2019 Micronesian parliamentary election

2019 Micronesian parliamentary election

← 2017 5 March 2019 2021 →

All 14 seats in Congress
Presidential election
← 2015 11 May 2019 2023 →
 
Nominee David Panuelo
Electoral vote Acclamation

President0000000 before election

Peter M. Christian

Elected
President

David Panuelo

Executive
Legislative
Elections
Judiciary
  • v
  • t
  • e

Parliamentary elections were held in the Federated States of Micronesia on 5 March 2019, alongside a referendum on calling a Constitutional Convention. All 14 seats in Congress were up for election, and all 13 incumbents standing for re-election were returned to Congress.[1]

A majority of voters voted in favour of calling a Constitutional Convention, which was subsequently elected on 5 November 2019.[2]

Electoral system

The 14 members of Congress were elected by two methods; ten were elected in single-member constituencies by first-past-the-post voting for two year terms, while four were at-large Senator, with one elected from each state for a four-year term.[3]

Following the elections, the President and Vice-President were elected by the Congress, with only the four at-large Senators allowed to be candidates.[3]

Unlike a constitutional referendum, which requires 75% of the vote in three of the four states to vote in favour in order for the proposal to be approved, referendums on calling constitutional referendums require only a simple majority of the vote.[4]

Campaign

A total of 32 candidates were originally registered to contest the elections,[5] although Chuuk Electoral District 1 candidate Mithasy Mark later dropped out, leaving Florencio Singkoro Harper to run unopposed.[1] Former President Joseph Urusemal was the only candidate for the Senatorial seat in Yap State, whilst Victor Gouland ran unopposed in Electoral District 2 in Chuuk State.[5]

Referendums

A national referendum was held alongside the parliamentary election in which voters were asked whether they were in favor of calling a constitutional convention.[6]

An independence referendum was scheduled to be held in Chuuk State on the same day, but was postponed.

Results

Incumbent president Peter M. Christian was not elected to Congress, making him ineligible for a second term. He lost the Pohnpei At-Large election by 59 votes.[7]

Congress

State District Candidate Votes % Notes
Chuuk At-Large Wesley Simina 17,270 83.06 Re-elected
Erin Eram 3,523 16.94
Election District 1 Florencio Singkoro Harper 2,975 100 Re-elected unopposed
Election District 2 Victory Gouland 2,694 100 Re-elected unopposed
Election District 3 Derensio Konman 4,616 67.06 Re-elected
Eflove Mailos 2,267 32.94
Election District 4 Tiwiter Aritos 5,062 85.03 Re-elected
Manuel Rawit 593 9.96
Smith Paulus 298 5.01
Election District 5 Robson Urak Romlow 1,119 39.55 Re-elected
Vidalino Jones Raatior 708 25.03
Zander Refilong 463 16.37
Arisao Aichem 353 12.48
Joseph Konno, Jr. 186 6.57
Kosrae At-Large Yosiwo George 1,824 50.14 Elected
Aren Palik 1,814 49.86
Election District Paliknoa Welly 2,130 58.82 Re-elected
Johnson Asher 1,491 41.18
Pohnpei At-Large David Panuelo 6,774 50.22 Re-elected
Peter M. Christian 6,714 49.78
Election District 1 Ferny Perman 2,397 52.88 Re-elected
Merlynn Abello-Alfonso 2,136 47.12
Election District 2 Dion Neth 2,077 39.90 Re-elected
Berney Martin 1,105 21.23
Herman Semes, Jr. 1,020 19.60
Quincy Lawrence 1,003 19.27
Election District 3 Esmond Moses 2,543 68.77 Re-elected
Marstella Jack 1,155 31.23
Yap At-Large Joseph Urusemal 2,371 100 Re-elected unopposed
Election District Isaac Figir 2,225 90.12 Re-elected
Fidelik Thiyer-Fanoway 244 9.88
Source: PIO

Referendum

The referendum proposal was approved by 61% of voters overall. A majority was in favour in Kosrae and Pohnpei, but it was rejected in Chuuk and Yap.[8] However, as an overall majority of voters approved the proposal, a Constitutional Convention was elected on 5 November 2019.

Choice Popular vote State
vote
Votes %
For 10,033 60.84 2
Against 6,458 39.16 2
Invalid/blank votes
Total 16,491 100 4
Registered voters/turnout
Source: PIO

By state

State For Against
Votes % Votes %
Chuuk 1,545 44.51 1,926 55.49
Kosrae 1,476 75.46 480 24.54
Pohnpei 5,948 68.07 2,790 31.93
Yap 1,064 45.74 1,262 54.26
Source: Direct Democracy

Aftermath

On 4 July 2019 a special election was held in Pohnpei and Kosrae to fill the at-large seats vacated by President Panuelo and Vice President George, respectively. Peter M. Christian was elected in Pohnpei, while Aren Palik won in Kosrae.[9]

References

  1. ^ a b FSM Election 2019 Certified Results Hawaii Free Press, 8 March 2019
  2. ^ FSM announces winning constitutional convention candidates Marianas Variety, 14 November 2019
  3. ^ a b Electoral system IPU
  4. ^ Article XIV: Amendments Constitution of the Federated States of Micronesia
  5. ^ a b 32 Petitions Filed for National Elections 2019 Archived 2019-02-28 at the Wayback Machine Congress of the Federated States of Micronesia
  6. ^ FSM president likely to lose seat to House speaker Archived 2019-09-15 at the Wayback Machine Pacific News Centre, 7 March 2019
  7. ^ Ngirairikl, Oyaol (2019-03-14). "FSM President Christian loses bid for re-election". The Guam Daily Post. Retrieved 2023-03-07.
  8. ^ "PIO". Archived from the original on 2019-03-30. Retrieved 2019-03-19.
  9. ^ "Former President Peter Christian among winners in Congressional special election". Island Times. 2019-07-05. Retrieved 2023-03-07.
  • v
  • t
  • e
Parliamentary elections
Constitutional Conventions
Referendums
  • See also: Elections and referendums in the Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands