Misplaced Pages

Central Guadalcanal constituency

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
#645354

21-575: (Redirected from Central Guadalcanal ) Central Guadalcanal Single-member constituency for the National Parliament of the Solomon Islands Region Guadalcanal Province Current constituency Created 1973 Current MP Peter Shannel Agovaka Party Independent Central Guadalcanal is a single-member constituency of

42-579: A campaign rally in the Malaitan provincial capital of Auki , Sogavare delivered a speech where he praised the Chinese political system and declared his government's decision to switch diplomatic ties from Taiwan to China to have "put Solomon Islands on the map". Sogavare also claimed that democracy leads to moral decline and same-sex marriage. After declining to contest the election for prime minister for an additional term, Sogavare announced that he would stand down as

63-534: Is a political party in the Solomon Islands . It is headed by Jeremiah Manele and has competed in the 2010 and 2024 elections. The party was established on 17 December 2012 (and officially launched a month later ) by the leader of the Opposition (and former Prime Minister ) Manasseh Sogavare , and eight opposition MPs. The party stated its intention to "invest $ 780 million over a period of four years in

84-2246: The National Parliament of Solomon Islands Current (50) Aoke/Langalanga Baegu/Asifola Central Guadalcanal Central Honiara Central Kwara'ae Central Makira East ꞌAreꞌare East Central Guadalcanal East Choiseul East Guadalcanal East Honiara East Kwaio East Makira East Malaita Fataleka Gao/Bugotu Gizo/Kolombangara Hograno/Kia/Havulei Lau/Mbaelelea Malaita Outer Islands Maringe/Kokota Marovo Nggela North East Guadalcanal North Guadalcanal North Malaita North New Georgia North Vella Lavella North West Choiseul North West Guadalcanal Ranongga/Simbo Rennell/Bellona Russells/Savo Shortlands Small Malaita South Choiseul South Guadalcanal South New Georgia/Rendova/Tetepari South Vella Lavella Temotu Nende Temotu Pele Temotu Vatud Ulawa/Ugi West ꞌAreꞌare West Guadalcanal West Honiara West Kwaio West Kwara'ae West Makira West New Georgia/Vona Vona Defunct ꞌAreꞌare Central Malaita Central Solomons Choiseul Choiseul/Shortlands East Isabel East Isabel/Savo Eastern Outer Islands Gizo/Ranongga/Simbo/Kolombangara Honiara Kwaio Makira Marovo/Kusaghe New Georgia Ngella/Savo/Russells North Central Malaita North Choiseul North East Malaita North West Malaita North Western Solomons Roviana/Rendova Roviana and North New Georgia Santa Isabel Shortlands/Vella Lavella South Central Malaita South Guadalcanal/Rennell and Bellona South Malaita Vella Lavella Vella Lavella/Kolombangara Vona Vona/Rendova/Tetepari West Guadalcanal and Russells West Isabel Ysabel/Russells Authority control databases [REDACTED] International ISNI VIAF National United States Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=National_Parliament_of_the_Solomon_Islands&oldid=1230705614 " Categories : National Parliament of

105-6031: The National Parliament of Solomon Islands . Established in 1973 when the Governing Council was expanded from 17 to 24 seats, it is located on the island of Guadalcanal . List of MPs [ edit ] Term MP Party 1973–1976 David Thuguvoda   1976–1980 Paul Joseph Tovua   1980–1984   1984–1989   1989–1993   1993–1997 Cain Eric Seri   1997–2001 Walton Naezol   2001–2006   2006–2010 Peter Shannel Agovaka   2010–2014 Ownership, Unity and Responsibility Party 2014– Independent Election results [ edit ] 2014 [ edit ] 2014 general election Candidate Party Votes Peter Shannel Agovaka Independent 2,083 Walton Naezol United Democratic Party 1,446 Ribson Nunua Tinbaku Independent 697 Patrick Kennedy Direct Development Party 270 Noelyne Biliki People's Alliance Party 114 Elvish Kekegolo Pan-Melanesian Congress Party 91 Matilda Tosa Elta National Transformation Party 78 George Solomon Sovekibo Independent 52 Brendan Muna Independent 47 Invalid/blank votes 20 Total Registered voters Source: Election Passport 2010 [ edit ] 2010 general election Candidate Party Votes Peter Shannel Agovaka Ownership, Unity and Responsibility Party 2,526 Walton Naezol Independent 2,025 Invalid/blank votes 58 Total 4,609 Registered voters 6,829 Source: Election Passport 2009 [ edit ] 2009 by-election Candidate Party Votes Peter Shannel Agovaka 2,089 Walton Naezol 1,291 Elvish Kekegolo 170 Invalid/blank votes 51 Total 3,601 Registered voters Source: Election Passport 2006 [ edit ] 2006 general election Candidate Party Votes Peter Shannel Agovaka 1,124 Walton Naezol 966 Noveti Napter 490 Wilson Weston Suhara 467 Whitlam Kikolo 300 Simon Tonavi 163 Paul Berry Voromate 39 Invalid/blank votes 21 Total 3,570 Registered voters 5,089 Source: Election Passport 2001 [ edit ] 2001 general election Candidate Party Votes Walton Naezol 1,364 Napter N Lui 532 Peter Shannel Agovaka 515 Justice Denni 383 Bernard Teli 333 Invalid/blank votes Total 3,127 Registered voters 5,042 Source: Election Passport 1997 [ edit ] 1997 general election Candidate Party Votes Walton Naezol 1,246 Joash Salani 406 Haniel Miniti 394 Willie Ronnie 359 Clement Jimmy Natei 322 Michael Kelly 262 Jeriel Watson Mani 229 Allan Moses Telei 129 Invalid/blank votes Total 3,347 Registered voters 4,584 Source: Election Passport 1993 [ edit ] 1993 general election Candidate Party Votes Cain Eric Seri 827 Joseph Bobby Naesol 804 Paul Joseph Tovua 656 David Kafaikao 242 Invalid/blank votes Total 2,529 Registered voters 3,477 Source: Election Passport 1989 [ edit ] 1989 general election Candidate Party Votes Paul Joseph Tovua 757 Cain Eric Seri 604 Francis Manengelea 441 David Balue 336 Jim Vokia 133 Invalid/blank votes Total 2,271 Registered voters 3,525 Source: Election Passport 1984 [ edit ] 1984 general election Candidate Party Votes Paul Joseph Tovua 473 Samuel Topilu 401 Sam Nesa Chamatete 349 Cain Eric Seri 263 Walter Vaghi 134 Invalid/blank votes Total 1,620 Registered voters Source: Election Passport 1980 [ edit ] 1980 general election Candidate Party Votes Paul Joseph Tovua 608 Francis George Labu 244 Samuel Topilu 196 Sam Nesa Chamatete 167 M. J. Koba 86 Jim Vokia 59 Invalid/blank votes Total 1,360 Registered voters 3,427 Source: Election Passport 1976 [ edit ] 1976 general election Candidate Party Votes Paul Joseph Tovua 408 Moses Albert Rere 228 Mark Manapasege 190 Belden Aghi 123 Invalid/blank votes Total 949 Registered voters Source: Election Passport 1973 [ edit ] 1973 general election Candidate Party Votes David Thuguvoda 618 Alfred Maeke 507 Moses Albert Rere 191 Allan Billy Masedi 181 Invalid/blank votes Total 1,497 Registered voters Source: Election Passport References [ edit ] ^ Constituencies and their Members of Parliament National Parliament of

126-475: The rural economy from our own sources to improve the participation of our people in economic development". Provincial governments would be required to take an active part in rural development. It has also promised to consider whether it may be possible to restore customary ownership of land alienated for public purposes during the colonial era, notably in Honiara . In this respect, the party said it would be guided by

147-2614: The Grenadines Samoa San Marino São Tomé and Príncipe Saudi Arabia Senegal Serbia Seychelles Sierra Leone Singapore Slovakia Solomon Islands Sri Lanka Suriname Sweden Syria Tanzania Togo Tonga Tunisia Turkey Tuvalu Uganda Ukraine Vanuatu Holy See (Vatican City) Vietnam Yemen Zambia Dependent and other territories Åland Islands Anguilla Aruba Azores British Virgin Islands Cayman Islands Cook Islands Curaçao Falkland Islands Faroe Islands French Polynesia Gibraltar Greenland Guam Guernsey Hong Kong Jersey Madeira Macau Montserrat New Caledonia Niue Pitcairn Islands Saint Barthélemy Saint Helena Saint Martin Saint Pierre and Miquelon Sint Maarten Tobago Tokelau Turks and Caicos Islands U.S. Virgin Islands Wallis and Futuna Non-UN states Abkhazia Kosovo Northern Cyprus Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic South Ossetia Taiwan Transnistria Historical Artsakh (1991–2023) Confederate States (1861–1862) Czechoslovakia (1948–1969) Irish Republic (1919–1922) Norfolk Island Orange Free State (1854–1902) Scotland Serbia and Montenegro (2003–2006) Sicily Sikkim (1953–1975) South African Republic (1857–1902) Related Bicameralism Tricameralism Multicameralism List of legislatures by country National bicameral legislatures National lower houses National upper houses v t e Solomon Islands Parliaments by year convened 2nd (1980) 3rd (1984) 4th (1989) 5th (1993) 6th (1997) 7th (2001) 8th (2006) 9th (2010) 10th (2014) 11th (2019) 12th (2024) v t e [REDACTED] Constituencies of

168-670: The National Parliament of Solomon Islands Legislative Council of the Solomon Islands Governing Council of the Solomon Islands List of members of the Solomon Islands Parliament who died in office References [ edit ] ^ "About Parliament" , National Parliament of Solomon Islands ^ "Results" . Solomon Islands Electoral Commission. Archived from

189-542: The OUR Party's five most prioritised policies going into the election. The first was preserving social cohesion and the national unity to prevent ethnic tensions from rising, as in 2000. Enhancing the nation's legal and governing systems to guarantee public safety was another key priority, as was socio-economic growth; the party pledged to utilise the Australian Infrastructure Financing Facility for

210-532: The Pacific, the Solomon Islands Infrastructure Program and China's Belt and Road Initiative . The OUR Party's fourth priority was national defence, security and trade; the party sought to preserve relations with Australia and other traditional allies while expanding ties with China as part of a "look north" policy. The fifth key priority was development and land and resources empowerment. During

231-2291: The Solomon Islands v t e [REDACTED] Constituencies of the National Parliament of Solomon Islands Current (50) Aoke/Langalanga Baegu/Asifola Central Guadalcanal Central Honiara Central Kwara'ae Central Makira East ꞌAreꞌare East Central Guadalcanal East Choiseul East Guadalcanal East Honiara East Kwaio East Makira East Malaita Fataleka Gao/Bugotu Gizo/Kolombangara Hograno/Kia/Havulei Lau/Mbaelelea Malaita Outer Islands Maringe/Kokota Marovo Nggela North East Guadalcanal North Guadalcanal North Malaita North New Georgia North Vella Lavella North West Choiseul North West Guadalcanal Ranongga/Simbo Rennell/Bellona Russells/Savo Shortlands Small Malaita South Choiseul South Guadalcanal South New Georgia/Rendova/Tetepari South Vella Lavella Temotu Nende Temotu Pele Temotu Vatud Ulawa/Ugi West ꞌAreꞌare West Guadalcanal West Honiara West Kwaio West Kwara'ae West Makira West New Georgia/Vona Vona Defunct ꞌAreꞌare Central Malaita Central Solomons Choiseul Choiseul/Shortlands East Isabel East Isabel/Savo Eastern Outer Islands Gizo/Ranongga/Simbo/Kolombangara Honiara Kwaio Makira Marovo/Kusaghe New Georgia Ngella/Savo/Russells North Central Malaita North Choiseul North East Malaita North West Malaita North Western Solomons Roviana/Rendova Roviana and North New Georgia Santa Isabel Shortlands/Vella Lavella South Central Malaita South Guadalcanal/Rennell and Bellona South Malaita Vella Lavella Vella Lavella/Kolombangara Vona Vona/Rendova/Tetepari West Guadalcanal and Russells West Isabel Ysabel/Russells Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Central_Guadalcanal_constituency&oldid=904388326 " Categories : Solomon Islands parliamentary constituencies Governing Council of

SECTION 10

#1733085350646

252-1424: The Solomon Islands Politics of Solomon Islands [REDACTED] The Crown Monarch Charles III Governor-General David Tiva Kapu Executive Cabinet Prime Minister Jeremiah Manele Legislature National Parliament Speaker : Ajilon Nasiu Leader of the Opposition Jeremiah Manele Shadow Cabinet Constituencies Political parties Elections Recent elections General: 2010 2014 2019 2024 Judiciary Judiciary Administrative divisions Administrative divisions Foreign relations Ministry of Foreign Affairs: Minister : Jeremiah Manele Diplomatic missions of / in Solomon Islands Passport Visa requirements Visa policy Related topics Foreign relations Truth and Reconciliation Commission Regional Assistance Mission to Solomon Islands (RAMSI) Other countries v t e The National Parliament of

273-667: The Solomon Islands Parliaments by country Politics of the Solomon Islands Government of the Solomon Islands Unicameral legislatures National legislatures Hidden categories: Articles with short description Short description matches Wikidata Pages using navbox columns without the first column Ownership, Unity and Responsibility Party The Ownership, Unity and Responsibility Party (or OUR Party )

294-1566: The Solomon Islands is the legislature of the Solomon Islands . Its 50 members are elected for a four-year term in 50 single-seat constituencies . [REDACTED] Solomon Islands Parliament Building Latest elections [ edit ] Main article: 2024 Solomon Islands general election [REDACTED] Party Votes % Seats +/– Ownership, Unity and Responsibility Party 83,279 24.07 15 New Solomon Islands Democratic Party 66,808 19.31 11 +3 Solomon Islands United Party 46,662 13.49 6 +4 Kadere Party 16,906 4.89 1 –7 Solomon Islands Party for Rural Advancement 15,735 4.55 1 0 People First Party 11,045 3.19 3 +2 Umi for Change Party 10,388 3.00 1 New People's Liberal Democratic Party 6,025 1.74 0 New People's Alliance Party 5,593 1.62 0 –2 Democratic Alliance Party 5,515 1.59 1 –3 National Transformation Party 1,116 0.32 0 0 Green Party Solomon Islands 893 0.26 0 0 Solomon Islands Progressive Action Party 349 0.10 0 New Independents 75,713 21.88 11 –10 Total 346,027 100.00 50 0 Registered voters/turnout 420,185 – Source: SIEC, SIBC, Solomon Islands Gazette See also [ edit ] List of constituencies of

315-1193: The Solomon Islands constituencies Legislative Assembly of the Solomon Islands constituencies 1973 establishments in the Solomon Islands Constituencies established in 1973 National Parliament of the Solomon Islands From Misplaced Pages, the 💕 National legislature of the Solomon Islands National Parliament of Solomon Islands [REDACTED] Type Type Unicameral Leadership Speaker Patteson Oti , OUR Party since 15 May 2019 Prime Minister Jeremiah Manele , OUR Party since 2 May 2024 Structure Seats 50 [REDACTED] Elections Voting system First-past-the-post Last election 17 April 2024 Meeting place [REDACTED] Solomon Islands Parliament Building , Honiara Website www .parliament .gov .sb Constitution Constitution of

336-411: The course of national unity. We believe that we can only progress in developing our country if we are united and see each other as brothers and sisters. We are also committed to encouraging responsible leadership at all levels, including personal leadership. We are also committed to empowering our people through a development strategy that is people-centred, rural-focussed and growth-oriented. Speaking in

357-573: The customary land ownership policy implemented in Vanuatu . During the party's official launch mid-February, in Gizo , Sogavare added that, despite "millions of dollars worth of logs" exported from Western Province , landowners had received little in the way of revenue or improved government services. He later promised to address citizens' concerns about "the spill-over effects of the Bougainville crisis " on

378-419: The maritime border with Papua New Guinea , and emphasised, that national unity was "one of the core pillars" of OUR Party. Later, in the context of the campaign for the 2010 general election , Sogavare stated: OUR Party is founded on Christian principles. OUR Party is committed to restore the ownership of this country to the people of Solomon Islands, both indigenous and naturalised. We are also committed to

399-4283: The original on 6 April 2024 . Retrieved 6 April 2024 . ^ Kusu, Fredrick (26 April 2024). "It's a race between OUR Party, CARE and UP: Sogavare claims OUR Party already has the absolute majority" . Solomon Islands Broadcasting Corporation . Archived from the original on 26 April 2024 . Retrieved 26 April 2024 . ^ "Solomon Islands Gazette No. 70" (PDF) . 30 April 2024. External links [ edit ] Official website v t e Solomon Islands  articles History British Solomon Islands Colonial governors World War II Japanese occupation Solomon Islands campaign Regional Assistance Mission to Solomon Islands (RAMSI) Truth and Reconciliation Commission [REDACTED] Geography Islands Mountains Populated places Protected areas Provinces Rain forests Rivers Volcanoes Wildlife Politics Cabinet Elections Foreign relations Governor-General Human rights LGBT Judiciary Monarchy Parliament ( Building ) Political parties Prime Minister Economy Central bank Currency Telecommunications Transport Society Demographics Ethnic groups Languages Religion Squatting Culture Anthem Big man (anthropology) Coat of arms Cuisine Dance Flag Literature Media Music Public holidays Sport Outline Category Links to related articles v t e Legislatures of Oceania Sovereign states Australia Federated States of Micronesia Fiji Kiribati Marshall Islands Nauru New Zealand Palau Papua New Guinea Samoa Solomon Islands Tonga Tuvalu Vanuatu Associated states of New Zealand Cook Islands Niue v t e National unicameral legislatures Federal Comoros Germany Iraq Federated States of Micronesia Saint Kitts and Nevis United Arab Emirates Venezuela Unitary Afghanistan Albania Andorra Angola Armenia Azerbaijan Bangladesh Benin Botswana Brunei Bulgaria Burkina Faso Cape Verde Central African Republic Chad China Costa Rica Croatia Cuba Cyprus Denmark Djibouti Dominica East Timor Ecuador El Salvador Eritrea Estonia Fiji Finland Gambia Georgia Ghana Greece Guatemala Guinea Guinea-Bissau Guyana Honduras Hungary Iceland Iran Israel Kiribati North Korea South Korea Kuwait Kyrgyzstan Laos Latvia Lebanon Libya Liechtenstein Lithuania Luxembourg Malawi Maldives Mali Malta Marshall Islands Mauritania Mauritius Moldova Monaco Mongolia Montenegro Mozambique Nauru New Zealand Nicaragua Niger North Macedonia Norway Palestine Panama Papua New Guinea Peru Portugal Qatar Saint Vincent and

420-570: The party won the election. Shortly after the 2019 general election , Sogavare relaunched the Ownership, Unity and Responsibility Party, Sogavare himself contest as an independent candidate, which after the 2019 elections decides to join the DCGA coalition. However, OUR Party was never registered to contest the 2019 elections. In the lead up to the 2024 general election , OUR Party launched its manifesto on 8 February 2024. Prime Minister Sogavare announced

441-556: The party's name, he has also criticised the country's Truth and Reconciliation Commission , describing it as costly, excessively academic and guided by "foreign concepts", as opposed to more effective indigenous means of resolving conflicts and their aftermath. Party secretary general Patterson Oti stated in May 2010 that the party would decentralise development programmes, to empower the provinces. In June, Sogavare "pledged to commit 6.2 million US$ to help relocate victims of climate change " if

SECTION 20

#1733085350646
#645354