2000 Guamanian general election
General elections were held in Guam in November 2000 in order to elect the Legislature, Guam's delegate to the United States House of Representatives, the Public Auditor (for the first time) and village mayor and vice-mayors.[1]
This article is part of a series on the politics and government of Guam |
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Campaign
A total of 33 candidates contested the 15 seats in the Legislature (including 13 incumbents), two ran for the Delegate position and five for the Public Auditor.[1]
In the Legislature elections, 32 candidates were from the Democratic or Republican parties, with one running as an independent.[1]
Results
Public Auditor
Doris Flores Brooks was elected with 51% of the vote.[1]
Delegate
Candidate | Party | Votes | % |
---|---|---|---|
Robert A. Underwood | Democratic Party | 34,179 | 74.2 |
Manuel Q. Cruz | Republican Party | 10,763 | 23.4 |
Write-ins | 1,111 | 2.4 | |
Total | 46,053 | 100 | |
Source: Shuster |
gollark: It *is* pretty javan.
gollark: Like I said, you should make a compiler thing to "warp" stuff for you!
gollark: Interesting.
gollark: You said you could probably do infinite storage, so I assume it's doable maybe ish.
gollark: You could show that it *was* TC if you implement brain[REDACTED] or another Turing complete language in it.
References
- Donald R Shuster (2004) Elections on Guam, 1970–2002 Pacific Studies, Vol. 27, Nos. 1/2
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