December 2021 Chair of the Assembly election

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December 2021 Chair of the Assembly election

← August 2021 18‒26 December 2021 March 2022 →
Registered92 legislators of the South Pacific
Turnout30.43%
 
Candidate anjo
Party Independent
Assembly vote 26
Percentage 100.0%

Chair before election

anjo

Elected Chair

anjo

The December 2021 Chair of the Assembly election was an election held in the South Pacific from 18‒26 December 2021 to elect a new Chair of the Assembly. The single seat of the Assembly's presiding officer was contested only by incumbent anjo, who was ultimately unanimously re-elected.

Background

Elections for Chair of the Assembly are to take place at least every four months, with a snap election instantly triggered if the position of Chair becomes vacant. The Elections Act stipulates that an election must take place eight days before the end of an incumbent's term, so that the conclusion of the eight-days long election and the end of the incumbent's term coincide exactly for the elected Chair to be able to immediately assume office. As the last Chair election was certified on the 26th of August, 2021,[1] incumbent anjo's term would run out by the 26th of December; accordingly, an election would have to be called by the 18th.

Electoral System

The Chair is elected in a single round of voting, with the system used being approval voting. On their ballots, voters are to list any and all candidates they approve of, with no regard to any preference between them; alternatively, they may vote to Re-Open Nominations. The single candidate with the most approvals wins the election, provided that they have received an effective approval rate of at least 50%. If no candidate has received enough approval, or the Re-Open Nominations option has received the most votes, then the election is to restart.

Candidates

The sole candidate running in the election was anjo, the incumbent. LFP had originally accepted their nomination and even posted a campaign, but shortly thereafter retracted their candidacy.[2] Belschaft, Not Austria, and Sandaoguo never accepted their nominations.

Declared Candidates
Bolded candidates are incumbents.
Italicized candidates withdrew from the election.
Struck candidates were disqualified from the race.
Candidate Political office(s) Campaign
  anjo Chair of the Assembly of the South Pacific
(since August 2021)
Other offices
OWL Senior Staff
Ambassador to the Free Nations Region
Anjo for Chair (again)[3]
  LFP Legislator of the South Pacific
(since October 2021)
LFP for Chair: What Could Go Wrong?

Campaign

anjo's campaign first contained a look back on his ending term, evaluating his various campaign promises, before turning to his plans for another term. At the heart of the campaign was, once again, outreach and integration ‒ in addition to continuing the Weekly RMB Updates and creating an Assembly Gazette dispatch to accompany it, he planned to revive the Assembly Mentorship Program to better educate new legislators on Assembly matters. Furthermore, he promised to conduct a thorough check of the South Pacific's body of laws to ensure consistency. Before closing the campaign with a pledge to continue working dutifully, he also expressed a desire to appoint a number of Deputy Chairs again to grant interested legislators insight into the office.[3]

Results

On the 26th of December, 2021, Election Commissioner Kris Kringle certified the results of the election.[4]

Results: First Round
Green background denotes winning candidates.
Red background denotes eliminated candidates.
and denote the status of any incumbent, win or lose respectively.
Candidate Approvals
anjo 26 100%
Re-Open Nominations 0 0%
Invalid ballots 2 7.14%

Thus, anjo was confirmed in his office and elected to another 4-month term.

References

  1. EC Kris Kringle (26 Aug '21): Certification of Results. Retrieved 7 Feb '22.
  2. LFP (19 Dec '21): RE: Declarations of Candidacy. Retrieved 7 Feb '22.
  3. 3.0 3.1 anjo (19 Dec '21): Anjo for Chair (again). Retrieved 7 Feb '22.
  4. EC Kris Kringle (26 Dec '21): Certification of Results. Retrieved 7 Feb '22.