In early April 2017, Pruaitch publicly criticised his own government's management of the economy at a party meeting of the National Alliance Party. He was then formally still in the Cabinet as Treasurer. He stressed the rapid growth of the national debt and the fall of government revenue. He doubted Peter O'Neill's willingness to curb public spending at a time when public debt was increasing. Early in May, he accused O'Neill of not providing sufficient funding for police services in preparation for the 2017 general election. O’Neill responded after a few days stating that Pruaitch, himself as minister in his Cabinet, was responsible for the state of affairs of the economy. Pruaitch was dismissed as treasurer on 12 May 2017, but O'Neill offered him to remain a member of the government as a minister without a portfolio. However, Pruaitch decided to leave the coalition. A vote of no confidence cannot be moved in PNG’s national parliament during a period of 18 months after the commencement of the term of a Prime Minister. The O’Neill/Able government therefore became vulnerable in February 2019. In November 2018, a coalition of opposition parties was formed in anticipation of a vote of no confidence. On 28 May 2019, this coalition appointed Pruaitch as nominee for Prime Minister in the Alternative
Government of Papua New Guinea. He was proposed and introduced by
James Marape as the unanimous choice of the opposition MPs. Marape was
Minister of Finance but he defected from the O’Neill/Abel government in early April 2019. He had been declared as alternate MP before on 7 May 2019. However, he later resigned from the post after he was mentioned together with O’Neill in an Ombudsman report on the UBS loan. Pruaitch thus became the leader of that coalition, which at that point still was far short of the numbers needed to succeed. This changed after more and more MPs joined them. The defection of
William Duma and his
United Resources Party gave the opposition the numbers to defeat O’Neill. This was followed by another contest for the post of alternate prime minister between Marape and Pruaitch. Pruaitch won with 37 votes against 28 for Marape. Afterward, Marape proposed Pruaitch as the prime ministerial candidate of the opposition; the expectation was that the vote of no confidence would go ahead with Pruaitch as alternate PM. O’Neill then avoided a vote of no confidence by resigning as prime minister, which created an opening filled by Marape, who, together with 28 MPs, rejoined PNC (O’Neill’s party that he had left before). Marape was then elected as PM by an overwhelming majority of MPs: 109 out of 111 votes. Pruaitch initially reacted with a proposal to nominate Peter O”Neill. O’Neill’s nomination was, however, withdrawn before the vote. Pruaitch protested against the procedure installing Marape as PM and opened a court case four months after the election in August 2019 as he considered the succession illegal. However, in September he withdrew the court case after he left the opposition and joined the government coalition. In November, Marape appointed Pruaitch Minister of Foreign Affairs. In July 2020, a leadership tribunal against Pruaitch revived accusations of misconduct dating from two decades prior. Most cases were dismissed in early October. The remaining cases were minor and decided. This ended a situation where Pruaitch was active in office while he was supposed to be suspended. This is relevant as the accusations could no longer be levelled against him in the next sequence of events. On 14 November 2020, Pruaitch joined a group of 13 Ministers in a "camp" of MPs meeting in Vanimo – the constituency of
Belden Namah, leader of the opposition – planning a vote of no confidence in the Marape government. Patrick Pruaitch was selected as the alternate PM in a contest with
Sam Basil: 27 votes against 24, with 4 abstentions. Marape congratulated Pruaitch. After a court case, they succeeded in tabling this motion on 15 December with confidence in a majority. They had a slim majority: the government claimed to have 55 MPs behind them. However, the move to unseat Marape collapsed when 18 MPs – among whom Sam Basil – rejoined the government side when entering the chamber giving the government support of 90 members out of the 111 seat parliament. The National Alliance Party had split during the attempt to mount a vote of no confidence as some of their MPs remained loyal to Marape. Pruaitch rejoined those loyal members, along with the other MPs who had supported the vote of no confidence. They therefore supported again the Marape government. Pruaitch lost his seat in the 2022 election. ==References==