Table: Center-left Social Democrats lead vote in Czech election

PRAGUE (Reuters) - The center-left Social Democrats led the vote in the Czech parliamentary election on Saturday with around 95 percent of polling stations across the country reporting. Pre-election polls had predicted the Social Democrats would win about 25 percent of the vote with Czechs punishing center-right parties that ruled for most of the past seven years for austerity policies and a series of graft scandals. Parties must win at least 5 percent of the vote to enter parliament. The following are the latest election results for the leading parties: CSSD -- 20.8 pct KSCM -- 15.2 pct TOP09 -- 11.5 pct ODS -- 7.5 pct ANO 2011 -- 18.7 pct Usvit -- 7.0 pct SPOZ -- 1.5 pct Greens -- 3.0 pct KDU-CSL -- 6.9 pct The parties are: - The Czech Social Democratic Party (CSSD) - left - The Communist Party of Bohemia and Moravia (KSCM) - far left - Civic Democratic Party (ODS) - right, liberal-conservative - TOP09 - conservative - Citizens' Rights Party - the Zemanites (SPOZ) - center-left, connected to President Milos Zeman - ANO 2011 - center-right party run by billionaire food and agricultural businessman Andrej Babis; ANO means 'yes' in Czech - Usvit (Dawn) - direct democracy movement, set up by Czech-Japanese entrepreneur and senator Tomio Okamura - The Greens - environmentalist, centrist - Christian Democratic Union-Czechoslovak People's Party (KDU-CSL) - centrist (Reporting by Prague newsroom; Editing by Michael Kahn)