The Legislative Chamber of the Federal District (CLDF) will have a renewal of 50% of parliamentarians in the next legislature. Data from the Superior Electoral Court (TSE) show that, of the 24 district deputies, 12 are new parliamentarians. In all, 610 candidates competed for a district deputy seat.
In all, 13 elected candidates. The largest bench is from the PL, with four elected. There was a tie in the second and third benches, PT and MDB, both with three districts.
Of the current legislature, 18 deputies have tried to be re-elected to office. Another five candidates tried different elective positions. Only deputy Arlete Sampaio (PT) decided not to seek re-election. Of the 12 new district deputies, Ricardo Vale (PT) and Wellington Luiz (MDB) have held the position before.
Re-elected for a second term, district Fábio Félix (PSOL) received the most votes, with 51,792 votes. This is the largest number of votes in the entire history of the Legislative Chamber, surpassing the number reached by Luis Estevão in the 1994 election (when he received 46,200 votes).
Deputy Chico Vigilante (PT) was the second most voted, with 43,854 voters. Followed by Max Maciel (PSOL), in the first term, with 35,758 votes. The new composition looks like this:
– Felix (PSOL);
– Chico Vigilante (PT);
– Max Maciel (PSOL);
– Daniel Donizet (PL);
– Martins Machado (Republicans);
– Robério Negreiros (PSD);
– Jorge Vianna (PSD);
– Jaqueline Silva (Agir);
– Thiago Manzoni (PL);
– Eduardo Pedrosa (União Brasil);
– Joaquim Roriz Neto (PL),
– Iolando (MDB);
– Pastor Daniel de Castro (PP);
– Hermeto (MDB);
– Roosevelt Vilela (PL);
– Doctor Jane (Agir);
– Rogério Morro da Cruz (PMN);
– Gabriel Magno (PT);
– João Cardoso (Avant);
– Paula Belmonte (Citizenship);
– Ricardo Vale (PT);
– Wellington Luiz (MDB);
– Pepa (PP);
– Dayse Amarilio (PSB).
Although they registered more than 20,000 votes, three candidates for reelection were left out even with more votes from other elected parliamentarians due to the electoral quotient. They were: Delmasso, Cláudio Abrantes and Reginaldo Sardinha.
In this election, a party needed to reach at least 69,182 votes. This number corresponds to the calculation of the division of the total valid votes by the total number of seats in the Legislative Chamber. In 2022, 1,660,387 valid votes were registered. For the result of the distribution of seats by party, it is still necessary to divide the total votes of each party by the electoral quotient.