municipality as a scale from red/Left-wing bloc to blue/Centre-right bloc.
A very original map combining a cartogram of Czech districts sized by their proportion of catholics, colored in 5 hues depending of their vote for the KDU-ČSL party in 2010.

Various

commons:User:Magog the Ogre/Political maps

See also

also see