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See main article: Fiji election of 2006. In August 2005, the NVTLP joined the
Grand Coalition Initiative Group, an electoral
coalition of five political parties led and supported mostly by indigenous Fijians, to contest the
election due in 2006. All parties participating in the coalition would share "preferences" under Fiji's
instant run-off voting system, which allows votes to be transferred from low-polling candidates to higher polling-candidates, according to a ranking of "preferences" specified by the candidates, though voters may customize the ranking. The party has expressed confidence that the election will unite the people of Fiji. Konataci said that some candidates of the NVTLP would probably be women. Party leader Iliesa Duvuloco complained on 12 April that some 30 NVTLP candidates had been disqualified because they could not afford to pay the
F$500 deposit required by the Elections Office, in lieu of the 250 signatures from electors they had failed to collect. Claiming that most indigenous Fijians were poor, Duvuloco was quoted in the
Fiji Sun as saying that the required deposit was an injustice.
Calls for all land to be returned On 6 March 2006,
Radio New Zealand quoted Duvuloco as calling for all
freehold land to be restored to indigenous landowners. He also condemned the present
Constitution, which he called a betrayal of the Fijian people. In a separate report, the
Daily Post newspaper quoted him as saying that former
Vice-President Ratu Jope Seniloli should be appointed
President, at the
Great Council of Chiefs meeting on 8 March. He saw Seniloli, who resigned the Vice-Presidency in November 2004 in disgrace following his conviction on coup-related offences, as providing the "good strong leadership" which Fiji needed.
Election result The party did not win any seats in the
2006 election. ==2006 coup and aftermath==