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WorldPublished: 28 June 2026 at 13:38

New Caledonia polls close in first provincial elections since 2019

On Sunday, New Caledonia held its first provincial elections since 2019, delayed from 2024, with peaceful voting and heightened security after deadly riots in 2024.

Foto: France 24

Voters in the French overseas territory of New Caledonia cast ballots on Sunday in the archipelago's first provincial elections since 2019, after the vote was delayed as talks stalled over its political future. The results will determine the balance of power ahead of fresh negotiations with France on the territory's status, with independence remaining the defining political issue.

The poll took place peacefully, an AFP journalist in the capital Noumea observed, with additional security deployed two years after deadly riots erupted over a plan to extend voting rights. An hour before polling stations closed at 6 pm local time, turnout stood at 54.42 per cent – down slightly from 58.49 per cent at the same point in 2019, according to local authorities.

Some 192,500 voters were eligible to elect 76 councillors for three provincial assemblies – 40 in the South Province, 22 in the North Province and 14 in the Loyalty Islands. Fifty-four of those elected will become members of the Pacific archipelago's Congress, the territory's main governing institution and the only body authorised to pass local laws. Members of Congress will then elect up to 11 members to the executive branch known as the collegial government.

The elections come after the main pro-independence group rejected a deal with France intended to bring stability. The so-called Bougival Accord would have created a Caledonian state and established a Caledonian nationality enshrined in the French constitution, but would have scrapped any future referendums on independence. Three referendums held in 2018, 2020 and 2021 returned majorities in favour of remaining part of France, although pro-independence groups boycotted the third vote. The independence movement retains strong support, particularly among the indigenous Melanesian Kanak population.

A law approved in May added around 10,575 previously excluded "native-born" residents to the electoral roll, including more than 4,000 people with so-called "customary civil status", which denotes Kanaks. The change increased the number of eligible voters after the electoral roll had been frozen under a landmark 1998 agreement. A previous plan to extend voting rights to thousands of non-indigenous long-term residents sparked deadly riots in 2024, which left 14 people dead and caused more than two billion euros worth of damage.

France has deployed around 2,400 law enforcement officers to New Caledonia, where they are to remain until mid-July. French Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu has promised negotiations on the overseas territory's future will resume next month, with the goal of reaching an agreement before the year's end.

"My grandparents fought hard to secure the right" to vote, said Cedric Ixeco, a 43-year-old who hails from the indigenous Kanak group, adding he "wants to see things change" in people's day-to-day lives. "Above all, I hope we can stabilise the country and manage to find common ground," said Barbara Meylan, 53.

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