Legality of Cannabis by U.S. Jurisdiction

General elections were held in Guam in November 2000 in order to elect the Legislature, Guam's delegate to the United States House of Representatives, the Public Auditor (for the first time) and village mayor and vice-mayors.[1]

Campaign[edit]

A total of 33 candidates contested the 15 seats in the Legislature (including 13 incumbents), two ran for the Delegate position and five for the Public Auditor.[1]

In the Legislature elections, 32 candidates were from the Democratic or Republican parties, with one running as an independent.[1]

Results[edit]

Legislature[edit]

Candidate Party Votes Notes
Frank Aguon Democratic Party Elected
Felix P. Camacho Republican Party Elected
Edward J.B. Calvo Republican Party Elected
Judith Won Pat Democratic Party Elected
Ben Pangelinan Democratic Party Elected
Thomas C. Ada Democratic Party Elected
Mark Forbes Republican Party Elected
Mark C. Charfauros Republican Party Elected
Kaleo S. Moylan Republican Party Elected
Joseph F. Ada Republican Party Elected
Lourdes A. Leon Guerrero Democratic Party Elected
Angel L.G. Santos Democratic Party Elected
Antonio R. Unpingco Republican Party Elected
Lawrence F. Kasperbauer Republican Party Elected
Joanne M.S. Brown Republican Elected

Tom Ada received the most votes, and three women were elected.[1]

Public Auditor[edit]

Doris Flores Brooks was elected with 51% of the vote.[1]

Delegate[edit]

General Election Results for Delegate to the U.S. House of Representatives[2]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Robert A. Underwood (incumbent) 29,099 78.09
Republican Manuel Q. Cruz 8,167 21.92
Total votes 100

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e Donald R Shuster (2004) Elections on Guam, 1970–2002 Pacific Studies, Vol. 27, Nos. 1/2
  2. ^ Shuster