American Samoa

Parliament
The Fono or Legislative Assembly is bicameral.
The House of Representatives has 21 seats -- 20 of which are elected by popular vote and 1 is an appointed, non-voting delegate from Swains Island. Members serve two-year terms The Senate has 18 seats. Members are elected from local chiefs and serve four-year terms.

Governors
1905-1908   Charles Brainard Taylor Moore
1908-1910   John Frederick Parker
1910-1913   William Michael Crose
1913-1913   Nathan Woodworth Post
1913-1914   Clark Daniel Stearns
1914-1914   Nathan Woodworth Post
1914-1915   Charles Armijo Woodruff
1915-1919   John Martin Poyer
1919-1920   Warren Jay Terhune
1920-1922   Waldo A. Evans
1922-1923   Edwin Taylor Pollock
1923-1925   Edward Stanley Kellogg
1925-1927   Henry Francis Bryan
1927-1929   Stephen Victor Graham
1929-1931   Gatewood Sanders Lincoln
1931-1931   James Sutherland Spore
1931-1931   Arthur Tenney Emerson
1931-1932   Gatewood Sanders Lincoln
1932-1934   George Bertram Landenberger
1934-1934   Thomas Calloway Latimore
1934-1936   Otto Carl Dowling
1936-1936   Thomas Benjamin Fitzpatrick
1936-1938   MacGillivray Milne
1938-1940   Edward William Hanson
1940-1940   Jesse Rink Wallace
1940-1942   Laurence Wild
1942-1942   Henry L. Larsen (military governor)
1942-1944   John Gould Moyer
1944-1945   Allen Hobbs
1945-1945   Ralph Waldo Hungerford
1945-1945   Samuel Wakefield Canan
1945-1947   Harold Alexander Houser
1947-1949   Vernon Huber
1949-1951   Thomas Francis Darden, Jr.
1951-1952   Phelps Phelps
1952-1952   John C. Elliott
1952-1953   James Arthur Ewing
1953-1953   Lawrence M. Judd
1953-1956   Richard Barrett Lowe
1956-1961   Peter Tali Coleman
1961-1967   Hyrum Rex Lee
1967-1969   Owen Stuart Aspinall
1969-1974   John Morse Haydon
1974-1975   Frank C. Mockler
1975-1976   Earl B. Ruth
1976-1977   Frank Barnett
1977-1978   Hyrum Rex Lee
1978-1985   Peter Tali Coleman
1985-1989   Lutali Aifili Paulo Lauvao
1989-1993   Peter Tali Coleman
1993-1997   Lutali Aifili Paulo Lauvao
1997-2003   Tauese Pita Fiti Sunia
2003 now   Togiola Talalelei A. Tulafono