Africa Tunisia Ennahda Party made an alliance with the parties of opposing political ideologies, and governed Tunisia between 2011 and 2021. After the party won the
Constituent Assembly election in 2011, an alliance was established with the second-placed party (
Congress for the Republic) and the third-placed party (
Ettakatol), forming the Troika alliance. In the
2014 parliamentary election, the party came in second place, but it formed alliance with
Nidaa Tounes which was in first place, despite the tensions in the electoral campaign. In the
2019 parliamentary election, the party returned to first place and allied with the
Heart of Tunisia party, until the
2021 political crisis.
South Africa The 2024 elections in the Republic of South Africa resulted in the
African National Congress (ANC), which had been in power since 1994, losing its majority having received less than 41% of the national vote. The ANC formed a grand coalition with the
Democratic Alliance (previously the official opposition) and nine other parties. Together the parties had 72% of seats in the South African
Parliament. All parties who were prepared to sign a statement of intent, which contained the main principles for what it called the Government of National Unity (GNU), were included.
Asia An example of a grand coalition in Asia occurred in
Japan in 2003, when the two main opposition parties, the
Constitutional Democratic Party (CDP) and the
Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) agreed to form a grand coalition. The CDP was a liberal, social reform-oriented party, while the LEP was a conservative, pro-business party. This unusual grand coalition succeeded in bringing about political stability and economic recovery to the nation. This CDP-LDP coalition lasted until 2005 when the deep ideological divisions led to early elections.
India In the
Indian
state of
Maharashtra, the
Maha Vikas Aghadi alliance was formed between the
Indian National Congress, the
Nationalist Congress Party (NCP) and the
Shiv Sena after the
2019 Maharashtra Legislative Assembly election. While the Congress and the NCP reflect
centre to
centre-left policies and have a
secular ideology, the Shiv Sena reflects
right-wing policies and has a
Hindu-nationalist ideology. The alliance formed the government in Maharashtra after a
political crisis. The government lasted for 2.5 years, after which in 2022 a rebellion occurred in Shiv Sena regarding the alliance and another
political crisis followed. After the government collapsed, the Shiv Sena split into two factions; the relatively moderate and secular group
Shiv Sena (Uddhav Balasaheb Thackeray) (SS (UBT)) led by
Uddhav Thackeray and the
Balasahebanchi Shiv Sena, the
Hindu nationalist group led by
Eknath Shinde. The alliance still exists between the Congress, the NCP and the SS (UBT), though they sit in the opposition in the
Maharashtra Legislative Assembly.
Israel Israel has had several grand coalition governments. The first was the wartime government of
Levi Eshkol, formed in 1967 and which lasted until 1970. Subsequent grand coalitions were formed in the 1980s and at several points in the 21st century. Several of Israel's grand coalitions were rotation governments, in which the premiership alternated between center-left and center-right leaders. The first was from 1984 to 1988, led by
Shimon Peres and
Yitzhak Shamir (which was continued as a non-rotation grand coalition until 1990). In 2021, a rotation grand coalition government, the
Bennett-Lapid government, succeeded another rotation grand coalition in the form of the
Netanyahu-Gantz government.
Japan Following the
1993 Japanese general elections, the historically hegemonic
Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) was narrowly placed into the opposition in the lower house for the first time in its history. The former opposition, consisting of parties ranging from the
Japan Socialist Party (JSP) to the
neoconservative Japan Renewal Party, united around
Morihiro Hosokawa as their choice for
prime minister. After having passed
electoral reform legislation, which was the coalition's
raison d'être, the bickering between ideological factions led to the grand coalition falling apart less than a year later. Soon afterwards, in 1994, the JSP negotiated with the LDP to form a grand coalition government. This lasted until January 1996, and the JSP collapsed after losing much of its political support.
Malaysia The
Pakatan Harapan coalition and the
Barisan Nasional coalition formed the first grand coalition government in Malaysia in 2022, after the country's
15th general election. No major coalition secured enough seats in these elections to secure a simple majority in parliament. Thus, the country had a hung parliament for the first time in its history. A few days after the election, the
Conference of Rulers decreed that party leaders must work together to form a government. Pakatan Harapan's Prime Minister candidate,
Anwar Ibrahim, was sworn in as the country's 10th Prime Minister after securing the support of Barisan Nasional, its longstanding opponent, together with other parties that make up the Borneo Bloc:
Gabungan Parti Sarawak (GPS),
Gabungan Rakyat Sabah (GRS) and
Warisan. This coalition government is commonly referred to as a
Unity Government, even in official communication by the government itself, but this is not a commonly accepted use of the term. A Unity Government is typically defined as a broad coalition government that lacks opposition. In Malaysia's case, the
Perikatan Nasional coalition serves as the biggest group in the opposition bloc.
Mongolia Following the election, the ruling
Mongolian People's Party had been reduced from
Supermajority to simple majority for the first time in 8 years. Although The
Mongolian People's Party could have formed a government of their own, the party leaders of
Mongolian People's Party,
Democratic Party (Mongolia) and
HUN Party met and signed a memorandum to cooperate, thus a Grand Coalition in Mongolia is formed for the first time in its history.
Turkey Turkey's first grand coalition was formed after the
1961 general election, with members of
Republican People's Party and
Justice Party. At the same time, the grand coalition was also Turkey's
first coalition government.
Europe Austria In post-war Austria, a "grand coalition" () between the
Social Democratic Party of Austria (SPÖ) and the conservative
Austrian People's Party (ÖVP) has been standard since
World War II. Of the 31 governments which have taken office since 1945, 20 have been grand coalitions, including eleven consecutively from 1945 to 1966. Grand coalitions again governed from 1987 to 2000 and 2007 to 2017. Grand coalitions have also been common at the
state level: as of July 2020, grand coalitions governed
Carinthia,
Styria,
Lower Austria, and
Upper Austria; in the last two of these, grand coalitions (more specifically, all-party government) are compulsory under the constitution.
Croatia The Third Government of the Republic of Croatia (), or the Government of National Unity (
Croatian:
Vlada nacionalnog jedinstva), was the
Croatian government cabinet led by
Prime Minister Franjo Gregurić. It was announced on 17 July 1991 in response to the escalation of the
Croatian War of Independence. It was the 3rd cabinet of Croatia since the
first multi-party elections, and its term ended on 12 August 1992 after the
first parliamentary election under the
1990 Croatian Constitution. During the term of this cabinet Croatia gained
internationally diplomatic recognition and became a member of the
United Nations. The government was dominated by the right-wing
Croatian Democratic Union and contained the
Social Democratic Party of Croatia,
Croatian Social Liberal Party,
Croatian People's Party,
Croatian Christian Democratic Party,
Socialist Party of Croatia,
Social Democrats of Croatia, and the
Croatian Democratic Party Czech Republic After the
Velvet Revolution, there was a government of socialists (
ČSSD) with Prime Minister
Miloš Zeman supported by the right-wing
ODS, known as the
opposition agreement.
Denmark After the
2022 Danish general election a grand coalition was formed between the centre-left
Social Democrats, the centre-right
Venstre and the centrist
Moderates, presided over by the social democrat
Mette Frederiksen.
European Union In the
European Parliament, the two main
pan-European party groups are the
European People's Party (EPP) and the
Socialists & Democrats (S&D). Until 2019, they held a majority in the European Parliament and worked together in a grand coalition. However, advances by green, liberal and right-wing populist parties across Europe in the
2019 European Parliament election led to the EPP-S&D coalition losing their majority, making
Renew Europe support necessary to give
Ursula von der Leyen and
her commission a majority in the European Parliament.
Estonia Kaja Kallas' first cabinet was a grand coalition between the
Reform Party and the
Centre Party. Kallas dismissed the Centre ministers from her cabinet in June 2022, leaving it in a minority.
Germany (SPD),
Angela Merkel (CDU) and
Horst Seehofer (CSU) presenting the 2013 coalition agreement for Germany's
third Merkel cabinet In post-war Germany, "grand coalition" () refers to a governing coalition of the two largest parties, usually the Christian Democrats (
CDU/
CSU) and the
Social Democrats (SPD). Under the
Weimar Republic, the
Great Coalition included all of the major parties of the left, centre, and centre-right who formed the basis of most governments: the
SPD, the
Catholic Centre Party, the
German Democratic Party (DDP), and the
German People's Party (DVP). The two examples were the
first and
second Stresemann cabinets (August–November 1923) and, less ephemerally, the
second Müller cabinet (1928–1930). While
West Germany and
re-unificated Germany has historically tended to favour narrow coalitions of one of the two largest parties with the
FDP or with the
Greens, four grand coalitions have been formed at a federal level: the
Kiesinger cabinet (1966–1969), the
first Merkel cabinet (2005–2009), the
third Merkel cabinet (2013–2018), and the
fourth Merkel cabinet (2018–2021). A fifth coalition government, the
Merz cabinet (2025–present), is dubbed as the "black-red coalition" due to the SPD falling behind the second-placed
AfD after the
2025 German federal election.
Greece In Greece there had been two Grand Coalitions known in Greece as National Unity Governments. The first one is the
Coalition Cabinet of Xenophon Zolotas composed by the right-wing
New Democracy (Greece) and the left-wing
PASOK and
Synaspismos because of a hung parliament and the second one is the
Cabinet of Lucas Papademos composed by the right-wing New Democracy and
Popular Orthodox Rally and the left-wing PASOK because of the
Greek government-debt crisis. There were also grand coalitions during the governments of
Tzannis Tzannetakis (New Democracy and Synaspismos),
Antonis Samaras (New Democracy, PASOK and
Democratic Left (Greece)) and
Alexis Tsipras (
Syriza,
Independent Greeks and
Ecologist Greens).
Iceland In
Iceland there was a grand coalition between 30 November 2017 and December 2024 between the largest parties of the centre-right
Independence Party (16), the left-wing
Left-Green Movement (9), and the liberal agrarian
Progressive Party (8). All of the parties are
opposed to EU integration. The coalition collapsed into a minority government after the Left-greens exited the coalition.
Italy In the early decades of the
Kingdom of Italy, there were several
coalition governments between the
Historical Right and the
Historical Left, the two major
political factions. The
First Italian Republic was characterised by
Christian Democracy (DC) as the
de facto ruling party and its coalition's leitmotiv being impeding the
Italian Communist Party (PCI) from entering the
Italian government. During the 1970s, in order to establish the political rotation () common to most Western countries and within the context of a PCI that appeared to overtake the DC as the most voted and largest party, the DC leader
Aldo Moro and the PCI secretary
Enrico Berlinguer formed a political accommodation agreement where the PCI would give
external support in exchange for influence in the government. Ultimately, the agreement, which was the closest thing to a grand coalition between the two largest parties, was ended after the
kidnapping and murder of Moro and the PCI never entered the government. A grand coalition was formally established during the early decades of the
Second Italian Republic and within the context of Italy coming from the
Great Recession and the
Monti government (a
technocratic government) after the
resignation of Silvio Berlusconi in 2011, as well as
austerity policies, in turn giving rise to the
Five Star Movement (M5S), which resulted in a hung parliament after the
2013 Italian general election. As a result, the ensuing
supermajority government was described as a grand coalition (), and was officially known as ( 'government of broad understanding', meaning 'government of broad agreements, 'broad-based coalition government', or 'broad-coalition government'), although it included five parties rather than only the two largest groups in the
Italian Parliament. It was formed in April 2013 between the centre-left
Democratic Party (PD), the centre-right
The People of Freedom (PdL) party, and the centrist
Civic Choice (SC),
Italian Radicals (RI), and
Union of the Centre (UdC) parties. In November 2013, the PdL (later renamed as
Forza Italia) dropped out and broke apart, leaving the government led by
Enrico Letta and subsequently the
Renzi government (a coalition between the PD, SC, RI, and UdC, with the addition of the
New Centre-Right, which was composed of former PdL members who rejected the withdrawal of the
new Forza Italia founded by
Silvio Berlusconi after the PdL's dissolution, and the centre-right
Populars for Italy) with a small majority. Despite the PdL's withdrawal from the majority,
Matteo Renzi and Berlusconi signed the
Nazareno Pact for a series of agreed reforms, such as the
electoral law and a
constitutional reform, which lasted until the
2015 Italian presidential election of
Sergio Mattarella.
Liechtenstein The
Patriotic Union and the
Progressive Citizens' Party have often governed
Liechtenstein together, including the entire period from 1938 to 1997.
Luxembourg In Luxembourg, towards the end of
World War I, a new
Chamber of Deputies was elected in 1918 with the explicit aim of reviewing the
constitution. To this end, formalised parties were formed by the main political blocs, so as to increase their bargaining power in the negotiations. The revisions to the constitution introduced
universal suffrage and
compulsory voting, adopted
proportional representation, and limited the powers of the
monarch. Since the foundation of the
party system, only one cabinet (between 1921 and 1925) has included only members of a single party. Most of the time, governments are grand coalitions of the two largest parties, no matter what their ideologies; this has made Luxembourg one of the most stable democracies in the world. Two cabinets (between 1945 and 1947) included members of every party represented in the
Chamber of Deputies.
Netherlands In the Netherlands, there have been several
cabinets which can be described as grand coalitions (). The
Roman/Red coalitions of the 1940s and 1950s under Prime Minister
Willem Drees were composed of the Christian democratic
Catholic People's Party (KVP) and the social-democratic
Labour Party (PvdA) at its core and several smaller parties as backup (
Drees–Van Schaik). The purple coalitions in the 1990s under Prime Minister
Wim Kok were between the PvdA, the conservative liberal
People's Party for Freedom and Democracy (VVD) and the social-liberal
Democrats 66 (D66) party (
First Kok cabinet). The
Second Rutte cabinet, a grand coalition cabinet which can also be described as a purple coalition, was composed of the VVD and the PvdA. A more traditional grand coalition cabinet was the
Third Lubbers cabinet, comprising the Christian-democratic
Christian Democratic Appeal (CDA) and the PvdA.
Portugal In the 1983 legislative elections, the
Socialist Party (PS) made a post-electoral agreement with the
Social Democratic Party (PSD), creating a single large government coalition called the
Central Bloc that lasted until 1985.
Romania After the
political crisis in autumn 2021,
PNL,
PSD and the
UDMR reached an agreement to rule the country together for the next seven years. Thus, it has been agreed that the prime minister and several other important ministries should be changed every 18 months. The prime minister appointed was national-liberal
Nicolae Ciucă. His cabinet was sworn in on 25 November. The coalition supports the Romanian President
Klaus Iohannis.
Spain In Spain, the term "grand coalition" is typically used to refer to any hypothetical government formed between the centre-right to right-wing
People's Party (PP) and the centre-left
Spanish Socialist Workers' Party (PSOE). No such a coalition government has ever been formed at the national level, though it was proposed by then
Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy during the
2015–2016 government formation process. Rajoy's own investiture on 29 October 2016 was allowed by the abstention of PSOE's MPs, in what was dubbed a "covert grand coalition", in reference to PSOE's tolerance of Rajoy's minority government through punctual agreements until the
re-election of
Pedro Sánchez as party leader in June 2017. At the regional level, grand coalitions between the two largest parliamentary forces have been rare, but examples exist: •
Basque Country:
PNV–
PSE, 1986–1990 and 1991–1998. •
Catalonia:
PDeCAT/
JxCat–
ERC, 2016–2017 and 2018–2022. •
Navarre:
UPN–
PSN, 2011–2012. Additionally, both PSOE and PP formed a joint coalition government—which also included other parties—following a successful vote of no confidence in the Cantabrian regional government of
Juan Hormaechea in 1990, enduring until the
1991 regional election. At the time, however, the PP was not among the two largest political parties in the regional assembly.
Switzerland Switzerland is a
Directorial Republic, which means that the role of Head of State is collectively exercised by the Cabinet of Ministers, who are each elected by Parliament and whose chair is
primus inter pares. The
Federal Council consists of seven members who are elected by the
Federal Assembly (both
National Council and
Council of States) in joint session, with the chair, the
President of the Swiss Confederation, and the vice-president elected annually in rotation by Parliament in order of seniority—meaning that Switzerland actually has no Prime Minister and no member of the Federal Council is superior to another. By
constitutional convention since 1959, the "
Magic Formula" () allocates seats in the Federal Council to the four major parties represented in Parliament. Due to that, these major parties form a
de facto perennial "grand coalition" or constant national unity government with a supermajority in both the National Council and the Council of States. This magic formula was adjusted after the
Swiss People's Party (SVP) became the largest party represented in Parliament in the
2003 elections, transferring one seat in the Federal Council from the
CVP to the SVP; however, the government's policies are only supported on a case-by-case basis by the parliamentary groups of the governing parties, so these major parties are in government and opposition at the same time.
United Kingdom The UK has had grand coalitions in central government during periods of wartime. They are referred to as the "National Government".
Northern Ireland The
Northern Ireland Executive, the devolved administration of Northern Ireland, must by law, be a coalition of the largest Nationalist (also predominantly left of centre) and Unionist (also predominantly right of centre) parties. The chief post, of
First Minister and deputy First Minister, is a
diarchy. Most recently, this coalition has been led by
Sinn Féin and the
Democratic Unionist Party since the
2024 Northern Ireland Executive formation. All parties, major and minor, are offered posts in the executive, although they may
opt to form an opposition.
Cayman Islands The Cayman Islands, a
British overseas territory, had a coalition between the largest parties, the centre-left
People's Progressive Movement and centre-right
Cayman Democratic Party, from 2017 through 2021. The coalition government ended after the
2021 Caymanian general election as a result of the collapse of the Democratic Party that year. ==See also==