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All 14 seats in Congress | |||
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Parliamentary elections were held in the Federated States of Micronesia on 4 March 2003.[1] As there were no political parties, all 28 candidates ran as independents. Four candidates were elected unopposed.[2]
Electoral system
At the time of the election, Congress consisted of 14 members, of which 10 were elected for two-year terms and four elected for four-year terms.[2] The 2003 elections were for both types of seats.[2]
Results
| Party | Votes | % | Seats |
|---|---|---|---|
| Independents | 81,029 | 100 | 14 |
| Total | 81,029 | 100 | 14 |
| Source: Adam Carr | |||
Elected members
| State | Seat | Term | Elected member | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chuuk | At large | 4 years | Redley A. Killion | |
| District 1 | 2 years | Henry Asugar | ||
| District 2 | 2 years | Roosevelt Kansou | Unopposed | |
| District 3 | 2 years | Sabino Asor | ||
| District 4 | 2 years | Twitier Aritos | ||
| District 5 | 2 years | Nelson Moses | ||
| Kosrae | At large | 4 years | Alik L. Alik | |
| โ | 2 years | Claude Phillip | Unopposed | |
| Pohnpei | At large | 4 years | Resio Moses | |
| District 1 | 2 years | Dohsis Halbert | Unopposed | |
| District 2 | 2 years | Dion Neth | ||
| District 3 | 2 years | Peter M. Christian | ||
| Yap | At large | 4 years | Joseph Urusemal | |
| โ | 2 year | Isaac Figir | Unopposed | |
| Source: Adam Carr | ||||
References
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