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2003 Niutao by-election

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FieldValue
election_name2003 Niutao by-election
typeby-election
countryTuvalu
seats_for_electionOne of the two Niutao seats in the Parliament of Tuvalu.
Elected by simple majority using first past the post. Triggered by the death of the incumbent.
ongoingno
previous_election2002 Tuvaluan general election
previous_year2002
next_election2006 Tuvaluan general election
next_year2006
election_date5 May 2003
candidate1Taavau Teii
image1[[File:Tavau Teii at MEDEF.jpg100px]]
party1Independent (politician)
popular_vote1unopposed
percentage1n/a
before_electionSaloa Tauia
before_partyindependent (politician)
after_electionTaavau Teii
after_partyindependent (politician)
map_image
map_captionLocation of Niutao within Tuvalu

Elected by simple majority using first past the post. Triggered by the death of the incumbent.

A by-election was held in the Niutao constituency in Tuvalu on 5 May 2003. It was triggered by the death of the incumbent MP, Saloa Tauia. Tauia, the Speaker of Parliament, died in February, after having entered Parliament in the July 2002 general election.

On the same day, the 2003 Nanumea by-election was also held, which following the annulment in February of incumbent MP Sio Patiale's election in the July 2002 general election. There are no political parties in Tuvalu, but Patiale and Tauia were both members of prime minister Saufatu Sopoanga's extremely narrow parliamentary majority. In the 2002 general election, Sopoanga had obtained the support of just 8 MPs (himself included) out of 15. His government thus needed to win both by-elections in order to retain its majority.

Niutao is a two-seat constituency, and in the 2002 general election it had returned Samuelu Teo and Saloa Tauia with 26.5% and 25.9% of the vote respectively, ahead of two other candidates. For the by-election, of course, only one seat would be provided for, Teo retaining the other.

There was only one candidate to the by-election: Taavau Teii, who had come third in the constituency in the general election, with 24.56% of the vote. This time, he was thus elected unopposed. He had not indicated during his campaign whether he would side with the government or the opposition, and did not do so immediately after his election. Eventually, he joined the opposition, providing the latter with a one-seat majority in parliament; the Nanumea by-election had returned pro-government MP Sio Patiale to parliament. The opposition asked that parliament be recalled, so that a motion of no confidence in the government could be tabled. Sopoanga delayed recalling parliament until September, then appointed opposition MP Faimalaga Luka as governor general, depriving the opposition of its crucial one-seat majority and triggering the 2003 Nukufetau by-election. The winner of the October by-election, Elisala Pita, joined the government's benches, enabling it to survive a while longer. The Sopoanga government was eventually brought down by an eight-to-six motion of no confidence in August 2004.

Teii would go on to be appointed deputy prime minister under Apisai Ielemia after the 2006 general election, Tuvalu Islands Headline News, November 2007 and would hold that position until he lost his seat in parliament in the 2010 general election.

Result

2002 result

References

References

  1. Paulson Panapa & Jon Fraenkel. (2008). "The Loneliness of the Pro-Government Backbencher and the Precariousness of Simple Majority Rule in Tuvalu". Research School of Pacific and Asian Studies, Australian National University.
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  8. (15 August 2006). "Tuvalu elects Apisai Ielemia as new prime minister". Radio New Zealand.
  9. [http://www.radioaustralia.net.au/pacbeat/stories/201009/s3014232.htm "Tuvalu PM, speaker retain seats as deputy PM crashes out"], Radio Australia, 17 September 2010
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