In 1993, the Free List overcame the 8% electoral threshold for the first time with over 10% in the state elections and was also able to consolidate in the early elections in the same year with 8.5%, although this remained its worst result since then. Having increased to over 11% in 1997 and falling again somewhat in 2001, FL reached a record 13.3% of the votes in the 2005 election and thus won three out of a total of 25 mandates. In the 2009 elections, it fell to 8.9% and was only able to win one seat. In the 2013 election, its share rose again to over 11%, which in turn brought the party three mandates. In the state elections on February 5, 2017, the party gained 1.5%, but this didn't change the number of seats.
In the 2021 state election, the Free List gained 12.9%, an increase of 0.3%, but the number of seats held by the party remained the same.
The Young List (German: Junge Liste, JL) was founded in 2019 as a young party associated with the Free List.[2] In September 2020, the youth organization presented its goals for the first time at the General Assembly of the Free List.[9]
In October 2020, Young List started collecting signatures for a petition with the aim of lowering the voting age in Liechtenstein to 16.[10][11] In May 2021, JL addressed a corresponding petition to the state parliament, which referred it to the government.
In September 2021, the Young List was constituted as a separate association.[12]
At the general assembly in August 2022, the members Daniel Lochner (from Triesen) and Samuel Schurte (from Balzers) decided to stand as mayoral candidates in the 2023 municipal elections.[13]
According to its own statements, the Young List has around 60 members (as of 2022).[14]