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・ Bruno Carvalho
・ Bruno Casanova
・ Bruno Casimir
・ Bruno Cassirer
・ Bruno Castanheira
・ Bruno Akrapović
・ Bruno Albert Forsterer
・ Bruno Aleixo
・ Bruno Alexandre Rodrigues
・ Bruno Alicarte
・ Bruno Alves
・ Bruno Amaro Sousa
・ Bruno Amato
・ Bruno Amorim
・ Bruno Amoroso
Bruno Amoussou
・ Bruno and Luisa di Marco
・ Bruno Andrade
・ Bruno Andrade (footballer born 1989)
・ Bruno Andrade (Portuguese footballer)
・ Bruno Andrade (racing driver)
・ Bruno Angoletta
・ Bruno Antonio dos Santos
・ Bruno Antunes de Oliveira
・ Bruno Apitz
・ Bruno Appels
・ Bruno Aranda Pertile
・ Bruno Araújo dos Santos
・ Bruno Arcari
・ Bruno Arcari (boxer)


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Bruno Amoussou : ウィキペディア英語版
Bruno Amoussou
Bruno Ange-Marie Amoussou (born 2 July 1939) is a Beninese politician who was President of the National Assembly of Benin from 1995 to 1999〔(Benin government page on former presidents of the National Assembly ).〕 and Minister of State for Planning and Prospective Development under President Mathieu Kérékou from 1999 to 2005.〔Willéandre Houngbedji, ("Bruno Amoussou: Vaincre ou périr!" ), ''L'Araignee'', 3 March 2006 .〕 He is currently a Deputy in the National Assembly. As the long-time leader of the Social Democratic Party (PSD), Amoussou stood as a presidential candidate in 1991, 1996, 2001, and 2006.
==Political career==
Amoussou was born in Djakotomey in south-western Benin. In the 1991 presidential election, he received 5.8% of the vote and fourth place, therefore failing to qualify for the second round.〔(Elections in Benin ), African Elections Database.〕 Following the March 1995 parliamentary election, he was elected as President of the National Assembly on 12 June 1995.〔(''Africa Review'' ) (1997), page 12.〕 During his political career, his support was locally concentrated in his native southwest, but it was sufficient to enable him to be a consistent player on the political scene during the 1990s and 2000s.〔Jennifer C. Seely, ''The Legacies of Transition Governments in Africa: the Cases of Benin and Togo'' (2009), Palgrave Macmillan, page 158.〕 He placed fourth in the March 1996 presidential election with 7.8% of the vote;〔 along with third place finisher Houngbédji, Amoussou backed Kérékou against President Nicéphore Soglo for the second round of the election, and Kérékou was victorious.〔Samuel Decalo, "Benin: First of the New Democracies", in ''Political Reform in Francophone Africa'' (1997), page 61, note 21.〕
Amoussou was re-elected to the National Assembly in the March 1999 parliamentary election,〔(Results of the 1999 parliamentary election ), bj.refer.org .〕 but on 29 April 1999, he was defeated in his bid for re-election as President of the National Assembly by Adrien Houngbédji in a parliamentary vote, despite being the favored candidate of Kérékou for the position. Amoussou received 38 votes against 45 for Houngbédji.〔(Benin, Year in Review: 1999 ), Britannica.com.〕 Under Kérékou, Amoussou was appointed as Minister of Development and Planning in 1999.〔 The PSD held its first ordinary congress in early 2000, and Amoussou was elected as the party's President.〔"Benin: Social Democratic Party congress ends, new leaders elected", Radio Benin, 1 February 2000.〕
In the first round of the March 2001 presidential election, he placed fourth yet again with 8.6% of the vote, but participated in the runoff when the second- and third-placed candidates, Soglo and Houngbédji, withdrew from the race. Running against heavily favored incumbent Kérékou, to whom he had previously given his support for the second round, Amoussou received nearly 16% of the vote.〔〔("Benin finally votes for president" ), CNN, 22 March 2001.〕 By providing token opposition to Kérékou after the President's most important opponents decided to boycott the vote, he gave the outcome a limited measure of legitimacy that it would have otherwise lacked. He remained Minister of Development and Planning until 2005.〔
Amoussou ran again in the March 2006 presidential election, obtaining 16.29% of the vote and placing third.〔〔(Angus Reid Global Monitor page on 2006 election ).〕 He supported Yayi Boni in the second round.〔("Rejecting appeal, government sets poll for 19 March" ), IRIN, 18 March 2006.〕
In the March 2007 parliamentary election, Amoussou and the PSD participated in the Alliance for a Dynamic Democracy,〔Alain C. Assogba, ("Conclave à Cotonou hier : L’Add passe à l’offensive (Elle veut constituer sa propre majorité)" ), ''La Nouvelle Tribune'', 6 April 2007.〕 and Amoussou was again elected to a seat.〔, BeninInfo.com .〕 Afterwards he was again a candidate for President of the National Assembly, losing to Mathurin Nago of the Cauris Forces for an Emerging Benin in a vote on 3 May 2007. Amoussou received 34 votes, while Nago received 45.〔("Benin : Mathurin Nago elected Parliament speaker" ), African Press Agency, 3 May 2007.〕〔("Election du bureau de l’Assemblée nationale : Comment Yayi Boni a gagné le perchoir" ), ''Le Matinal'', 4 May 2007 .〕
At the PSD's second ordinary congress in mid-2009, Amoussou was re-elected as PSD President.〔Sulpice O. Gbaguidi, ("L’inoxydable Amoussou" ), fraternite-info.com, 10 August 2009 .〕 He was re-elected to the National Assembly in the March 2011 parliamentary election.〔(" Assemblée nationale/6ème législature:Liste complète des 83 députés proclamés élus par la Cour" ), ''Le Matinal'', 13 May 2011 .〕
Amoussou resigned as PSD President on 22 January 2012.〔("Communiqué du Psd sur la démission d’Amoussou Bruno" ), ''La Nouvelle Tribune'', 26 January 2012 .〕 In the April 2015 parliamentary election, he was re-elected to the National Assembly as a candidate of the Union Makes the Nation coalition in the 11th constituency.〔Yao Hervé Kingbêwé, ("Législatives : liste complète des 83 députés selon la CENA" ), ''La Nouvelle Tribune'', 2 May 2015 .〕
He has used the campaign slogan, "He knows the country."

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