Robert Laufoaulu

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Robert_Laufoaulu an entity of type: Thing

Robert Laufoaulu, né le 7 juillet 1947 à Wallis (Wallis-et-Futuna), est un homme politique français. Il est sénateur de Wallis-et-Futuna de 1998 à 2020. rdf:langString
Robert Laufoaulu (born 7 July 1947) is a Wallisian politician. He represented Wallis and Futuna in the Senate of France from 1998 to 2020. A teacher by profession, Laufoaulu was first elected to the Senate in 1998. He was not one of the six candidates in the first round, who all sat in the territorial assembly, but was nominated for the second round by the alliance of parties opposed to candidate Kamilo Gata , former deputy for Wallis-and-Futuna. He won the second round by 14 votes to 7. He stood for re-election in 2020, but was defeated by Mikaele Kulimoetoke in the second round. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Robert Laufoaulu
rdf:langString Robert Laufoaulu
xsd:date 1947-07-07
xsd:integer 20186818
xsd:integer 1094531947
xsd:date 1947-07-07
rdf:langString Senator for Wallis and Futuna
rdf:langString Union for a Popular Movement
rdf:langString The Independents – Republic and Territories group
rdf:langString Les Republicans
xsd:date 2020-09-30
xsd:date 1998-09-27
rdf:langString Robert Laufoaulu, né le 7 juillet 1947 à Wallis (Wallis-et-Futuna), est un homme politique français. Il est sénateur de Wallis-et-Futuna de 1998 à 2020.
rdf:langString Robert Laufoaulu (born 7 July 1947) is a Wallisian politician. He represented Wallis and Futuna in the Senate of France from 1998 to 2020. A teacher by profession, Laufoaulu was first elected to the Senate in 1998. He was not one of the six candidates in the first round, who all sat in the territorial assembly, but was nominated for the second round by the alliance of parties opposed to candidate Kamilo Gata , former deputy for Wallis-and-Futuna. He won the second round by 14 votes to 7. He was re-elected in the first round in the Senatorial elections of 2008 and 2014. In the Senate he sat as a member of Rally for the Republic, then the Union for a Popular Movement, then Les Republicans, before joining The Independents – Republic and Territories group in 2018. In 2016, he was financially sanctioned for absenteeism. In the 2016 Republicans presidential primary he supported Alain Juppé. In the first round of the 2017 French presidential election he supported François Fillon, who obtained 28.5% of the vote in Wallis and Futuna, against 20% nationally. He stood for re-election in 2020, but was defeated by Mikaele Kulimoetoke in the second round.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 5541

data from the linked data cloud