2010 Tuvaluan general election

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2010 Tuvaluan general election
Flag of Tuvalu.svg
  2006 16 September 2010 2015  

All 15 seats in the Parliament of Tuvalu
 First party
 
Party Independents
Seats before15

Prime Minister 0000000 before election

Apisai Ielemia

Subsequent
Prime Minister

Maatia Toafa

Parliamentary elections were held in Tuvalu on 16 September 2010. [1] [2] Voters elected fifteen members of the Parliament to a four-year term. All candidates were independents, as there are no political parties in the country. Ten out of the fifteen incumbent members were re-elected. The remaining five incumbents, including Deputy Prime Minister Tavau Teii, did not retain their seats. [3] The incumbent Prime Minister, Apisai Ielemia, retained his seat in Vaitupu constituency. [4] On 29 September, Maatia Toafa from Nanumea won eight of the fifteen votes to become Prime Minister.

Contents

However, on 24 December 2010, after a motion of no confidence, carried by eight votes to seven, [5] Maatia Toafa was replaced by Willy Telavi as Prime Minister of Tuvalu. [6]

Willy Telavi retained a bare majority through the term of his ministry until by-elections were won by candidates that supported the opposition. Willy Telavi attempted to avoid facing a vote of the parliament until he was forced to call parliament following the intervention of the governor-general. On 2 August 2013 Willy Tevali faced a motion of no confidence in the parliament: the voting was eight for the motion, four against. [7] On 4 August the parliament elected Enele Sopoaga as Prime Minister. [7] [8] [9]

Background

Parliament was dissolved on 13 August 2010, and registration began on 28 August. [10] There are no political parties in Tuvalu, so all candidates are non-partisan. [11]

Twenty-six candidates, including all sitting Members of Parliament, stood for the fifteen seats in Parliament. [12] Tuvalu has "about 6,000 eligible voters" – a little over half the country's population. [13] [14]

Many candidates focused on climate change issues including Enele Sopoaga, a former Tuvalu Ambassador to the United Nations and Tuvalu's representative at the UN Climate Change Conference held in Copenhagen in 2009. [15] [16] Sopoaga stood for election in the Nukufetau constituency, and is reportedly considered a "national hero" for his diplomatic work at the Copenhagen Summit on climate change in December 2009. [16] Enele Sopoaga was elected by the voters of Nukufetau.

Controversy

Prime Minister Apisai Ielemia and Communications Minister Taukelina Finikaso, who are relatives, stood for election in the same Vaitupu constituency in the 2010 election. [11] (The top two vote earners in Vaitupu are elected to parliament). Finikaso filed a complaint against Ielemia prior to the election, accusing the Prime Minister of distributing voter registration forms before the official registration date. [11]

Results

There were 6,008 registered voters in the election, and voter turnout was reportedly strong. [17] Voting began at 8 a.m. and closed at 4 p.m. before counting commenced at the country's twelve polling stations. [18]

Prime Minister Ielemia retained his seat to win re-election from his Vaitupu constituency. [17] Ielemia's re-election prospects had been thought to be tenuous before the election. [17]

In total, ten MPs were re-elected, including Speaker Kamuta Latasi, while five incumbent MPs – including deputy Prime Minister Tavau Teii – lost their seats. [2] [16] [17] The announcement that ten sitting MPs had been re-elected was made by Speaker Kamuta Latasi the following day. [3] [19]

ConstituencyCandidateVotes%Notes
Funafuti Kausea Natano 43642.5Elected
Kamuta Latasi 30229.4Elected
Samuelu Teo 28928.1
Nanumaga Monise Lafai 37941.9Elected
Falesa Pitoi 29632.7Elected
Otinielu Tausi 23025.4
Nanumea Maatia Toafa 53137.7Elected
Willy Telavi 44331.5Elected
Amuia Tapeva43430.8
Niutao Fauoa Maani 31424.5Elected
Vete Sakaio 31424.5Elected
Tomu Sione 23518.3
Tavau Teii 21817.0Unseated
Iopu Iupasi Kaisala20015.6
Nui Isaia Italeli 26324.6Elected
Taom Tanukale 24623.0Elected
Alesana Seluka 20319.0
Iopu Iupasi20018.7
Leneuoti Maatusi15914.8
Nukufetau Enele Sopoaga 49040.5Elected
Lotoala Metia 39932.9Elected
Elisala Pita 32226.6
Nukulaelae Namoliki Sualiki 14855.8Elected
Vaefitu Luke Paeniu11744.2
Vaitupu Apisai Ielemia 59738.7Elected
Taukelina Finikaso 54135.1Elected
Ionatana Peia40326.2
Source: Tuvalu News, Psephos

Aftermath

Government formation

Speaker Latasi originally announced that all fifteen MPs would meet the following week to form a new government. [19] However, the election of a new Prime Minister was not held until 29 September 2010. [20] Incumbent Apisai Ielemia, who became caretaker prime minister after the election, hoped to form a new government, though he ultimately did not have the support in the new parliament. [20] Enele Sopoaga was reported as being a possible challenger for the premiership. [15]

A secret ballot to determine the next prime minister was held on 29 September 2010. [4] Maatia Toafa, who had served as Prime Minister from 2004 to 2006 and the Leader of the Opposition from 2006 to 2010, won the ballot to become Tuvalu's next prime minister with five new members and three members of the previous government. [2] [4] Toafa narrowly defeated Kausea Natano, who received seven votes in the ballot. [4] Toafa took office on the day of his election and named his Cabinet almost immediately. He included a number of first time MPs who had supported his bid for the premiership – including Enele Sopoaga, who became Minister for Foreign Affairs. [21] [22] Isaia Taeia Italeli, the younger brother of Governor General Iakopa Taeia Italeli, became the speaker of parliament. [2]

However, on 15 December 2010, Prime Minister Maatia Toafa's government was ousted in a motion of no confidence, which followed Willie Telavi withdrawing his support for the government. [5] On 25 December 2010 Willy Telavi was elected prime minister with an (8:7) majority over Enele Sopoaga. Kamuta Latasi, was appointed Speaker. [2] [6]

By-elections

Minister of Works Isaia Italeli died suddenly in July 2011, [23] which led to the 2011 Nui by-election in the following month. The election was won by his widow, Pelenike Isaia, who became only the second woman ever to have sat in the Tuvaluan Parliament. [2] The by-election was described as "pivotal", as Italeli's death had deprived Prime Minister Willy Telavi of his government's one seat majority in Parliament. Pelenike Isaia's election restored the one seat majority, [24] of the government of Willy Telavi.

Lotoala Metia, the MP for Nukufetau and Minister of Finance, died on 21 December 2012. The 2013 Nukufetau by-election was held on 28 June. [25] The Nukufetau by-election was won by the opposition candidate Elisala Pita. [26]

Constitutional crisis

After Pita's victory, a constitutional crisis developed when Prime Minister Telavi responded that, under the Constitution, he was only required to convene Parliament once a year, and was thus under no obligation to summon it until December 2013. [27] Tuvalu's opposition then requested the Governor-General Iakoba Italeli to intervene against the Prime Minister's decision. [28] On 3 July, Italeli exercised his reserve powers in ordering Parliament to convene, against the Prime Minister's wishes, on 30 July. [29]

The Governor-General, Iakoba Italeli, then proceeded to exercise his reserve powers to order Telavi to stand down as prime minister and appointed Enele Sopoaga as interim prime minister. [30] [31] The Governor-General also ordered that parliament sit on Friday 2 August to allow a vote of no-confidence in Telavi and his government. [32]

On 2 August 2013 Willy Tevali faced a motion of no confidence in the parliament: the voting was eight for the motion, four against and one abstention. [7] On 4 August the parliament elected Enele Sopoaga as Prime Minister. [7] [8] [9]

Sopoaga gained further support in the parliament following the 2013 Nui by-election, [33] [34] [35] and the 2014 Nanumaga by-election. [36] [37] [38] Willy Telavi resigned from parliament in August 2014. [39] [40] The result of the 2014 Nanumea by-election provided further support for the government of Enele Sopoaga. [41] A general election was set down for 19 March 2015. [42]

Related Research Articles

The politics of Tuvalu takes place in a framework of a parliamentary representative democratic monarchy, whereby the monarch is the head of state, represented by the governor-general, while the prime minister is the head of government. Executive power is exercised by the government.

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Maatia Toafa OBE is a Tuvaluan politician, representing Nanumea, who served two non-consecutive terms as Prime Minister of Tuvalu. He first served as prime minister, and foreign minister, from 2004 to 2006, from the resignation of his predecessor, Saufatu Sopoanga, until the defeat of his Cabinet in the 2006 general election. From 2004 to 2006 he also held the role of foreign minister.

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Kamuta Latasi</span> Prime Minister of Tuvalu

Sir Kamuta Latasi is a political figure from the Pacific nation of Tuvalu from Funafuti atoll. He was elected to the Parliament of Tuvalu in 1992. Latasi served as the 4th prime minister, and foreign minister, from 1993 until 1996. He has served as the Speaker of parliament from 2006 to September 2010 and again from December 2010 to March 2014.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Apisai Ielemia</span> Tuvaluan politician (1955–2018)

Apisai Ielemia was a Tuvaluan politician. He served as the tenth Prime Minister of Tuvalu from 2006 to 2010, and also held the role as Foreign Minister. He was returned as a member of parliament in the 2010 Tuvaluan general election. He was re-elected to parliament in the 2015 Tuvaluan general election. On 5 October 2016 Chief Justice Sweeney of the High Court of Tuvalu declared that Ielemia’s parliamentary seat was vacant as he was not qualified to be a member of parliament, as the consequence of the short time the opposition MP served time in jail following his conviction on 6 May 2016 in the Magistrate’s Court of charges of abuse of office during the final year of his term as prime minister. The abuse of office charges related to payments deposited into a National Bank of Tuvalu personal account. The 5 October 2016 decision of the Chief Justice was controversial as it appeared to contradict the June 2016 decision of Justice Norman Franzi of the High Court of Tuvalu that had quashed Ielemia’s conviction and acquitted him of the abuse of office charges. The appeal to the High Court held that the conviction was "manifestly unsafe," with the court quashing the 12-month jail term.

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