Parliamentary elections were held in Ghana on 29 August 1969, the first since the 1966 coup by the National Liberation Council which toppled the Nkrumah government.
Voters elected the new 140-seat Parliament. Kofi Abrefa Busia, the leader of the Progress Party (which won 105 of the 140 seats)[1] became Prime Minister. There were no presidential elections, as the system adopted was a parliamentary republic. Instead, a ceremonial president, Edward Akufo-Addo, was elected by an electoral college.
^Dieter Nohlen, Michael Krennerich & Bernhard Thibaut (1999) Elections in Africa: A data handbook, p435 ISBN 0-19-829645-2
and 26 Related for: 1969 Ghanaian parliamentary election information
elected in the 1969Ghanaianparliamentaryelection Busia government Dieter Nohlen, Michael Krennerich & Bernhard Thibaut (1999) Elections in Africa: A...
National Liberation Council military government organised the 1969Ghanaianparliamentaryelection which brought the Progress Party into power with a large...
elected in the 1969Ghanaianparliamentaryelection Ghana Parliamentary Register 1969-70. Accra: Office of the National Assembly. 1969. p. 174. Assembly...
restored by the time of the next elections in 1969. List of MPs elected in the 1965 Ghanaianparliamentaryelection About The Parliament of Ghana Archived...
the 1969Ghanaianparliamentaryelection Ghana Parliamentary Register 1969-70. Accra: Office of the National Assembly. 1969. p. 117. Parliamentary Debates...
elected in the 1969Ghanaianparliamentaryelection Ghana Parliamentary Register 1969-70. Accra: Office of the National Assembly. 1969. p. 146. Assembly...
elected in the 1969Ghanaianparliamentaryelection Ghana Parliamentary Register 1969-70. Accra: Office of the National Assembly. 1969. p. 120. Assembly...
elected in the 1969Ghanaianparliamentaryelection Ghana Parliamentary Register 1969-70. Accra: Office of the National Assembly. 1969. p. 232. Assembly...
Bilson's All People's Congress. He contested the Ghanaianparliamentaryelection on 29 August 1969 for a seat in the Parliament of Ghana during the second...
October 1969, after being pronounced winner at the 1969GhanaianParliamentaryelection held on 26 August 1969. His tenure of office as a member of parliament...
at the 1969Ghanaianparliamentaryelection. His tenure ended on 13 January 1972. Adjepong was a Christian. Ghana Parliamentary Register 1969-70. Office...
at the 1969Ghanaianparliamentaryelection. His tenure ended on 13 January 1972. Benjamin was a Presbyterian. Ghana Parliamentary Register 1969-70. Office...
winner at the 1969Ghanaianparliamentaryelection. His tenure ended on 13 January 1972. Osei is a Christian. Ghana Parliamentary Register 1969-70. Office...
winner at the 1969Ghanaianparliamentaryelection. His tenure ended on 13 January 1972. Seyire is a Christian. Ghana Parliamentary Register 1969-70. Office...
the 1969Ghanaianelection held on 26 August 1969. and his tenure of office ended on 13 January 1972. Seglah is Presbyterian. Ghana Parliamentary Register...
elected in the 1969Ghanaianparliamentaryelection Ghana Parliamentary Register 1969-70. Accra: Office of the National Assembly. 1969. p. 124. Assembly...
at the 1969Ghanaianparliamentaryelection. His tenure ended on 13 January 1972. Akwatia was a Methodist. Ghana Parliamentary Register 1969-70. Office...
winner at the 1969Ghanaianparliamentaryelection. His tenure ended on 13 January 1972. Ntim is a Christian. Ghana Parliamentary Register 1969-70. Office...
elected in the 1969Ghanaianparliamentaryelection Ghana Parliamentary Register 1969-70. Accra: Office of the National Assembly. 1969. p. 176. Assembly...
the 1969Ghanaianparliamentaryelection. He assumed office as a member of the first parliament of the second republic of Ghana on 1 October 1969 after...
the 1969Ghanaianparliamentaryelection. He assumed office as a member of the first parliament of the second republic of Ghana on 1 October 1969 after...
the 1969Ghanaianparliamentaryelection. He assumed office as a member of the first parliament of the second republic of Ghana on 1 October 1969 after...