2011 Singaporean presidential election
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2011 Singaporean presidential election
Summary
2011 Singaporean presidential election is a Presidential elections in Singapore[1]. It draws 56 Wikipedia views per month (presidential_elections_in_singapore category, ranking #2 of 4).[2]
Key Facts
- 2011 Singaporean presidential election is in the country of Singapore[3].
- 2011 Singaporean presidential election's instance of is recorded as Presidential elections in Singapore[4].
- 2011 Singaporean presidential election's follows is recorded as 2005 Singaporean presidential election[5].
- 2011 Singaporean presidential election's followed by is recorded as 2017 Singaporean presidential election[6].
- 2011 Singaporean presidential election's Commons category is recorded as Singaporean presidential election, 2011[7].
- 2011 Singaporean presidential election's office contested is recorded as President of Singapore[8].
- 2011 Singaporean presidential election's point in time is recorded as +2011-08-27T00:00:00Z[9].
- 2011 Singaporean presidential election's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/0glqcl1[10].
- 2011 Singaporean presidential election's candidate is recorded as Tony Tan Keng Yam[11].
- 2011 Singaporean presidential election's candidate is recorded as Tan Cheng Bock[12].
- 2011 Singaporean presidential election's candidate is recorded as Tan Jee Say[13].
- 2011 Singaporean presidential election's candidate is recorded as Tan Kin Lian[14].
- 2011 Singaporean presidential election's successful candidate is recorded as Tony Tan Keng Yam[15].
- 2011 Singaporean presidential election's applies to jurisdiction is recorded as Singapore[16].
- 2011 Singaporean presidential election's total valid votes is recorded as {'amount': '+2118540'}[17].
- 2011 Singaporean presidential election's eligible voters is recorded as {'amount': '+2274773'}[18].
- 2011 Singaporean presidential election's ballots cast is recorded as {'amount': '+2153014'}[19].
Why It Matters
2011 Singaporean presidential election draws 56 Wikipedia views per month (presidential_elections_in_singapore category, ranking #2 of 4).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 7 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[20]