11th legislature of Antigua and Barbuda

The 11th legislature of Antigua and Barbuda was elected on 9 March 1999, and was dissolved on 26 February 2004.[1]

11th legislature of Antigua and Barbuda
10th 12th
Overview
Legislative bodyParliament of Antigua and Barbuda
Meeting placeSt. John's
Term9 March 1999 (1999-03-09) – 26 February 2004 (2004-02-26)
Election1999 Antiguan general election
GovernmentABLP
OppositionUPP, BPM
Crown of Antigua and Barbuda
Senate
House of Representatives

Members

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Senate

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Party[2] Representative
ALP Millicent Percival
ALP George Bernard Walker
ALP Guy Yearwood
ALP Asot Micheal
ALP Kenrick Isaac
ALP Reuben James
ALP Llewellyn Smith
ALP Samuel Aymer
ALP Nathalie Payne
ALP Charles Fernandez
ALP Rupert Sterling
UPP Leonard T. Hector
UPP Lionel Gomes
UPP Bertrand Joseph
UPP Ralph Potter
UPP Aziz Hadeed
Calvin Gore
ALP Osmund Lake

House of Representatives

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Party[3] Representative Constituency
ALP Lester Bird

Prime Minister

St. John's Rural East
UPP Baldwin Spencer

Leader of the Opposition

St. John's Rural West
ALP Gaston Browne St. John's City West
ALP John St. Luce St. John's City East
ALP Steadroy Benjamin St. John's City South
ALP Vere Bird Jr. St. John's Rural South
ALP Bernard Percival St. John's Rural North
ALP Molwyn Joseph St. Mary's North
UPP Hilson Baptiste St. Mary's South
UPP Charlesworth Samuel All Saints East & St. Luke
ALP Hilroy Humphreys All Saints West
UPP Nathaniel Francis St. George
ALP Longford Jeremy St. Peter
ALP Robin Yearwood St. Phillip North
ALP Sherfield Bowen St. Phillip South
ALP Rodney Williams St. Paul
BPM Thomas Hilbourne Frank Barbuda
ALP Gertel Thom Attorney General

References

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  1. ^ "Caribbean Elections | Members of the House of Representatives Antigua and Barbuda 1999 - 2004". web.archive.org. 2018-01-20. Retrieved 2024-07-05.
  2. ^ "Caribbean Elections | Members of the Senate of Antigua and Barbuda 1999 - 2004". www.caribbeanelections.com. Retrieved 2022-04-08.
  3. ^ "Caribbean Elections | Members of the House of Representatives Antigua and Barbuda 1999 - 2004". www.caribbeanelections.com. Retrieved 2022-04-08.