The Promo-LEX Association carried out a Quick Count during the 30 November 2014 Parliamentary Elections, on a representative sample of 700 polling stations in country, of the total of 1 987 polling stations (polling stations from abroad were not included).
The selected sample is statistically representative for the entire country and the maximum margin of error is 1.2%.
According to the results of the Quick Count, the votes in the country were divided as follows:
| Results/Candidates | % | %+ME95 | %-ME95 | %+ME99 | %-ME99 |
| PDM | 16.241% | 17.414% | 15.067% | 17.783% | 14.698% |
| PLDM | 20.121% | 21.294% | 18.947% | 21.663% | 18.578% |
| PCR | 4.956% | 6.130% | 3.783% | 6.499% | 3.414% |
| PSRM | 20.369% | 21.543% | 19.196% | 21.912% | 18.827% |
| PCRM | 17.923% | 19.096% | 16.749% | 19.465% | 16.380% |
| PL | 9.573% | 10.747% | 8.400% | 11.116% | 8.031% |
| Others | 10.937% | 12.110% | 9.763% | 12.479% | 9.394% |
Based on the results of the Promo-LEX Quick Count, the mandates in Parliament will be distributed in the following manner:
| Electoral Candidate | Obtained Directly | Redistributed | Total Mandates Obtained |
| PDM | 16 | 3 | 19 |
| PLDM | 20 | 4 | 24 |
| PSRM | 20 | 4 | 24 |
| PCRM | 18 | 3 | 21 |
| PL | 10 | 3 | 13 |
| 84 | 17 | 101 |
The maximum margin of error 1.2% is applicable to the candidate PCR. The margin is calculated for each candidate individually. The analysis excluded 7 polling stations from the sample that failed to report the results and the 151 protocols that were received by the Promo-LEX operators but failed to pass the CEC-established checks.
The Quick Count is a statistical operation of assessing the quality of the voting, and high-precision prediction of the final results of the poll. The operation reported an overall high-quality of voting procedures and lack of major incidents.
The Election Monitoring Effort is part of the activities conducted by the civil society under the aegis of the Coalition for Free and Fair Elections.
The Monitoring Effort for the Parliamentary Election on 30 November 2014 has received technical assistance from the National Democratic Institute for International Affairs (NDI) and is funded by the United States Agency for International Development (USAID), the National Endowment for Democracy (NED), the Council of Europe, and the Stefan Batory Foundation from the funds provided by the Solidarity Fund as part of the “Support for Democracy” Programme of the Polish Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

