Election Name: | 2014 Gagaʻifomauga by-election |
Type: | parliamentary |
Country: | Samoa |
Previous Election: | 2011 Samoan general election |
Previous Year: | 2011 |
Next Election: | 2016 Samoan general election |
Next Year: | 2016 |
Election Date: | 15 August 2014 |
Candidate1: | Faimalotoa Kika Stowers |
Party1: | Human Rights Protection Party |
Popular Vote1: | 1,045 |
Percentage1: | 27.24% |
Candidate2: | Lavea Ieti |
Party2: | Human Rights Protection Party |
Popular Vote2: | 232 |
Percentage2: | 23.58% |
MP | |
Posttitle: | Subsequent MP |
Before Election: | Aniteleʻa Tuiloʻa |
Before Party: | Human Rights Protection Party |
After Election: | Faimalotoa Kika Stowers |
After Party: | Human Rights Protection Party |
Image3: | HRPP |
Popular Vote3: | 198 |
Percentage3: | 20.12% |
Candidate3: | Taito Vaea Tanu |
Party3: | Human Rights Protection Party |
Seats For Election: | Constituency of Gagaʻifomauga |
Candidate4: | Gaʻina Tino |
Candidate5: | Lavea Peseta Nafoʻi |
Popular Vote4: | 185 |
Popular Vote5: | 101 |
Party5: | Tautua Samoa Party |
Party4: | Human Rights Protection Party |
Image4: | HRPP |
Image5: | TSP |
Percentage4: | 18.80% |
Percentage5: | 10.26% |
A by-election was held in the Gagaʻifomauga no.1 constituency in Samoa on 15 August 2014.[1]
The Gagaʻifomauga no.1 seat in the Legislative Assembly had been held by Aniteleʻa Tuiloʻa for the Human Rights Protection Party in the 2011 general election; he had first won it in 2006. During the 15th Parliament, he served as an associate minister in the Ministry for Women, Community and Social Development. He died of kidney failure on 9 June 2014.[2]
Despite it being a single seat constituency, the ruling Human Rights Protection Party, as often, nominated several candidates - in this instance, four: Gaʻina Tino (a former Minister for Justice), Faimalotoa Kolotita Stowers (former Director and CEO of the Samoa Broadcasting Service), Lavea Ieti, and Taito Vaea Tanu. This despite having nominated only one candidate in the constituency in the 2011 general election. The opposition Tautua Samoa Party chose a single candidate: Lavea Peseta Lua Nafoʻi.[3]
Kolotita Stowers, the only woman among the five candidates, was elected - bringing to three the number of women in the 15th Samoan Parliament. The Tautua Samoa Party candidate finished last.[4]