Democratic Party of the Northern Mariana Islands explained

Democratic Party of the Northern Mariana Islands
Ideology:Modern liberalism
Headquarters:Saipan, Northern Mariana Islands
Website:nmidems.org
Country:the Northern Mariana Islands
Chairperson:Jonathan Cabrera
Leader1 Title:Vice Chairperson
Leader1 Name:Luella Marciano
Leader2 Title:Secretary
Leader2 Name:Melia Johnson
Leader3 Title:Treasurer
Leader3 Name:Shawna Indalecio
Founded:1978
National:Democratic Party
Colors: Blue
Predecessor:Popular Party
Seats1 Title:Seat in the U.S. House of Representatives
Seats2 Title:Seats in the Northern Mariana Islands Senate
Seats3 Title:Seats in the Northern Mariana Islands House of Representatives
Seats4 Title:Northern Mariana Islands Mayors

The Democratic Party of the Northern Mariana Islands is a political party in the Northern Mariana Islands. It began as a purely local territorial party and is now officially affiliated with the United States' national Democratic Party.

History

In 1977, the Popular Party changed its name to the Democratic Party. The Popular Party's opponent, the Territorial Party, would change its name to the Republican Party in 1981.[1]

The CNMI has not elected a Democratic Governor since 1993, when Froilan Tenorio was elected. At the legislative elections of November 1, 2003 the party won 1 out of 18 seats. It won an extra seat in the 2005 legislative elections. Its candidate Froilan Tenorio won 18% in the 2005 gubernatorial election. In the November 3, 2007 Commonwealth Legislature elections, the party took only 1 of 20 seats in the House of Representatives.[2] [3]

In 2009, for the first time ever, the Democratic Party did not nominate a candidate in the gubernatorial election. They fielded a candidate for Mayor of Saipan (Angelo Villagomez), along with two CNMI House candidates and one CNMI Senate candidate.[4]

In August 2016, the Commonwealth Election Commission recognized the party for the 2016 election year. Three of the 67 political candidates on the NMI are Democrats.[5]

The party organized the 2020 Northern Mariana Islands Democratic caucuses.[6]

In the 2020 elections, four incumbent representatives announced that they would run for re-election as Democrats.[7] The party is running 18 candidates, and supporting 3 independent candidates. Prior to the election, there were zero Democrats in either chamber of the Commonwealth Legislature.[8] The result of the 2020 general election was that the CNMI had experienced a blue wave as the party gained nine Democrats and the three endorsed independents were elected to office.[9] For the time in a decade, representatives affiliated with the Democratic Party had seats in the legislature. In the special election to replace the late Republican legislator Ivan A. Blanco, Democratic candidate Corina Magofna won the special election, flipping the seat.[10]

In the 2022 gubernatorial election, the party nominated Tina Sablan for governor with Leila Staffler as her running mate.[11] She lost the 1st race, conceded, and endorsed independent candidate Arnold Palacios and his running mate David Apatang.[12] The party lost much of their gains from the previous election in the House, winning 4 seats, half of their previous win. They did gain a seat in the Senate, increasing their number to 2.[13]

Positions

The Democratic Party of the Northern Mariana Islands has defended Article 12 of the CNMI Constitution which restricts land alienation to persons of Northern Marianas descent.[14]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Porter. Kit. 1993. Starting Northern Marianas College: A Negotiation Perspective. Harvard Graduate School of Education.
  2. Web site: Northern Mariana Islands Government 2015, CIA World Factbook . theodora.com . February 26, 2015.
  3. Book: The Far East and Australasia 2003 . 2002 . Taylor & Francis Group . 9781857431339 . 1129 . February 26, 2015.
  4. Web site: 2010 Northern Marianas Islands Congressional Race . https://web.archive.org/web/20150922000000/http://www.dcpoliticalreport.com/CNMI.htm . dead . D.C.'s Political Report . D.C. Finegold-Sachs . September 22, 2015 . February 26, 2015.
  5. Web site: Villahermosa. Cherrie Anne E.. Democrats recognized as NMI political party. August 18, 2016. Marianas Variety. August 20, 2016.
  6. Web site: Presidential caucus announcement. www.nmidems.org. 2020-03-13.
  7. Web site: Why I'm running as a Democrat and why the CNMI needs a two-party system . Propst . Edwin . June 19, 2020 . Saipan Tribune . August 9, 2020 .
  8. News: De La Torre . Ferdie . August 7, 2020 . 66 candidates, 2 judges, 1 justice for retention . August 9, 2020 .
  9. News: De La Torre. Ferdie. Hix assures successful Democratic bets will deliver. November 6, 2020. Saipan Tribune. January 1, 2021.
  10. Web site: Magofna Wins Northern Mariana Islands Special Election. October 18, 2021.
  11. Web site: Post . Emmanuel T. Erediano For The Guam Daily . CNMI Dems endorse Sablan for governor . 2022-11-13 . The Guam Daily Post . en.
  12. Web site: Limol . K.-Andrea Evarose . Torres tops gubernatorial race; Sablan endorses Palacios in runoff . 2022-11-13 . Marianas Variety News & Views . en.
  13. Web site: 2022-general-election-results 2022 Election . 12 November 2022 . Commonwealth Election Commission.
  14. Web site: Dayao . Jun . Democratic Party of NMI defends Article 12 . Saipan Tribune . May 21, 2014 . April 21, 2016.