Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
General elections were held in Antigua and Barbuda on 18 January 2023 to elect members of the House of Representatives. The Labour Party (ABLP) has held an absolute majority of 15 seats in the House of Representatives after the 2018 general election, with Gaston Browne remaining as prime minister.
18 January – 2023 Antiguan general election: Citizens in Antigua and Barbuda elect members of the House of Representatives. The Labour Party retains its majority. [1] [2] 29 March – 2023 Barbuda Council election [3] 6 May – Coronation of Charles III as King of Antigua and Barbuda and the other Commonwealth realms.
It was Antigua and Barbuda's second election since Prime Minister Gaston Browne emerged victorious in the country's general election in 2023 with a narrow win. The election was won by the UPP. [ 1 ] This was the first by-election held outside of Barbuda since independence in 1981.
The first elections held under this system resulted in a victory for the Antigua Labour Party, which won all eight seats. The ALP dominated Antiguan politics, winning every seat in elections held in 1956, 1960 and 1965. During this period voter turnout remained low, dropping to just 38% for the 1960 elections. [4]
Download as PDF; Printable version; ... 2023 Dutch island council elections; 2023 St. Mary's South by-election; A. 2023 Antiguan general election; B.
2023 Argentine provincial elections; 2023 Argentine general election, 22 October (first round) & 19 November (second round) Antigua and Barbuda. 2023 Antiguan and Barbudan general election, 18 January Colombia. 2023 Colombian regional and municipal election, 29 October Chile. 2023 Chilean Constitutional Council election, 7 May
These elections resulted in an even larger landslide for the Labour Party, winning all but two seats in Parliament. [13] However, after its loss of the Barbuda seat in 2014, the Barbuda People's Movement flipped the constituency, largely in part due to the government's handling of the hurricane just a few months before.
The following indirect elections of heads of state and the upper houses of bicameral legislatures are scheduled to take place through votes in elected lower houses, unicameral legislatures, or electoral colleges: Since 29 September, 2022: Lebanon, President [86] [87] 14 January: Kazakhstan, Senate [88] 20 January: Sahrawi Republic, President [89]