2009 Belgian regional elections
Press Enter · cited answer in seconds
0 sources
2009 Belgian regional elections
Summary
2009 Belgian regional elections is a public election[1]. It ranks in the top 9% of public_election entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (5 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- 2009 Belgian regional elections is in the country of Belgium[3].
- 2009 Belgian regional elections's instance of is recorded as public election[4].
- 2009 Belgian regional elections's follows is recorded as 2004 Belgian regional elections[5].
- 2009 Belgian regional elections's followed by is recorded as 2014 Belgian regional elections[6].
- 2009 Belgian regional elections's part of is recorded as 2009 Belgian elections[7].
- 2009 Belgian regional elections's has part is recorded as 2009 Brussels regional election[8].
- 2009 Belgian regional elections's has part is recorded as 2009 Flemish elections[9].
- 2009 Belgian regional elections's has part is recorded as 2009 Walloon Parliament elections[10].
- 2009 Belgian regional elections's has part is recorded as 2009 German-speaking Community Parliament election[11].
- 2009 Belgian regional elections's office contested is recorded as Minister-President of Flanders[12].
- 2009 Belgian regional elections's office contested is recorded as Minister-President of Wallonia[13].
- 2009 Belgian regional elections's office contested is recorded as Minister-President of the Brussels-Capital Region[14].
- 2009 Belgian regional elections's point in time is recorded as +2009-06-07T00:00:00Z[15].
- 2009 Belgian regional elections's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/05c0p0c[16].
- 2009 Belgian regional elections's successful candidate is recorded as Kris Peeters[17].
- 2009 Belgian regional elections's successful candidate is recorded as Rudy Demotte[18].
- 2009 Belgian regional elections's successful candidate is recorded as Charles Picqué[19].
Why It Matters
2009 Belgian regional elections ranks in the top 9% of public_election entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (5 views/month).[2]