VILNIUS, Lithuania — Lithuania' s center-left opposition parties celebrated victory on Monday after prevailing over the center-right ruling coalition in the final round of national elections.
With 100% of votes counted from Sunday's polls, the Social Democrats won 52 seats in the 141-seat parliament, known as the Seimas, ending the four-year rule of the Homeland Union government led by conservative Prime Minister Ingrida Šimonytė.
The Social Democrats will start talks on forming a majority cabinet with two smaller center-left parties, the Democratic Union and the Union of Peasants and Greens, which won respectively 14 and 8 seats. The coalition is expected to control at least 74 seats.
Šimonytė's Homeland Union won only 28 seats in the two-round election.
Vilija Blinkevičiūtė, who heads the Social Democrats, thanked supporters as a cheering crowd celebrated victory in downtown Vilnius on Sunday.
''I am very grateful to the people of Lithuania who were so active today voting for us'' she said adding that ''the results have shown that the people want change, a completely different government.''
The outcome was a surprise to the ruling conservatives, who were only two seats behind the Social Democrats after the first round.
Analysts had predicted that Lithuania is set to continue a historic pattern where voters tend to look a different way every four years.