The Vanuatu Presidential Party ( VPP ) is a political party in Vanuatu .
11-545: On Misplaced Pages, VPP may refer to Misplaced Pages:Village pump (policy) . VPP may refer to: Organisations [ edit ] Vanuatu Presidential Party , a political party in Vanuatu Vermont Progressive Party , third party based in Vermont, United States Vietnam Populist Party , a Vietnamese illegal party Veterans and People's Party , a minor political party in
22-455: A cluster of distributed energy generation installations controlled by a central entity Voltage peak-to-peak (Vpp), in electronics; for example see Line level Other uses [ edit ] Verbal Plenary Preservation Virtual Presence Post , an e-consulate run by the US Department of State Volumetric Production Payment , a form of financing Voluntary Protection Program ,
33-538: A safety management program administered by OSHA in the US Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title VPP . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=VPP&oldid=1120583944 " Category : Disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description
44-546: Is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Vanuatu Presidential Party The party was formed by Louis Kalnpel and former Presidents Ati George Sokomanu and John Bani . In the 2012 general elections the party nominated 17 candidates, receiving 2.4% of the vote and failing to win a seat. In the 2016 elections the party fielded eleven candidates, winning one seat; Samson Samsen in Santo . The party didn't contest
55-744: The 2020 election , and failed to win any seat in the 2022 election . 2020 Vanuatuan general election General elections were held in Vanuatu on 19–20 March 2020. The elections were initially intended to be held on 19 March, but logistical problems resulted in some areas voting the following day. The 52 members of Parliament were elected from eight single-member constituencies and ten multi-member constituencies (of between two and seven seats) by first-past-the-post and single non-transferable vote , respectively. The Vanua'aku Pati launched its campaign slogan 'Lets Rebuild Vanuatu' in June 2019 and endorsed
66-606: The Land and Justice Party by 31 votes to 21. Loughman's coalition government included the Vanua'aku Pati, the Union of Moderate Parties , the National United Party and other minor parties. The next day Loughman appointed the members of his government. Caused by the conviction of incumbent Charlot Salwai for perjury. He was pardoned by President Tallis Obed Moses , allowing him to run for
77-872: The United Kingdom Volunteer Political Party , a short-lived loyalist political party in Northern Ireland Venture Philanthropy Partners , a philanthropic organization in the Washington D.C. metro area Technology and engineering [ edit ] Vaginal photoplethysmograph , arousal measuring device Variable-pitch propeller (disambiguation) , a type of propeller used in aircraft and ships Velocity prediction program , velocity prediction program Vector Packet Processing technology, software that provides network switch/router functionality Virtual Party Protocol , an SMC protocol Virtual Power Plant ,
88-417: The continuation of its Kambak ("come back") policy. In October 2019, a 'Vot Woman' campaign was launched, supporting all female candidates and calling for guaranteed 50% representation for women in parliament. No women were elected in the 2012 or 2016 elections . There were around 15 female candidates, but none were elected. The youngest woman candidate in 2020 was Litiana Kalsrap . An important issue
99-561: The prior elections in 2016. Due to the delay in announcing the official results, Parliament was unable to meet for its first sitting within the normal period of 21 days after the election, and instead met for the first time on 20 April. During the first meeting, Gracia Shadrack of the Leaders Party of Vanuatu was elected Speaker. Bob Loughman of the Vanua'aku Pati was elected Prime Minister, defeating former foreign minister Ralph Regenvanu of
110-596: Was about 57%. Unofficial results were gradually released over the following days, with official results being announced later than usual, on 6 April, due to the death of the Chairman of the Vanuatu Electoral Commission, Martin Tete. No women were elected. Nineteen parties won one or more seats, with the Land and Justice Party becoming the largest with nine of the 52 seats. Turnout was down six percentage points from
121-414: Was the future of the lucrative but controversial citizenship by investment, or “passport sales” programs. For a price of about US $ 150,000, these schemes allow applicants to become citizens in months, without setting foot in the country. Although there were no confirmed cases of COVID-19 in the islands, there were concerns that fears of the pandemic could keep turnout low. Turnout at the previous election
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