Like the majority of people of European descent living in New Caledonia, Backès remains strongly opposed to an independent New Caledonia, a goal supported by a large segment of the indigenous population. In the runup to a
third referendum on independence from France (held in late 2021), she travelled to New York to address the United Nations on 17 June 2021, pleading unsuccessfully before the UN Special Committee on Decolonisation for the removal of New Caledonia from the list of non-self-governing territories arguing that “in New Caledonia, there is no longer an administering power and a colonised people.” In July 2022, Backès, who had become a member of French President Macron’s Renaissance party, was appointed Secretary of State for Citizenship in Prime Minister Élisabeth Borne’s government. The following year, she decided to run for a New Caledonia seat in the September French senatorial elections. Although widely expected to win, she was soundly defeated by Robert Xowie, a pro-independence Indigenous Kanak leader. Soon afterward, she resigned her ministerial post. During
Bastille Day on 14 July 2024, Backès gave a controversial speech criticising the
Nouméa Accord and advocating the partition of New Caledonia along provincial lines following the
2024 New Caledonia unrest. While Southern Province is ruled by pro-loyalist parties, the Northern and Loyalty Islands Provinces are ruled by pro-independence parties. Backès' speech was criticised by the pro-independence
FLNKS political bureau spokesperson
Aloisio Sako and
Party of Kanak Liberation spokesperson
Judickaël Selefen. By contrast, her speech was praised by vice-president of the Southern Province
Virginie Ruffenach, who advocated a return to the provincial autonomy arrangement that began in 1988. == References ==