The 2024 Belgian provincial, municipal and district elections took place on Sunday 13 October 2024, four months after the simultaneous European, federal and regional elections.

The local elections were organised by the respective regions:

  • Brussels with 19 municipalities
  • Flanders with 5 provinces and 285 municipalities (down from 300)
    • In the city of Antwerp, elections were also held for its 10 districts (up from 9)
  • Wallonia with 5 provinces and 261 municipalities (one fewer)
    • In the German-speaking Community, the elections are organised by that community rather than the Walloon Region

In the municipalities with language facilities of Voeren, Comines-Warneton and the 6 of the Brussels Periphery, the aldermen and members of the OCMW/CPAS council are directly elected.

As reflected in the number of municipalities above, some municipalities were merging. One of them, Borsbeek, merged with the city of Antwerp, becoming its tenth district. In Wallonia, only Bastogne and Bertogne were merging. The mergers took effect following the 2024 elections, on the 1st of January, 2025, when the councils of the newly formed entities were elected.

Brussels

The municipal councils of the 19 municipalities were elected.

Voting is obligatory in Brussels and Walloon local elections.

Flanders

The Flemish decree of 16 July 2021 reformed the local electoral process, abolishing compulsory voting in Flemish local elections. Voting remains obligatory in Brussels and Walloon local elections.

The decree also changed several election rules for Flemish municipal elections:

  • the list vote is abolished; only preference votes placed on specific candidates count.
  • The candidate with the highest number of preferences vote of the list with the most votes (as per votes placed on candidates) has the exclusive right to form a coalition during two weeks.
  • The candidate with the largest number of preference votes belonging to the most-popular party within the formed coalition will be mayor by law.

This incentivises forming larger, joint lists instead of smaller, separate ones.

Turnout was lower than expected, with on average 63.6% of voters casting a ballot. Eeklo had the lowest turnout and Mesen the highest.

Electoral system

Municipal councils were elected by the Imperiali highest averages method, a form of open-list party-list proportional representation.

Municipal elections

Antwerp

Two-term mayor Bart De Wever (N-VA) was a candidate to continue governing the most populous city, Antwerp. Main challenger was PVDA with Jos D'Haese.

Gent

Open Vld (with mayor Mathias De Clercq) and Groen (with first alderman Filip Watteeuw) were the two main political parties since the 2018 elections. The current governing coalition is composed of Vooruit-Groen (a joint list in 2018), Open Vld and CD&V. Open Vld and Vooruit formed a joint "Voor Gent" list, opposing a Groen list.

Mechelen

Bart Somers, mayor of Mechelen since 2001, became Flemish minister in 2019 but returned as mayor in November 2023. He headed the "Voor Mechelen" list, composed of the Open Vld, Groen and M governing coalition.

Raes controversy

In September 2024, the Vlaams Belang sparked controversy by putting Roeland Raes who had previously been convicted of Holocaust denial as one of its candidates in the upcoming municipal elections before removing his candidacy the following day.

Provincial elections

The provincial councils of Antwerp, Flemish Brabant, East Flanders, West Flanders and Limburg were elected. Councillors are elected for a six-year term, starting on the first working day in December following the elections, thus 2 December 2024.

Wallonia

The five provincial councils and the municipal councils were elected.

In eight municipalities, only one electoral list was submitted: their candidates were automatically elected. This was the case in Herbeumont, Houffalize, Rouvroy, Anhée, Bièvre, Vresse-sur-Semois, Limbourg and Verlaine.

References

External links

Media related to 2024 Belgian local elections at Wikimedia Commons

  • Local elections - Flemish Government website
  • Municipal elections - Brussels Government website
  • Local elections - Walloon Government website
  • Municipal elections - German-speaking Community website

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