Universal Suffrage in Western Samoa: The 1991 General Elections
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So'o, Asofou
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Canberra, ACT : Dept. of Political and Social Change, Research School of Pacific and Asian Studies, The Australian National University.
Abstract
Since 1962 Western Samoa has been an independent state with a parliamentary
system of government. The one-chamber parliament consists of a House of
Assembly with 47 members, whose composition and method of election has
reflected a specifically Samoan form of political democracy which blends tradi
tion with modernity.
In terms of both eligibility for election and eligibility to vote at elections, a
dual system operated until 1991 . Of the 47 members of parliament (MPs), 45
were required to be matai (chief) elected by a system of matai suffrage, while
two were non-matai representatives elected by individual voters under a system
of qualified adult suffrage. The introduction in 1 99 1 ofuniversal non-compulsory
suffrage to elect the 45 matai MPs transformed the electoral system by entitling
all persons aged 2 1 years and over to vote for matai candidates in their electorate,
thereby ensuring that all citizens have equal political rights in the election of
parliament, and that all members of parliament represent, and are responsible to,
their constituency and to the overall Samoan population. Thus, universal
suffrage may be regarded as a giant step in the process of democratizing Samoan
politics and in legitimizing parliamentary rule. Nevertheless, it should be
pointed out that the composition of parliamentremains unaltered: only matai are
eligible for election to 45 of the 47 seats in parliament; the political system
continues to be based on both traditional and modem forms.
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