|
General elections were held in Sark on 12 December 2012 to elect half of the 28 members of the Chief Pleas. [1] Ten conseillers were re-elected, four candidates were elected for the first time, and two sitting conseillers lost their seats. [1]
The 28 members of the Chief Pleas were elected via plurality block voting for four-year terms in two tranches. The 2012 election was held to replace members who had been elected for a four-year term in 2008. [2]
A total of 22 candidates contested the elections, vying for the 14 available seats. [1]
The Sark Government appointed Norman Browse to serve as an observer of the elections. [1] Browse reported that the elections were "open and transparent". [2]
Candidate | Votes | % | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Sandra Williams | 244 | 6.60 | Re-elected |
Hazel Fry | 226 | 6.11 | Re-elected |
Karen Adams | 219 | 5.93 | Elected |
Richard James Dewe | 215 | 5.82 | Re-elected |
Elizabeth Mary Dewe | 211 | 5.71 | Re-elected |
Michael Mann | 206 | 5.57 | Elected |
Antony Dunks | 203 | 5.49 | Re-elected |
Andrew Prevel | 189 | 5.11 | Re-elected |
Paul Williams | 186 | 5.03 | Re-elected |
Rosanne Byrne | 184 | 4.98 | Re-elected |
Margaret Mallinson | 175 | 4.73 | Elected |
Christine Dorothy Audrain | 172 | 4.65 | Re-elected |
Charles Noel Donald Maitland | 158 | 4.27 | Re-elected |
Robert Cottle | 155 | 4.19 | Elected |
Tony Le Lievre | 146 | 3.95 | |
Stephen Taylor | 144 | 3.90 | Lost seat |
Simon Couldridge | 129 | 3.49 | |
Lorraine Southern | 127 | 3.44 | |
Gemma Knight | 117 | 3.17 | |
Natalie Craik | 110 | 2.98 | |
Paul Burgess | 105 | 2.84 | |
Simon Higgins | 75 | 2.03 | Lost seat |
Total | 3,696 | 100 | |
Valid votes | 344 | 100 | |
Invalid/blank votes | 0 | 0.0 | |
Total votes cast | 344 | 100 | |
Registered voters/turnout | 444 | 77.48 | |
Source: BBC |
Politics of Guernsey take place in a framework of a parliamentary representative democratic British Crown dependency.
Sark is a part of the Channel Islands in the southwestern English Channel, off the coast of Normandy, France. It is a royal fief, which forms part of the Bailiwick of Guernsey, with its own set of laws based on Norman law and its own parliament. It has a population of about 500. Sark has an area of 2.10 square miles (5.44 km2). Little Sark is a peninsula joined by a natural but high and very narrow isthmus to the rest of Sark Island.
Brecqhou is one of the Channel Islands, located off the west coast of Sark where they are now geographically detached from each other. Brecqhou is politically part of both Sark and the Bailiwick of Guernsey. It has been established in the courts that Brecqhou is a tenement of Sark. The Ministry of Justice, the department of the United Kingdom government with responsibility for the Channel Islands, considers Brecqhou part of Sark.
Elections in Hong Kong take place when certain political offices in the government need to be filled. Hong Kong has a multi-party system, with numerous parties in the Legislative Council. The Chief Executive of Hong Kong is nonpartisan but has to work with several parties to form a coalition government.
Guernsey elects a legislature at the national level. The islands of Alderney and Sark also elect their own parliaments.
Since its establishment in 1947, Pakistan has had an asymmetric federal government and is a federal parliamentary democratic republic. At the national level, the people of Pakistan elect a bicameral legislature, the Parliament of Pakistan. The parliament consists of a lower house called the National Assembly, which is elected directly, and an upper house called the Senate, whose members are chosen by elected provincial legislators. The head of government, the Prime Minister, is elected by the majority members of the National Assembly and the head of state, the President, is elected by the Electoral College, which consists of both houses of Parliament together with the four provincial assemblies. In addition to the national parliament and the provincial assemblies, Pakistan also has more than five thousand elected local governments.
The States of Guernsey, officially the States of Deliberation and sometimes referred to as the Government of Guernsey, is the parliament and government of the British Crown dependency of Guernsey. Some laws and ordinances approved by the States of Guernsey also apply to Alderney and Sark as "Bailiwick-wide legislation" with the consent of the governments of those islands. All enactments of the States of Guernsey apply to Herm as well as Guernsey, since Herm is directly administered by the Bailiwick of Guernsey.
General elections were held in Sark on 10 December 2008, the first elections on the island.
Since 2008, Elections in Sark take place every two years to elect 14 members of the Chief Pleas, the parliament of Sark, to serve a four-year term in a rolling election cycle.
The 2013 Western Australian state election was held on Saturday 9 March 2013 to elect 59 members to the Legislative Assembly and 36 members to the Legislative Council. The Liberal Party won a majority of seats in the Legislative Assembly for the first time since the election of 1996, retaining government with 31 seats. The Labor Party won 21 seats and the National Party won 7 seats. In the Legislative Council, the Liberals won 17 of the 36 seats.
General elections were held in Sark on 8 December 2010, the second elections held on the island under the 2008 Constitution. The elections were for 14 of the seats that had been elected in the 2008 elections, for a four-year term.
A referendum on the composition of the Chief Pleas was held in Sark between 16 August and 6 September 2006, following an informal referendum in February. Voters were given the choice of having all 28 seats elected, or to have 12 seats for Deputies, eight for tenants and eight elected by everyone.
The 2016 general election in Yukon, Canada, took place on November 7, 2016, to return members to the 34th Yukon legislative assembly.
General elections were due to be held in Sark on 10 December 2014. However, only 16 candidates nominated for the 16 seats in the Chief Pleas, meaning that all were elected unopposed, without a public vote being required.
The 2020 Northern Territory general election was held on 22 August 2020 to elect all 25 members of the Legislative Assembly in the unicameral Northern Territory Parliament.
General elections were due to be held in Sark on 14 December 2016. However, only 12 candidates were nominated for the 17 seats available in the Chief Pleas, meaning that all were elected unopposed for a four-year term, without a public vote being required.
Sandra Williams is a Conseiller on Sark's Chief Pleas, the island's parliament. She was among the first elected to the reformed legislature in 2008, topped the poll in the 2012 election and was returned unopposed in 2016.
General elections were held in Sark on 12 December 2018. The elections saw 15 candidates contest the nine available seats in the Chief Pleas, the first time seats were contested since 2012. Seven of the nine elected members were new to the legislature.
General elections were due to be held in Sark on 16 December 2020 and will serve for 4 years, until December 2024.
General elections were due to be held in Sark on 14 December 2022. However, only 5 candidates were nominated for the 9 seats available in the Chief Pleas, meaning that all were elected unopposed for a four-year term, without a public vote being required.