According to information provided by the General Secretariat of the Ministry of Internal Affairs, the Social Democrats obtained 36.13% of the votes (49,103 votes) and 19 seats in the regional parliament, made up of a total of 47 deputies.

In second place, the PS had 11 elected (21.32% of the votes, in a total of 28,981), followed by the JPP, with nine (16.89% and 22,958 votes), Chega, with four (9.23 % and 12,541 votes), the CDS-PP, with two (3.96 % and 5,384 votes), and the IL (with 2.56 % and 3,482 votes) and the PAN (1.86 % and 2,531 votes), with one deputy each. BE and CDU leave the Legislative Assembly, in relation to the previous composition.

An absolute majority requires 24 seats.

Last year, in the previous regional elections, the PSD and CDS-PP, which competed together, elected 23 deputies, one short of an absolute majority, so the Social Democrats signed a parliamentary advocacy agreement with the PAN's sole deputy.

At the time, the PS elected 11 deputies (the same number as now), Juntos Pelo Povo (JPP) five (four fewer than today) and Chega four (the same number), while the CDU - Coligação Democrática Unitária (PCP -PEV), the Liberal Initiative (IL), People-Animals-Nature (PAN) and the Left Bloc (BE) elected one deputy each.

In today's elections, 14 candidates were put to vote, of which seven were unable to elect representatives: in addition to the CDU and BE, which until now had one deputy each, ADN, Livre, RIR, MPT, and PTP.

Abstention was 46.60%, the same level as in previous elections (46.65%), with 135,909 of the 254,522 registered voters voting.

The early elections in Madeira took place eight months after the most recent regional legislative elections, after the President of the Republic dissolved the Madeiran parliament, following the political crisis triggered in January, when the leader of the Regional Government (PSD/CDS-PP), Miguel Albuquerque, was named a defendant in a process in which suspicions of corruption are investigated.