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List of landmasses connected via bridge or similar [ edit ]
Should every dependent territory be a separate country?
List of large islands governed by but not physically connected to larger areas of land that might, for the sake of fostering cultural connections between governments and the land they govern, lead to improved sustainable use[ edit ]
Considering alternate structures for global peace beyond the UN, perhaps through continental confederations based on land connections? Initial concept needs further development.
List of international trips made by Penny Wong as Minister for Foreign Affairs [ edit ]
This is a list of international visits made by Senator Penny Wong in her capacity as the Australian Minister for Foreign Affairs , a role in which she has served since 23 May 2022. In the first 12 months of the Albanese Government , several media outlets noted Wong's influence on a perceived reengagement of Australian diplomacy, not merely as a result of her being the first Asian-Australian Foreign Minister, but also due to her busy travel itinerary.[ 1] [ 2] [ 3] [ 4]
[Insert list here]
National election candidates by popular vote per month [ edit ]
See User:Neegzistuoja/sandbox2 for infoboxes listing the most successful candidates who contested a national election in recent months.
G20 head of state/government elections since 2000[ edit ]
The following table lists elections for heads of state and government in member states of the G20 since the year 2000. There may be some exclusions in the list of elections, and some inaccuracies in popular vote, and ordering and naming of parties.
Date
Country
Elected leader
First party
Second party
Third party
Party
Popular vote
%
Party
Popular vote
%
Party
Popular vote
%
26 March 2000
Russia
President
Vladimir Putin
Vladimir Putin
39,740,467
53.4%
Communist Party of the Russian Federation
21,928,468
29.5%
Yabloko
4,351,450
5.9%
25 June 2000
Japan
Prime Minister
Yoshirō Mori
Liberal Democratic Party
16,943,425
28.31%
Democratic Party of Japan
15,067,990
25.18%
New Kōmeitō Party
7,762,032
12.97%
2 July 2000
Mexico
President
Vicente Fox
National Action Party
15,989,636
42.52%
Institutional Revolutionary Party
13,579,718
36.11%
Party of the Democratic Revolution
6,256,780
16.64%
7 November 2000
United States
President
George W. Bush
Republican Party
50,456,002
47.87%
Democratic Party
50,999,897
48.38%
Green Party
2,882,955
2.74%
27 November 2000
Canada
Prime Minister
Jean Chrétien
Liberal Party of Canada
5,252,031
40.85%
Canadian Alliance
3,276,929
25.49%
Bloc Québécois
1,377,727
10.72%
13 May 2001
Italy
Prime Minister
Silvio Berlusconi
Forza Italia
16,915,513
45.4%
The Daisy
16,209,944
43.5%
Communist Refoundation Party
1,868,659
5.0%
7 June 2001
United Kingdom
Prime Minister
Tony Blair
Labour Party
10,724,953
40.7%
Conservative Party
8,357,615
31.7%
Liberal Democrats
4,814,321
18.3%
10 November 2001
Australia
Prime Minister
John Howard
Liberal-National Coalition
4,924,959
43.33%
Australian Labor Party
4,341,420
37.84%
Australian Democrats
620,197
5.41%
21 April 2002
France
President
TBD (2nd round)
Rally for the Republic
5,665,855
19.88%
National Front
4,804,713
16.86%
Socialist Party
4,610,113
16.18%
5 May 2002
Jacques Chirac
25,537,956
82.21%
5,525,032
17.79%
—
9 June 2002
Prime Minister
TBD (2nd round)
Union for a Popular Movement
8,408,023
33.30%
Union for French Democracy
1,226,462
4.86%
Socialist Party
6,086,599
24.11%
16 June 2002
Jean-Pierre Raffarin
10,026,669
47.26%
Socialist Party
7,482,169
35.26%
Union for French Democracy
832,784
3.92%
22 September 2002
Germany
Chancellor
Gerhard Schröder
Social Democratic Party of Germany
18,488,668
38.5%
CDU/CSU
18,482,641
38.5%
Alliance '90/The Greens
4,110,355
8.6%
6 October 2002
Brazil
President
TBD (2nd round)
Workers' Party
39,436,099
46.4%
Brazilian Social Democracy Party
19,694,843
23.2%
Brazilian Socialist Party
15,176,204
17.9%
27 October 2002
Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva
52,772,475
61.3%
33,356,860
38.7%
—
3 November 2002
Turkey
Prime Minister
Recep Tayyip Erdoğan
Justice and Development Party
10,808,229
34.28%
Republican People's Party
6,113,352
19.39%
True Path Party
3,008,942
9.54%
19 December 2002
South Korea
President
Roh Moo-hyun
Millennium Democratic Party
12,014,277
48.91%
Grand National Party
11,443,297
46.59%
Democratic Labor Party
957,148
3.90%
18 March 2003
China
President
Hu Jintao
Communist Party of China
2,170
72.9%
Revolutionary Committee of the Chinese Kuomintang
480
16%
—
27 April 2003
Argentina
President
Néstor Kirchner
Front for Victory
4,312,517
22.2%
Front for Loyalty
4,740,907
24.5%
Recreate for Growth
3,173,475
16.4%
9 November 2003
Japan
Prime Minister
Junichiro Koizumi
Liberal Democratic Party
20,660,185
34.96%
Democratic Party of Japan
22,095,636
37.39%
New Kōmeitō Party
8,733,444
14.78%
14 March 2004
Russia
President
Vladimir Putin
Vladimir Putin
49,558,328
71.9%
Communist Party of the Russian Federation
9,514,554
13.8%
Sergey Glazyev
2,850,610
4.1%
14 April 2004
South Africa
President
Thabo Mbeki
African National Congress
10,880,915
66.69%
Democratic Alliance
1,931,201
12.37%
Inkatha Freedom Party
1,088,664
6.97%
10 May 2004
India
Prime Minister
Manmohan Singh
Indian National Congress
138,312,337
35.4%
Bharatiya Janata Party
128,931,001
33.3%
Communist Party of India (Marxist)
30,578,698
7.7%
13 June 2004
European Union
President of the European Commission
Hans-Gert Pöttering
European People's Party Group
52,567,771
36.6%
Progressive Alliance of Socialists and Democrats
43,327,099
25.3%
Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe Group
Unknown
12.0%
28 June 2004
Canada
Prime Minister
Paul Martin
Liberal Party of Canada
4,982,220
36.73%
Conservative Party of Canada
4,019,498
25.49%
Bloc Québécois
1,680,109
12.39%
5 July 2004
Indonesia
President
TBD (2nd round)
Democratic Party
39,838,184
33.57%
Indonesian Democratic Party of Struggle
31,569,104
26.61%
Party of the Functional Groups
26,286,788
22.15%
20 September 2004
Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono
69,266,350
60.62%
44,990,704
39.38%
—
9 October 2004
Australia
Prime Minister
John Howard
Liberal-National Coalition
5,471,588
46.70%
Australian Labor Party
4,408,820
37.63%
Australian Greens
841,734
7.19%
2 November 2004
United States
President
George W. Bush
Republican Party
62,040,610
50.73%
Democratic Party
59,028,444
48.27%
Ralph Nader
465,151
0.38%
5 May 2005
United Kingdom
Prime Minister
Tony Blair
Labour Party
9,552,436
35.2%
Conservative Party
8,784,915
32.4%
Liberal Democrats
5,985,454
22.0%
11 September 2005
Japan
Prime Minister
Junichiro Koizumi
Liberal Democratic Party
25,887,798
38.18%
Democratic Party of Japan
21,036,425
31.02%
New Kōmeitō Party
8,987,620
13.25%
18 September 2005
Germany
Chancellor
Angela Merkel
CDU/CSU
16,631,049
35.2%
Social Democratic Party of Germany
16,194,665
34.2%
Free Democratic Party
4,648,144
9.8%
23 January 2006
Canada
Prime Minister
Stephen Harper
Conservative Party of Canada
5,374,071
36.27%
Liberal Party of Canada
4,479,415
30.23%
Bloc Québécois
1,553,201
10.48%
10 April 2006
Italy
Prime Minister
Romano Prodi
The Olive Tree
19,036,986
49.8%
Forza Italia
18,995,697
49.7%
North-East Project
93,172
0.27%
2 July 2006
Mexico
President
Felipe Calderón
National Action Party
15,000,284
35.89%
Party of the Democratic Revolution
14,756,350
35.31%
Institutional Revolutionary Party
9,301,441
22.26%
1 October 2006
Brazil
President
TBD (2nd round)
Workers' Party
46,662,365
48.61%
Brazilian Social Democracy Party
39,968,369
41.64%
Socialism and Liberty Party
6,575,393
6.85%
29 October 2006
Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva
58,295,042
60.83%
37,543,178
39.17%
—
22 April 2007
France
President
TBD (2nd round)
Union for a Popular Movement
11,448,663
31.18%
Socialist Party
9,500,112
25.87%
Union for French Democracy
6,820,119
18.57%
6 May 2007
Nicolas Sarkozy
18,983,138
53.06%
16,790,440
46.94%
—
10 June 2007
Prime Minister
TBD (2nd round)
10,289,737
39.54%
New Centre
616,440
2.37%
Socialist Party
6,436,520
24.73%
17 June 2007
François Fillon
9,463,408
46.37%
Socialist Party
8,622,529
42.25%
New Centre
433,057
2.12%
22 July 2007
Turkey
Prime Minister
Recep Tayyip Erdoğan
Justice and Development Party
16,327,291
46.58%
Republican People's Party
7,317,808
20.88%
Nationalist Movement Party
5,001,869
14.27%
28 October 2007
Argentina
President
Cristina Fernández de Kirchner
Front for Victory
8,651,066
45.29%
Support for an Egalitarian Republic
4,401,981
23.04%
Radical Civic Union
3,229,648
16.91%
24 November 2007
Australia
Prime Minister
Kevin Rudd
Australian Labor Party
5,388,184
43.38%
Liberal-National Coalition
5,229,024
42.09%
Australian Greens
967,789
7.79%
19 December 2007
South Korea
President
Lee Myung-bak
Grand National Party
11,492,389
48.7%
United New Democratic Party
6,174,681
26.1%
Lee Hoi-chang
3,559,963
15.1%
2 March 2008
Russia
President
Dmitry Medvedev
United Russia
52,530,712
71.2%
Communist Party of the Russian Federation
13,243,550
18.0%
Liberal Democratic Party of Russia
6,988,510
9.5%
18 March 2008
China
President
Hu Jintao
Communist Party of China
2,099
70.2%
Revolutionary Committee of the Chinese Kuomintang
888
29.7%
—
14 April 2008
Italy
Prime Minister
Silvio Berlusconi
The People of Freedom
17,063,874
46.8%
Democratic Party
13,686,673
37.5%
Union of the Centre
2,050,309
5.6%
14 October 2008
Canada
Prime Minister
Stephen Harper
Conservative Party of Canada
5,209,069
37.65%
Liberal Party of Canada
3,633,185
26.26%
Bloc Québécois
1,379,991
9.98%
4 November 2008
United States
President
Barack Obama
Democratic Party
69,498,516
52.93%
Republican Party
59,948,323
45.65%
Ralph Nader
739,034
0.56%
22 April 2009
South Africa
President
Jacob Zuma
African National Congress
11,650,748
65.90%
Democratic Alliance
2,945,829
16.66%
Congress of the People
1,311,027
7.42%
13 May 2009
India
Prime Minister
Manmohan Singh
Indian National Congress
153,482,356
37.22%
Bharatiya Janata Party
102,689,312
24.63%
Communist Party of India (Marxist)
88,174,229
21.15%
7 June 2009
European Union
President of the European Commission
José Manuel Barroso
European People's Party Group
Unknown
36%
Progressive Alliance of Socialists and Democrats
Unknown
25%
Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe Group
Unknown
11.4%
8 July 2009
Indonesia
President
Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono
Democratic Party
73,874,562
60.80%
Indonesian Democratic Party of Struggle
32,548,105
26.79%
Golkar
15,081,814
12.41%
30 August 2009
Japan
Prime Minister
Yukio Hatoyama
Democratic Party of Japan
29,844,799
42.41%
Liberal Democratic Party
18,810,217
26.73%
New Kōmeitō Party
8,054,007
11.45%
27 September 2009
Germany
Chancellor
Angela Merkel
CDU/CSU
14,658,515
33.8%
Social Democratic Party of Germany
9,990,488
23.0%
Free Democratic Party
6,316,080
14.6%
6 May 2010
United Kingdom
Prime Minister
David Cameron
Conservative Party
10,703,654
36.1%
Labour Party
8,606,517
29.0%
Liberal Democrats
6,836,248
23.0%
21 August 2010
Australia
Prime Minister
Julia Gillard
Australian Labor Party
4,711,363
37.99%
Liberal-National Coalition
5,365,529
43.32%
Australian Greens
1,458,998
11.76%
3 October 2010
Brazil
President
TBD (2nd round)
Workers' Party
47,651,434
46.91%
Brazilian Social Democracy Party
33,132,283
32.61%
Green Party
19,636,359
19.33%
31 October 2010
Dilma Rousseff
55,752,529
56.05%
43,711,388
43.95%
—
2 May 2011
Canada
Prime Minister
Stephen Harper
Conservative Party of Canada
5,832,401
53.90%
New Democratic Party
4,508,474
30.63%
Liberal Party of Canada
2,783,175
11.04%
12 June 2011
Turkey
Prime Minister
Recep Tayyip Erdoğan
Justice and Development Party
21,399,082
49.83%
Republican People's Party
11,155,972
25.98%
Nationalist Movement Party
5,585,513
13.01%
23 October 2011
Argentina
President
Cristina Fernández de Kirchner
Front for Victory
11,865,055
54.1%
Socialist Party
3,684,970
16.8%
Radical Civic Union
2,443,016
11.1%
4 March 2012
Russia
President
Vladimir Putin
United Russia
46,602,075
63.6%
Communist Party of the Russian Federation
12,318,353
17.2%
Mikhail Prokhorov
5,722,508
8.0%
22 April 2012
France
President
TBD (2nd round)
Socialist Party
10,272,705
28.63%
Union for a Popular Movement
9,753,629
27.18%
National Front
6,421,426
17.90%
6 May 2012
François Hollande
18,000,668
51.64%
16,860,685
48.36%
—
10 June 2012
Prime Minister
TBD (2nd round)
7,617,996
29.35%
7,037,471
27.12%
Europe Ecology – The Greens
1,418,141
5.46%
17 June 2012
Jean-Marc Ayrault
9,420,426
40.91%
8,740,625
37.95%
828,916
3.15%
1 July 2012
Mexico
President
Enrique Peña Nieto
Institutional Revolutionary Party
19,226,284
38.21%
Party of the Democratic Revolution
15,896,999
31.59%
National Action Party
12,786,647
25.41%
6 November 2012
United States
President
Barack Obama
Democratic Party
65,915,795
51.06%
Republican Party
60,933,504
47.20%
Libertarian Party
1,275,971
0.99%
16 December 2012
Japan
Prime Minister
Shinzō Abe
Liberal Democratic Party
16,624,457
27.62%
Democratic Party of Japan
9,268,653
15.49%
Japan Restoration Party
12,262,228
20.38%
19 December 2012
South Korea
President
Park Geun-hye
Saenuri Party
15,773,128
51.55%
Democratic United Party
14,692,632
47.02%
Kang Ji-won
53,303
0.17%
25 February 2013
Italy
Prime Minister
Enrico Letta
Democratic Party
10,047,507
29.5%
The People of Freedom
9,923,100
29.1%
Five Star Movement
8,688,545
25.5%
16 March 2013
China
President
Xi Jinping
Communist Party of China
2,170
72.21%
Revolutionary Committee of the Chinese Kuomintang
830
27.79%
—
7 September 2013
Australia
Prime Minister
Tony Abbott
Liberal-National Coalition
5,882,818
46.70%
Australian Labor Party
4,311,365
33.38%
Australian Greens
1,116,918
8.65%
22 September 2013
Germany
Chancellor
Angela Merkel
CDU/CSU
18,165,446
41.5%
Social Democratic Party of Germany
11,252,215
25.7%
The Left
3,755,699
8.6%
7 May 2014
South Africa
President
Jacob Zuma
African National Congress
11,436,921
62.15%
Democratic Alliance
4,091,584
22.23%
Economic Freedom Fighters
1,169,259
6.35%
12 May 2014
India
Prime Minister
Narendra Modi
Bharatiya Janata Party
171,660,230
31.34%
Indian National Congress
106,935,942
19.52%
All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam
18,111,579
3.27%
25 May 2014
European Union
President of the European Commission
Jean-Claude Juncker
European People's Party Group
38,610,376
29.4%
Progressive Alliance of Socialists and Democrats
40,202,068
25.4%
European Conservatives and Reformists
8,612,168
9.3%
9 July 2014
Indonesia
President
Joko Widodo
Indonesian Democratic Party of Struggle
70,997,833
53.15%
Great Indonesia Movement Party
62,576,444
46.85%
—
10 August 2014
Turkey
President
Recep Tayyip Erdoğan
Justice and Development Party
21,000,143
51.79%
Republican People's Party alliance
15,587,720
38.44%
Peoples' Democratic Party
3,958,048
9.76%
5 October 2014
Brazil
President
TBD (2nd round)
Workers' Party
43,267,668
41.59%
Brazilian Social Democracy Party
34,897,211
33.55%
Brazilian Socialist Party
22,176,619
21.32%
26 October 2014
Dilma Rousseff
54,501,119
51.64%
51,041,155
48.36%
—
14 December 2014
Japan
Prime Minister
Shinzō Abe
Liberal Democratic Party
17,658,916
33.11%
Democratic Party of Japan
9,775,991
18.33%
Japan Innovation Party
8,382,699
15.72%
7 May 2015
United Kingdom
Prime Minister
David Cameron
Conservative Party
11,334,576
36.9%
Labour Party
9,347,304
30.4%
Scottish National Party
1,454,436
4.7%
7 June 2015
Turkey
Prime Minister
Ahmet Davutoğlu
Justice and Development Party
18,867,411
40.87%
Republican People's Party
11,518,139
24.95%
Nationalist Movement Party
7,520,006
16.29%
19 October 2015
Canada
Prime Minister
Justin Trudeau
Liberal Party of Canada
6,943,276
39.47%
Conservative Party of Canada
5,613,614
31.91%
New Democratic Party
3,470,350
13.02%
25 October 2015
Argentina
President
TBD (2nd round)
Front for Victory
9,338,490
37.08%
Republican Proposal
8,601,131
34.15%
Renewal Front
5,386,977
21.39%
1 November 2015
Turkey
Prime Minister
Ahmet Davutoğlu
Justice and Development Party
23,681,926
49.50%
Republican People's Party
12,111,812
25.32%
Peoples' Democratic Party
5,148,085
10.76%
22 November 2015
Argentina
President
Mauricio Macri
Republican Proposal
12,997,938
51.34%
Front for Victory
12,317,329
48.66%
—
2 July 2016
Australia
Prime Minister
Malcolm Turnbull
Liberal-National Coalition
5,693,605
42.04%
Australian Labor Party
4,702,296
34.73%
Australian Greens
1,385,650
10.23%
8 November 2016
United States
President
Donald Trump
Republican Party
62,984,825
46.09%
Democratic Party
65,853,516
48.18%
Libertarian Party
4,489,221
3.28%
23 April 2017
France
President
TBD (2nd round)
En Marche!
8,657,326
24.01%
National Front
7,679,493
21.30%
The Republicans
7,213,797
20.01%
7 May 2017
Emmanuel Macron
20,743,128
66.10%
10,638,475
33.90%
—
9 May 2017
South Korea
President
Moon Jae-in
Democratic Party of Korea
13,423,800
41.08%
Liberty Korea Party
7,852,849
24.03%
People's Party
6,998,342
21.41%
8 June 2017
United Kingdom
Prime Minister
Theresa May
Conservative Party
13,636,690
42.3%
Labour Party
12,877,869
40.0%
Scottish National Party
977,568
3.0%
11 June 2017
France
Prime Minister
TBD (2nd round)
En Marche!
7,323,496
32.33%
The Republicans
4,885,997
21.57%
Socialist Party
2,154,269
9.51%
18 June 2017
Édouard Philippe
8,926,901
49.11%
4,898,061
26.95%
1,361,190
7.49%
24 September 2017
Germany
Chancellor
Angela Merkel
CDU/CSU
15,315,576
32.9%
Social Democratic Party of Germany
9,538,367
20.5%
Alternative for Germany
5,877,094
12.6%
22 October 2017
Japan
Prime Minister
Shinzō Abe
Liberal Democratic Party
18,555,717
33.27%
Constitutional Democratic Party of Japan
11,084,890
19.87%
Kibō no Tō
9,677,524
17.35%
Political affiliations of post-WWII United States Presidents [ edit ]
World Heritage Site location maps [ edit ]
World Heritage Sites in Queensland
First Australian award recipients [ edit ]
Olympic Medal : Edwin Flack , Summer Olympics 1896 (Gold in Athletics - Men's 800 metres & Men's 1500 metres )
Nobel Prize : William Lawrence Bragg , Physics 1915 (with William Henry Bragg )
Academy Award : Ken G. Hall and Damien Parer , Best Documentary Feature 1942 (Kokoda Front Line! )
Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine : Howard Florey , 1945 (with Alexander Fleming and Ernst Boris Chain )
Tony Award : Judith Anderson , Best Actress in a Play 1948 (Medea )
Tennis Grand Slam : Ken McGregor and Frank Sedgman , Men's Doubles 1951
Golden Globe Award : Victoria Shaw , New Star of the Year - Actress 1956
Grammy Award : Joan Sutherland , Best Classical Performance - Vocal Soloist (with or without orchestra) 1962 (The Art of the Prima Donna )
Nobel Prize in Literature : Patrick White , 1973
Nobel Prize in Chemistry : John Cornforth , 1975 (with Vladimir Prelog )
Man Booker Prize : Thomas Keneally , 1982 (Schindler's Ark )
Grammy Award for Song of the Year : Terry Britten , 1985 (What's Love Got to Do with It with Graham Lyle )
Winter Olympic Medal : Steven Bradbury , Kieran Hansen , Andrew Murtha and Richard Nizielski , Winter Olympics 1994 (Bronze in Short track speed skating - Men's 5000 metre relay )
Winter Olympic Gold Medal : Steven Bradbury , Winter Olympics 2002 (Short track speed skating - Men's 1000 metres )
Golden Raspberry Award : Nicole Kidman , Worst Screen Couple 2005 (Bewitched with Will Ferrell )
Fields Medal : Terence Tao , 2006
Tour de France : Cadel Evans , 2011
Masters Tournament : Adam Scott , 2013
Historically interesting stories of Black people in non-Black contexts [ edit ]
Leaders of nations with a population of 100 million or greater.
Hypothetical election results excluding votes for two-party system major parties [ edit ]
The following infoboxes suppose that any votes for either of the two major parties within a two-party system were not counted, and determine which minor parties would form government in this hypothetical scenario.
Hypothetical United Kingdom general election, 2017 Turnout 8.9% ( 57.5%)
Hypothetical United Kingdom general election, 2015 Turnout 21.7% ( 43.4%)
Hypothetical United Kingdom general election, 2010 Turnout 22.8% 38.6%
Hypothetical Australian federal election, 2016
Hypothetical Australian federal election, 2013 Registered 13,726,070 Turnout 19.81%
Hypothetical Australian federal election, 2001 Registered 12,054,664 Turnout 18.31%
Hypothetical United States presidential election, 2016 Turnout 3.44% 51.5 pp
Hypothetical United States presidential election, 2012 Turnout 0.95% 57.25 pp
Hypothetical United States presidential election, 2008 Turnout 0.83% 55.87 pp
^ Simons, Margaret (1 October 2022). "Penny Wong Wants Australia to Be More Than a Supporting Player" . Foreign Policy . In government for just four months, Wong has already overseen an extraordinary surge in international engagement. The day after being sworn in, new Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and Wong were in Tokyo for the Quad summit, quickly followed by Albanese's first visit as Prime Minister to Indonesia. Meanwhile, in the administration's first 100 days, Wong made four separate trips to the Pacific (Fiji, Samoa and Tonga, New Zealand and the Solomon Islands, and July's Pacific Islands Forum summit) and three trips to Southeast Asia (Vietnam and Malaysia, followed by Singapore and Indonesia twice).
^ Maude, Richard (11 November 2022). "South-East Asia and the Wong doctrine" . The Australia Financial Review . The seemingly tireless Wong has already visited Vietnam, Malaysia, Singapore, Indonesia, Cambodia, Brunei, Thailand, and East Timor.
^ Knott, Matthew (24 December 2022). "Penny Wong is making waves, despite the odd wipeout" . The Sydney Morning Herald . In the seven months since Labor took office, Wong has maintained a prodigious travel schedule, making 28 overseas trips to 24 countries (some countries have received two visits).
^ Hurst, Daniel (16 May 2023). "Australia 'diminished': Penny Wong's frenetic mission to repair regional ties" . The Guardian . After Wong flies from Laos to the Philippines on Tuesday, she will have visited every member of the Pacific Island Forum and every member of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean) except for military-ruled Myanmar in her first year in office... Wong initially says she "would anticipate a different intensity of travel over the next year" – but then she stops to look at her diary. The minister lets out a nervous laugh. "I'm not sure it's much less to be honest."