1951 Tongan general election

Electoral system

The Legislative Assembly had seven directly-elected members; three representing Tongatapu and nearby islands, two representing Haʻapai and two representing Vavaʻu and nearby islands..[1] A further seven members were elected by the nobility based on the same constituencies,[1] seven ministers (including the governors of Haʻapai and Vavaʻu) and a Speaker chosen by the monarch, Sālote Tupou III.[2]

Results

Elected members included the commoners Molitoni Finau and Sekonaia Tu'akoi and the noble Semisi Fonua from Tongatapu.[3][4][5]

gollark: Why would you want to do that?
gollark: <@113673208296636420> What you said about setfenv seems to be wrong. It does return a function pointer or whatever, yes, but it also modifies the environment of the existing function in-place.
gollark: Or even any.
gollark: I suspect Terra has not looked closely at many of the alternatives.
gollark: also, it is not.

References

  1. New Tongan Parliament Elected Pacific Islands Monthly, June 1948, p74
  2. Tonga Elects New Parliament: History of the Growth of Democracy Recalled Pacific Islands Monthly, July 1948, pp21–22
  3. Molitoni Finau Pacific Islands Monthly, January 1966, p151
  4. Sekonaia Tu'akoi Pacific Islands Monthly, November 1982, p82
  5. Hon. Kalanivalu-Fotofili Pacific Islands Monthly, February 1968, p154
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.