Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
General elections were held in Trinidad and Tobago on 24 May 2010. The date of the general elections was announced by Prime Minister Patrick Manning on April 16, 2010, via a press release. The election was called over two years earlier than required by law. [1] Polls showing that the UNC-led opposition coalition was likely to win the election ...
2 Results. 3 Nomination Day. ... 2010, the Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar announced that the date for the 2010 Local Elections was to be on July 26, 2010. ...
D'Abadie/O'Meara is a parliamentary electoral district in Trinidad and Tobago in the center of Trinidad. It has been represented since the 2020 general election by Lisa Morris-Julian of the People's National Movement (PNM). [1]
Adam Carr's Election Archive; Vote Trinidad & Tobago - Trinidad & Tobago elections, KnowledgeWalk online; Election Profile - Trinidad & Tobago, International Foundation for Electoral Systems (IFES) Matthias Catón: "Trinidad and Tobago" in: Elections in the Americas. A Data Handbook, vol. 1, ed. by Dieter Nohlen.
General election 2010: Couva South [4] Party Candidate Votes % ±% UNC: Rudranath Indarsingh 15,045 75.7 PNM: Anthony Khan 4,773 24.01 Rejected ballots 59 0.29 Turnout: 19,877 75.29 Majority 10,272 51.69 Registered electors: 26,400 UNC hold: Swing
Persad-Bissessar was sworn in as the first female prime minister by President George Maxwell Richards, where Anand Ramlogan was sworn in as Attorney General on May 26, 2010. Shortly thereafter, the People's Partnership won the 2010 local elections on July 26, 2010, securing a majority in the local corporations.
General elections were held in Trinidad and Tobago on 7 September 2015. [1] The date of the general elections was announced by Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar on 13 June 2015. The result was a victory for the opposition People's National Movement , which received 52% of the vote and won 23 of the 41 seats in the House of Representatives .
In 2004, five polling divisions were removed from the district to create the constituency of D'Abadie/O'Meara and one polling division was removed to create La Horquetta/Talparo for the 2007 Trinidad and Tobago general election. It was previously considered to be a safe PNM seat, but was won by the COP in the 2010 general election. [3]