Amuitahiraʻa o te Nunaʻa Maohi (French: Rassemblement du peuple Maohi, lit. 'Rally of the Maohi People'), known as Tāhōʻēraʻa Huiraʻatira (French: Rassemblement populaire, lit. 'Popular Rally') until January 2022, is a political party in French Polynesia. The party is conservative, pro-independence and pro-association. It was founded in 1977 by Gaston Flosse, who initially supported French Polynesia's autonomy arrangement with France before his current support for independent association with France, and who has led the party for over 20 years.
Historically, the party was backed by most non-Polynesian settlers (Europeans and Asians) in French Polynesia; nonetheless the party had to rely on Polynesian support to win elections, as they make up 70% of the territory's population.
History
The party was formed in 1977 from the Tahitian Union-UDR.[2] Originally Gaullist, in 1980 it announced its support for self-government for French Polynesia.[1]
Gaston Tong Sang was the party's presidential candidate in the election of March 2005, but was defeated by Oscar Temaru by 29 votes to 26. On 26 December 2006, Tong Sang was elected President of French Polynesia. He fell to a no-confidence vote on 31 August 2007, and Temaru was elected again on 14 September 2007. Tong Sang then split from his former party to found a new party called O Porinetia To Tatou Ai'a.
At the 2013 territorial elections the party won 38 of 57 seats.[4] Flosse was elected president, with Nuihau Laurey as his vice-president.[5] In September 2014 Flosse was convicted of corruption and removed from office,[6] and Édouard Fritch succeeded him as president.[7] A subsequent dispute between Fritch and Flosse[8] and a series of expulsions[9] saw the party split in May 2015, with 15 MPs leaving to form Tapura Huiraatira.[10] A further series of expulsions and defections saw the party weakened further before the 2018 election.[11][12][13]
Flosse attempted to stand at the 2018 territorial elections but was ruled ineligible by the courts,[15] and he did not appear on the party list.[16] The party won 28 percent of the vote and 11 seats in the election.[17] All of them left the party for other groups over the course of the term.[18]
The party failed to meet the 12.5% threshold to enter the second round of the 2023 election.[21] It subsequently formed a joint list with Tāpura Huiraʻatira, the Union of Autonomists Against Independence.[22]
In July 2024 Gaston Flosse stepped down as president of the party.[23]
References
^ ab"Neutron tests anger tahitians". Papua New Guinea Post-Courier. 18 September 1980. p. 5. Retrieved 4 February 2022 – via National Library of Australia.