1949 Netherlands Antilles general election

General elections were held in the Netherlands Antilles on 17 March 1949. This was the first parliamentary election in the Netherlands Antilles after the introduction of universal suffrage. At previous elections ten of the fifteen seats in the Estates of Curaçao were elected, with the remaining five appointed by the governor. This time the elections were about 21 seats in the Estates of the Netherlands Antilles and no seats were appointed by the governor. The 21 elected seats consisted of eight for Curaçao, eight for Aruba, two for Bonaire and one for each of the three SSS Islands.

Curaçao
Population: 95,195 (31 December 1948) Entitled to vote: 37,688 Valid votes: 30,700 Invalid votes: 476 Seats: 8 Average valid votes per seat: 3,837.5

Aruba
Population: 51,110 (31 December 1948) Entitled to vote: 12,819 Valid votes: 11,107 Invalid votes: 288

Seats: 8 Average valid votes per seat: 1,388 3/8

Bonaire
Population: 4,995 (31 December 1948) Entitled to vote: 2,224 Valid votes: 1,752 Seats: 2 Average valid votes per seat: 876

Saba
Population: 1.125 (31 December 1948) Entitled to vote: 451 Valid votes: 385 Invalid votes: 15 Seats: 1

Sint Eustatius
Population: 921 (31 December 1948) Entitled to vote: 347 Valid votes: 266 Invalid votes: 15 Seats: 1

Sint Maarten
Population: 1,568 (31 December 1948) Entitled to vote: 578 Valid votes: n.a. (only one list of candidates) Seats: 1

Aftermath
The new session of the Estates started on 18 April 1949.

At this election women could not only for the first time vote for the parliament, there were also female candidates. None of them however were elected. After M.F. da Costa Gomez gave up his position in the parliament to join the 'College van Algemeen Bestuur' (CAB; early stage of the Council of Ministers), De Lannoy-Elisabeth succeeded him mid 1949 and became the first female member of the parliament in the Netherlands Antilles. Plantz also joined the CAB and was succeeded by Buncamper.

Kroon left the parliament and because Van der Meer turned down the opportunity to succeed him, Isa could become a member of the Estates. At the end of 1949 Arends was succeeded by Amelink and Plantz returned after Buncamper gave up his seat in the parliament.