2010 in Oceania

Summary

Chronology of Oceania : The thematic eventsof 2010 in Oceania.

Years in Oceania: 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013
Centuries: 20th century · 21st century · 22nd century
Decades: 1980s 1990s 2000s 2010s 2020s 2030s 2040s
Years: 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013

Policy edit

Elections edit

  • February 27 : Nauruan constitutional referendum in Nauru. The proposed amendments (which would allow the election of the President of the Republic at the direct vote, rather than indirect) were rejected by 67% of the expressed votes.[1]
  • April 24 : Nauruan parliamentary election in Nauru. It was anticipated elections, to 'unblock' a Parliament where the presidential government and the opposition each benefited of nine deputies out of eighteen. The eighteen outgoing deputies were however renewed, keeping the country in a political doubt state.[2]
  • August 4 : Parliamentary elections in the Solomon Islands.
  • August 21 : Parliamentary elections in Australia. The prime minister Julia Gillard, replacing Kevin Rudd at the head of the country following an inner sling in the Labour party, aimed to legitimate her status obtaining a mandate from the citizens, via anticipated elections. The Labours got 72 seats out of 150 at the House of Representatives, as much as the liberal opposition, but could form a government with the support of a green deputy and of three unlabeled deputies.[3]
  • Septembre 16 : Parliamentary elections in the Tuvalu.
  • 25 novembre : Parliamentary elections in the Tonga. The citizens were led, for the first time, to elect a majority of the deputies. Up to now, the 'People's Representatives' formed a minority at the Parliament, alongside Nobility' Representatives and members of the executive appointed by the king and sat at the Parliament.[4]

Governments edit

Environment edit

Death edit

Notes and references edit

  1. ^ (in English) Résultats du référendum, gouvernement de Nauru
  2. ^ (in English) "Nauru election returns previous parliament unchanged" Archived 2012-03-10 at the Wayback Machine, Radio New Zealand International, 26 avril 2010
  3. ^ (in English) "Labor clings to power", Australian Broadcasting Corporation, 8 septembre 2010
  4. ^ (in English) "Tonga’s pro-democracy movement hails assembly reform", Radio New Zealand International, 21 avril 2010
  5. ^ « La Calédonie enterre Jacques Lafleur », Les Nouvelles calédoniennes, 11 décembre 2010