2002 Guamanian general election

General elections were held in Guam on November 5, 2002 in order to elect the Governor, all 15 members of the Legislature and the Federal delegate to the US Congress. There was also a referendum on raising the age at which alcohol could be bought and consumed to 21.[1] The proposal was rejected by voters.[1]

2002 Guamanian general election

November 5, 2002
 
Nominee Felix Perez Camacho Robert Underwood
Party Republican Democratic
Running mate Kaleo Moylan Thomas C. Ada
Popular vote 24,309 19,559
Percentage 55.41% 44.59%

Governor before election

Carl Gutierrez
Democratic

Elected Governor

Felix Perez Camacho
Republican

This article is part of a series on the
politics and government of
Guam

Background

The elections to the Legislature and multi-member boards were run via open primary (This following the outlawing of the previous blanket primary) similar to Louisiana.

Both the Public Auditor and Consolidated Commission on Utilities were required to be nonpartisan and as such candidates were not allowed to state affiliations or list them on the ballot.[2][3] In the case of the Auditor, affiliating with a party is grounds for disqualification.[2]

Democratic Party

  • Robert A. Underwood, U.S. Delegate Congressman
    • Thomas C. Ada, Senator
  • Carl Gutierrez (incumbent), Governor of Guam
    • Maj. Gen. Benny Paulino, U.S. Soldier of the Guam National Guard

Republican Party

Results

Governor

Republican gubernatorial primary

Republican primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Felix Camacho and Kaleo S. Moylan 1
Republican Antonio R. Unpingco and Edward J.B. Calvo 0
Total votes

Democratic gubernatorial primary

Democratic primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Robert A. Underwood and Thomas C. Ada 1
Democratic Carl T.C. Gutierrez and Benny Paulino 0
Total votes

General Election

General Election Results for Governor of Guam
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Felix Camacho/Kaleo S. Moylan 24,309 55.41
Democratic Robert A. Underwood/Thomas C. Ada 19,559 44.59
Total votes 43,868 100
Republican gain from Democratic

Delegate

Democratic primary

Democratic primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Madeleine Bordallo 17,845 59.20
Democratic Judith T. Won Pat 12,298 40.80

General Election

General Election Results for Delegate to the U.S. House of Representatives
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Madeleine Bordallo 27,081 63.60
Republican Joseph F. Ada 14,836 34.84
Total votes 100

Guam Legislature

2002 Guamanian legislative election

November 5, 2002

All 15 seats of the Legislature of Guam
  Majority party Minority party
 
Leader Ben Pangelinan Tony Unpingco (retired)
Party Democratic Republican
Leader's seat At-large district At-large district
Last election 6 seats 9 seats
Seats won 9 6

Speaker before election

Tony Unpingco
Republican

Elected Speaker

Ben Pangelinan
Democratic

Candidate Party Votes Notes
Frank AguonDemocratic PartyElected
Ray TenorioRepublican PartyElected
F. Randall CunliffeDemocratic PartyElected
Ben PangelinanDemocratic PartyElected
Carmen FernandezDemocratic PartyElected
Mark ForbesRepublican PartyElected
Larry F. KasperbauerRepublican PartyElected
John M. QuinataDemocratic PartyElected
Lourdes Aflague Leon GuerreroDemocratic PartyElected
Rory J. RespicioDemocratic PartyElected
Joanne M. BrownRepublican PartyElected
Jesse A. LujanRepublican PartyElected
Tina Muna BarnesDemocratic PartyElected
Robert KiltzkieRepublican PartyElected
Antoinette SanfordDemocratic PartyElected

Referendum

Choice Votes %
For19,43646.27
Against22,56353.73
Invalid/blank votes
Total41,999100
Registered voters/turnout
Source: Direct Democracy
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References

  1. Guam (USA), 5 November 2002: Drinking allowed from 21 years Direct Democracy (in German)
  2. "Office of The Public Auditor - Guam - Enabling Legislation". Retrieved December 3, 2006.
  3. "Public Law No. 26-76". Archived from the original on March 4, 2007. Retrieved December 3, 2006.
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