What comes next will have vast ramifications for the Pacific nation, its region and for democracy globally.
On Monday May 24, Fa'atuatua I Le Atua Samoa Ua Tasi (FAST) Party members, led by Fiame Naomi Mata’afa, arrived at parliament house to be sworn into office following their one-seat election win on April 9.
They found the doors locked by order of Tuilaepa Sa’ilele Malielegaoi, who has been prime minister for the last 23 years. By late afternoon, with the building still locked, the marquee swearing-in ceremony took place outside.
This was the 45th day since the election, the last date on which the newly elected parliament could sit according to Samoa’s constitution.