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30 September 2018 FijiFirst: Frank Bainimarama: SODELPA: Ro Teimumu Kepa: 35th general: 26 November 2018 – 30 October 2022 FijiFirst: Frank Bainimarama: SODELPA: Sitiveni Rabuka Ratu Naiqama Lalabalavu: 36th general: 24 December 2022 – present PAP–NFP–SODELPA Coalition: Sitiveni Rabuka: FijiFirst: Frank Bainimarama Inia Seruiratu
General elections were held in Fiji on 17 September 2014 to select the 50 members of Parliament. [1] [2] [3] The FijiFirst party, led by Prime Minister Frank Bainimarama, won a landslide victory, winning 32 of the 50 seats. [4]
The final results which was released on 18 December showed no party able to secure a parliamentary majority, leading to the possibility of Fiji having a coalition government for the first time since the 2013 constitution came into effect. FijiFirst won a plurality of 26 seats, the People's Alliance gained 21, the NFP's share increased to five ...
On 31 October, the coalition government's nominee and incumbent speaker Ratu Naiqama Lalabalavu was elected President of Fiji. The election took place during a roll call in Parliament, presided over by Deputy Speaker Lenora Qereqeretabua. Lalabalavu received 37 votes with support from all members of the People's Alliance, NFP and SODELPA ...
Note: The following statistics show the number of seats in the House of Representatives won by particular political parties in general elections from 1966 to 2006. The Year at the top of each column links to a main article about the election held that year.
Recent local elections. 2002; 2005; ... The 50 elected members of the Parliament of Fiji from 2014 to 2018 were elected on 17 September 2014. List of MPs. Member Party
The current 55 elected members of the Parliament of Fiji were elected on 14 December 2022 in the 2022 general election. Member [1] Party Notes Rosy Akbar: FijiFirst:
Under the 2013 Constitution, Fiji's Parliament is unicameral. Its 50 members are elected for four-year terms by Party-list proportional representation, with the entire country voting as a single constituency. To win election to Parliament, a political party (or an independent candidate) must win five percent of the total valid vote nationwide.