Pull to refresh
Logo
Daily Brief
Following
Why Ranks Sign Up
New Caledonia votes for a new Congress after years of deadlock

New Caledonia votes for a new Congress after years of deadlock

Rule Changes

First territorial election since 2019 reshapes who governs the French Pacific territory's independence talks

Today: New Caledonia elects its Congress

Overview

New Caledonia last picked its Congress in 2019. On June 28, 2026, after deadly riots and three postponements, voters in the French Pacific territory finally went back to the polls.

The 54-seat Congress runs the territory and shapes its talks with Paris over independence. This vote resets the balance between parties that want to stay French and those that want a sovereign state.

Why it matters

The new Congress decides whether New Caledonia stays French, becomes an associated state, or pushes for full independence in the Pacific.

Questions about this story

No questions yet — be the first to ask.

Key Indicators

54
Congress seats at stake
Members drawn from three provincial assemblies; 28 needed for a majority.
7 years
Since the last vote
The previous Congress election was held in May 2019.
13+
Deaths in 2024 unrest
Eleven Kanak residents and two gendarmes died in the May 2024 riots.
~800
Businesses looted or burned
The 2024 unrest left the local economy near collapse.

Voices

Curated perspectives — historical figures and your fellow readers.

Ever wondered what historical figures would say about today's headlines?

Sign up to generate historical perspectives on this story.

Play

Exploring all sides of a story is often best achieved with Play.

Log in to play. Track your picks, climb the leaderboards. Log in Sign Up
Predict 3 ways this could play out. Contrarian picks score more — points lock when the scenario resolves. Log in to play
Higher or Lower Two numbers from this story. Guess which is bigger. 5 rounds to set a streak. Log in to play
Connections Sixteen names from the news. Find the four hidden groups of four. Log in to play

People Involved

Organizations Involved

Timeline

May 2024 June 2026

7 events Latest: Today
Tap a bar to jump to that date
  1. New Caledonia elects its Congress

    Today Election

    Voters fill all 54 Congress seats for the first time since 2019, setting up the next round of talks with France.

  2. Referendum on the accord delayed

    Government

    The planned vote on the Bougival Accord is postponed indefinitely as support erodes.

  3. Bougival Accord signed

    Agreement

    Manuel Valls and about twenty local leaders agree on a path to a "State of New Caledonia" within France.

  4. Curfew lifted as unrest ends

    Government

    The death toll stands at 13, with about 800 businesses looted or destroyed.

  5. Voter-roll bill scrapped

    Government

    Prime Minister Michel Barnier withdraws the disputed reform to calm the territory.

  6. France declares state of emergency

    Government

    Paris sends hundreds of troops to restore order as clashes spread across the territory.

  7. Riots erupt in Nouméa

    Unrest

    Violence breaks out over a French plan to expand voter rolls, adding about 25,000 residents.

Historical Context

3 moments from history that rhyme with this story — and how they unfolded.

June 1988

Matignon Accords (1988)

After deadly clashes between Kanak independence fighters and French forces, including the Ouvéa cave hostage crisis, Paris and local leaders signed peace accords. The deal split New Caledonia into three provinces and promised a future independence referendum.

Then

The violence stopped and a power-sharing structure took hold.

Now

It set the template of negotiated, phased decolonization that still governs the territory.

Why this matters now

It shows the pattern repeating today: violence, then a brokered accord, then a vote that resets local power.

May 1998

Nouméa Accord (1998)

France and New Caledonian parties agreed to transfer powers gradually and to hold up to three independence referendums. The accord froze the electoral roll to residents living there by 1998, a rule still in force for this election.

Then

It created the Congress and the provincial assemblies being elected now.

Now

It defined the legal frame for two decades of status politics.

Why this matters now

The 2026 vote uses the Nouméa roll, and the fight over expanding that roll sparked the 2024 riots.

2018-2021

Independence referendums (2018-2021)

New Caledonia held three votes on independence under the Nouméa Accord. All three rejected independence, but the FLNKS boycotted the 2021 vote, calling the result illegitimate during the pandemic.

Then

France treated the question as settled; the independence camp did not.

Now

The disputed 2021 result left no agreed path forward, feeding the 2024 crisis.

Why this matters now

This election is the first major test of public opinion since those contested referendums.

Sources

(5)