PM Fiame advises dissolution of parliament, calls for snap elections
Prime Minister Fiame Naomi Mata'afa in parliament on Tuesday.
Photo:
Samoa Government
Prime Minister Fiame Naomi Mata'afa has advised Samoa's head of state that it is necessary to dissolve parliament so the country can move to an election.
This follows the bill for the budget not getting enough support for a first reading on Tuesday, and Fiame announcing she would therefore
seek an early election
.
Tuimaleali'ifano Va'aleto'a Sualauvi II has accepted Fiame's advice and a formal notice will be duly gazetted to confirm the dissolution of the Legislative Assembly.
Parliament will go into caretaker mode, and the Cabinet will have the general direction and control of the existing government until the first session of the Legislative Assembly following dissolution.
Fiame, who has led a minority government since being ousted from her former FAST party in January, finally conceded defeat on the floor of parliament on Tuesday morning after her government's 2025 Budget was voted down.
MPs from both the opposition Human Rights Protection Party and Fiame's former FAST party joined forces to defeat the budget with the final vote coming in 34 against, 16 in support and two abstentions.
Tuesday was the Samoa parliament's first sitting since back-to-back no-confidence motions were moved - unsuccessfully - against prime minister Fiame.
In January Fiame removed her FAST Party chairman La'auli Leuatea Schmidt and several FAST ministers from her Cabinet.
In turn, La'auli ejected her from the FAST Party, leaving her leading a minority government.
Her former party had been pushing for an early election,
including via legal action
.
The election is set to be held within three months.
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