Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The 2024 Maltese presidential election took place on 27 March 2024. Members of the Parliament of Malta voted in an indirect election to elect the next President of Malta with former parliament speaker Myriam Spiteri Debono being the only nominee.
27 March – 2024 Maltese presidential election: Myriam Spiteri Debono is unanimously elected by the Parliament as the next President of Malta. [2] 4 April – Myriam Spiteri Debono is sworn in as the 11th president, succeeding George Vella and becoming the third woman to hold the office. [3]
2024 Lithuanian presidential election, 12 May (first round) & 26 May (second round) 2024 Lithuanian parliamentary election, 13 October (first round) & 27 October (second round) Malta. 2024 Maltese local elections, 8 June Moldova. 2024 Moldovan presidential election, 20 October (first round) & 3 November (second round)
Malta, the smallest EU member state, includes around 0.1% of the total EU population. Maltese voters elect 6 MEPs (5 until 2011) to the European Parliament, or one every 69,342 voters - the lowest population-per-seat ratio in the EU, [2] 10 times smaller than the EU average (680,000) and 20 times smaller than the largest European Parliament constituency.
This is a list of the next general elections around the world in sovereign states. The general elections listed are for the government of each jurisdiction. These elections determine the prime minister and makeup of the legislature in a parliamentary democracy, or the president and then the legislature in a system where separate votes are taken for different tiers of government.
26 February: Hungary, President [125] 9 March: Pakistan, President [126] 27 March: Malta, President [127] 28–29 March: Tunisia, National Council of Regions and Districts [128] 2 April: Pakistan, Senate [129] 4 April: Belarus, Council of the Republic [130] 29 April: Democratic Republic of the Congo, Senate [131] 22 May: Vietnam, President [132]
The president of Malta (Maltese: President ta' Malta) is the constitutional head of state of Malta. The president is indirectly elected by the House of Representatives of Malta , which appoints the president for a five-year term and requires them to swear an oath to "preserve, protect and defend" the Constitution. [ 2 ]
The politics of Malta takes place within a framework of a parliamentary representative democratic republic, whereby the president of Malta is the constitutional head of state. Executive authority is vested in the president of Malta, with the general direction and control of the Government of Malta remaining with the prime minister of Malta ...