18-568: (Redirected from East Kwaio ) East Kwaio Single-member constituency for the National Parliament of the Solomon Islands Region Malaita Province Current constituency Created 1976 Created from Kwaio Current MP Stanley Festus Sofu Party Independent East Kwaio is a single-member constituency of
36-615: A coalition government , with three main camps forming. The first camp was built around the outgoing government led by Derek Sikua. One of its spokespeople, Matthew Wale, claimed on 13 August that the group has the support of five parties and 30 MPs including the Solomon Islands Democratic Party (12 MPs), the Solomon Islands Party for Rural Advancement (4), the Solomon Islands Liberal Party (1),
54-2246: 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
72-5445: The National Parliament of Solomon Islands . Located on the east coast of the centre of the island of Malaita , it was established in 1976 when the Legislative Assembly was expanded from 24 to 38 seats. List of MPs [ edit ] Term MP Party 1976–1980 Jonathan Fiifii'i 1980–1984 Daniel Fa'asifoaba'e 1984–1989 1989–1993 John Fisango 1993–1997 1997–2001 Alfred Solomon Sasako 2001–2006 2006–2010 Stanley Festus Sofu 2010–2014 Solomon Islands Democratic Party 2014– Independent Election results [ edit ] 2014 [ edit ] 2014 general election Candidate Party Votes Stanley Festus Sofu Independent 2,748 Alfred Solomon Sasako Direct Development Party 988 Diki Kolosu Independent 501 John Taniamae Solomon Islands Party for Rural Advancement 472 Robert Firigeni Kadare Party 418 Simon Baete Pipol First Party 227 Wilfred Mete Independent 117 Joseph Shem Bibiasi Pan-Melanesian Congress 101 Genesis Eddie Kofana Independent 76 Joseph Elvis Isafi National Transformation Party 74 Herikdun Bubunaia Siope Independent 72 Jimmy Masa People's Alliance Party 29 Invalid/blank votes 48 Total Registered voters Source: Election Passport 2010 [ edit ] 2010 general election Candidate Party Votes Stanley Festus Sofu Solomon Islands Democratic Party 3,973 Alfred Solomon Sasako 1,581 Herrick Dennie 190 Solomon Amos Morisudah 20 Invalid/blank votes 101 Total 5,865 Registered voters 10,448 Source: Election Passport 2006 [ edit ] 2006 general election Candidate Party Votes Stanley Festus Sofu 1,557 Senda Fifi 849 Billy Abae 701 Alfred Solomon Sasako 652 Delson Wane Safa'a 475 Henry Faasifoabae 226 Nelson Richard Isika 163 Invalid/blank votes Total 4,623 Registered voters 8,856 Source: Election Passport 2001 [ edit ] 2001 general election Candidate Party Votes Alfred Solomon Sasako 2,682 Stanley Festus Sofu 1,027 Diki Kolosu 331 Bilsshan Caleb Safa'a 229 Invalid/blank votes Total 4,269 Registered voters 7,450 Source: Election Passport 1997 [ edit ] 1997 general election Candidate Party Votes Alfred Solomon Sasako 896 John Fisango 602 John Fiuwalekwala 544 Gideon Siofa 451 James Tommy Fa'awela'a 126 Aziel Laete'e 121 Robert Soekeni 119 Stowell Fika Kolosu 35 Invalid/blank votes Total 2,894 Registered voters 4,812 Source: Election Passport 1993 [ edit ] 1993 general election Candidate Party Votes John Fisango 1,034 Lee Silomo Kolosu 330 Jared Oda Ngele 261 Samson Ubuni 199 Gideon Siofa 121 Invalid/blank votes Total 1,945 Registered voters 4,094 Source: Election Passport 1989 [ edit ] 1989 general election Candidate Party Votes John Fisango 347 Samuel Fangaria 188 George Henry Tafoa 164 Dick Kolosu Fuamae 161 Joseph Firiabae 157 Samson Ubuni 152 Gideon Siofa 132 Kadmiel Martin 107 Azel Laete Susua 81 Ken Gala'a 56 Invalid/blank votes Total 1,545 Registered voters 3,200 Source: Election Passport 1984 [ edit ] 1984 general election Candidate Party Votes Daniel Fa'asifoaba'e Jonathan Fiifii'i Kalisto Koke Samson Ubuni Silas Wanebeni Invalid/blank votes Total Registered voters Source: Election Passport 1980 [ edit ] 1980 general election Candidate Party Votes Daniel Fa'asifoaba'e 646 Jonathan Fiifii'i 604 Invalid/blank votes Total 1,250 Registered voters 3,003 Source: Election Passport 1976 [ edit ] 1976 general election Candidate Party Votes Jonathan Fiifii'i 849 John Fisango 278 Invalid/blank votes Total 1,127 Registered voters Source: Election Passport References [ edit ] ^ Alphabetical Listing of Members of
90-702: The People's Congress Party (1), and six independents. This camp was based at the Heritage Hotel. A second camp was based around three parties: the Ownership, Unity and Responsibility Party led by former Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare (4 seats); the Direct Development Party led by Dick Ha'amori (3); and the Reform Democratic Party led by former Deputy Prime Minister Danny Philip (2). This camp
108-631: The Solomon Islands on 4 August 2010. The election date was announced in May 2010 by Prime Minister Derek Sikua . Although the announcement was deemed to be premature, as only the Governor General has the authority to announce the election date upon the advice of the Electoral Commission, the election date remained the same. There were a total of 509 candidates, including 25 women. The event
126-2279: The 10th Parliament National Parliament of 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=East_Kwaio_constituency&oldid=981908370 " Categories : Legislative Assembly of
144-2614: 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
162-670: 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
180-1424: 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
198-628: 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 2010 Solomon Islands general election General elections were held in
SECTION 10
#1732852046853216-1566: 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
234-585: The Solomon Islands Party for Rural Advancement (SIPRA). It was thought possible that SIPRA would decide to join with the Heritage Hotel camp. A spokesman for the group denied that cash incentives were being used to secure members for the coalition. Danny Philip was narrowly elected the Prime Minister on 24 August 2010, with 26 votes to 23 for his rival, the Democratic Party's Steve Abana . In
252-1179: The Solomon Islands constituencies Solomon Islands parliamentary constituencies 1976 establishments in the Solomon Islands Constituencies established in 1976 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
270-4283: 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
288-639: Was based at the Pacific Casino Hotel. A third camp was led by the newly established Independent Democratic Party (IDP) led by Snyder Rini , and was based at Honiara Hotel. The IDP's party secretary Leonard Kaitu'u explained that the IDP was the successor to a previous party, the Association of Independent Members . Kaitu'u has suggested that their camp will also get support from the People's Alliance Party (PAP) and
306-511: Was overseen by international election observers connected with the United Nations International Election Observation Coordination Team. The elections were described as peaceful, although strong concerns were expressed about voter registration irregularities. 25 incumbents were returned and 25 were replaced (including three seats where the incumbent chose not to recontest and one seat that
324-446: Was vacant due to the death of Edward Huni'ehu). Of the 50 MPs, most are relatively inexperienced: 45 have served less than two terms in office. The five long-serving MPs are Job Dudley Tausinga (entering his 7th consecutive term), Danny Philip (5th term), Snyder Rini (4th term), Manasseh Sogavare (4th term) and Gordon Darcy Lilo (3rd term). On 11 August 2009, lobbying was reportedly in progress, as several political groups jockeyed to form
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