6 Mar 2016

Female MP could be Samoa deputy PM for first time

11:56 am on 6 March 2016
Four women MPs for the ruling HRPP party, from left Aliimalemanu Alofa Tu'uau, Gatoloaifa'ana Amataga Alesana Gidlow, Fiame Naomi and Faimalotoa Kika Stowers.

Fiame Naomi Mataafa, second from right, with fellow HRPP MPs (from left) Aliimalemanu Alofa Tu'uau, Gatoloaifa'ana Amataga Alesana Gidlow and Faimalotoa Kika Stowers. Photo: RNZI / Autagavaia Tipi Autagavaia

Fiame Naomi Mataafa, the daughter of the first prime minister of Samoa, has been earmarked to be the country's new deputy prime minister.

It would be the highest executive position that a woman has reached in the history of Samoa's government.

The possibility came following a selection meeting of the Human Rights Protection Party (HRPP) after voters went to the polls and gave the ruling party of Prime Minister Tuilaepa Sailele Malielegaoi its biggest landslide victory in a 30-year rule.

Provisional results show that HRPP won 44 of the 49 contested seats, while the opposition Tautua Samoa party won just three seats and independent candidates took two.

Fiame Naomi Mataafa was the minister of justice in the previous government, and has also previously been the minister of youth, women and rural affairs, and the minister of education.

She was educated in New Zealand and was aged 18 when her father, Mataafa Fiame Mulinuu II, passed away,

Her late mother, Laulu Fetauimalemau Mataafa, was also a member of parliament.

She could replace Fonotoe Lauofo Pierre Meredith as deputy prime minister and, according to political observers, would be the most logical choice to succeed Tuilaepa Sailele Malielegaoi as the head of HRPP and the next prime minister of Samoa should he give up the post.

She was one of four women elected to parliament in Friday's polls, all from the HRPP.

This means that a recent amendment to the constitution reserving five seats for women will be enforced, which will create a 50th seat in parliament for a female MP.

  • Samoa's ruling party given resounding mandate in elections