1969 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.[2] 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.[3]

Results

Three incumbent MPs (Pousima Afeaki and Lopeti Tofaimalaealoa of Haʻapai and Lopoi Tupou of Tongatapu) lost their seats.[1]

Constituency Elected members
Commoners
HaʻapaiTevita Sale Taufa
Latunipulu Unga
TongatapuTuilatai Mataele
Vili Ahio Vaipulu
Sekonaia Tu'akoi
VavaʻuLataipouono Niusini
Masao Paasi
Source: Pacific Islands Monthly

Aftermath

The newly elected Legislative Assembly was opened by King Tāufaʻāhau Tupou IV on 19 June.[1]

gollark: Oh, the reply shows now.
gollark: (@citrons)
gollark: Higher traffic throughput? SHEER coolness?
gollark: SELF-DRIVING flying car when?
gollark: If your helicopter is weaponised this can be enforced.

References

  1. They clowned their man to victory Pacific Islands Monthly, July 1969, p33
  2. New Tongan Parliament Elected Pacific Islands Monthly, June 1948, p74
  3. Tonga Elects New Parliament: History of the Growth of Democracy Recalled Pacific Islands Monthly, July 1948, pp21–22
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.