Parliament of Nauru

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The Parliament of Nauru has 19 members, elected for a three-year term in multi-seat constituencies. The President of Nauru is elected by the members of the Parliament.[1] The number of seats was increased to 19 following elections in 2013.[2]

The members of the Parliament of Nauru are elected by a positional voting system.[1]

History

The Parliament of Nauru came into existence with the country's independence on 31 January 1968. The island was previously a United Nations Trust Territory administered by Australia. The Australian government's Nauru Act 1965 created the Legislative Council for the Territory of Nauru, consisting of 15 members – nine elected members, one ex officio member (the Administrator of Nauru), and five "official members" nominated by the Administrator.[3]

On 22 March 2010, Radio New Zealand International reported that President Marcus Stephen had dissolved Parliament in readiness for elections on 24 April 2010. The election saw all 18 MPs returned,[4] but by this stage, nine of them had formed the Opposition, resulting in a deadlocked Parliament. Another election was held in June 2010, as a result of the continuing deadlock. After weeks of uncertainty, the deadlock was resolved when the Opposition agreed to have one of its own MPs, Ludwig Scotty, elected as Speaker. President Stephen then suggested that the number of MPs should be expanded to 19, to prevent future deadlocks.[5] In late 2012, Parliament, under the leadership of President Dabwido, acted on this suggestion and passed a law increasing the number of seats to 19 after election in 2013, it is expected to prevent future deadlocks like the one in 2010.[2]

Current MPs

Constituency Member Faction Points #1 Votes
Aiwo Rennier Gadabu Opposition 399.956 Template:Composition bar
Delvin Thoma Opposition 350.155 Template:Composition bar
Anabar Maverick Eoe Government 382.747 Template:Composition bar
Pyon Deiye Opposition 439.653 Template:Composition bar
Anetan Timothy Ika Opposition 667.667 Template:Composition bar
Marcus Stephen Speaker 531.017 Template:Composition bar
Boe Martin Hunt Opposition 576.683 Template:Composition bar
Asterio Appi Government 585.150 Template:Composition bar
Buada Shadlog Bernicke Government 233.197 Template:Composition bar
Bingham Agir Opposition 263.833 Template:Composition bar
Meneng Lionel Aingimea Government 643.612 Template:Composition bar
Khyde Menke Opposition 530.630 Template:Composition bar
Jesse Jeremiah Government 450.515 Template:Composition bar
Ubenide David Adeang Government 554.938 Template:Composition bar
Russ Kun Government 592.124 Template:Composition bar
Reagan Aliklik Government 409.732 Template:Composition bar
Wawani Dowiyogo Opposition 515.666 Template:Composition bar
Yaren Charmaine Scotty Government 449.867 Template:Composition bar
Isabella Dageago Government 365.829 Template:Composition bar

Speaker

The Speaker is the presiding officer of Parliament. The Speaker is an MP elected by the MPs. The Speaker has no vote in no-confidence votes and presidential elections.

Following the April 2008 election, Riddell Akua was appointed Speaker of the Parliament of Nauru. He replaced David Adeang.[6]

Two weeks after the April 2010 election, Godfrey Thoma was elected Speaker.[5] Due to the political deadlock fresh elections were held in June, after which Parliament continued to be deadlocked until the election of Ludwig Scotty to the chair in November 2010. Scotty resigned at the end of the 20th Parliament in March 2013. Godfrey Thoma was elected to replace him. Following the 2013 election, Scotty was re-elected to the speaker's post.

References

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Sources

http://www.radioaustralia.net.au/international/2013-06-11/baron-waqa-named-as-new-nauru-president/1144022
http://www.naurugov.nr/government-information-office/media-release/honbaron-waqa-elected-president.aspxTemplate:Dead link

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  1. a b "About Parliament", Parliament of Nauru Template:Webarchive
  2. a b "Nauru country brief" Template:Webarchive, Australian Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade. Retrieved 10 November 2012
  3. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  4. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  5. a b Template:Usurped, ABC Radio Australia, 13 May 2010
  6. "Nauru president moves to ensure political stability" Template:Webarchive, ABC Radio Australia, 1 May 2008