Transcript
That's the Tapura Huiraatira party leader Edouard Fritch thanking his supporters in his victory speech, saying they have voted for peace and stability.
With 49 percent of the vote the party was almost 20 percent ahead of its closest rival.
The electoral system rewards the party coming first, which means it has now 38 seats in the 57-member assembly.
That's twice the number of seats won by the two opposition parties put together.
The Tahoeraa leader Gaston Flosse, who was barred from standing because of a corruption conviction, was disappointed and said he could not congratulate the winner.
"When you see all the cheating, all the fiddling, everything that is false and illegal be it by the French state of by Edouard Fritch, I won't use the right word but simply say it's unbearable."
Gaston Flosse took issue with some convicted politicians being allowed to stand while others like him have been banned.
Mr Fritch had two convictions in the past term and was forced to reimburse the taxpayer more than $US80,000 dollars of funds abused at the time when he was still a Tahoeraa politician.
The pro-independence leader Oscar Temaru had campaigned on the subject of probity pointing out that the Tapura stood nine candidates with convictions for misspending public funds.
He says he will continue his battle.
"Against cronyism, complicity, all sorts of betrayal that we have endured and also against these politics of prostitution."
The Tapura's election victory is alerady being challenged by a citizen Yves Conroy who lodged a complaint with the supreme court, accusing Mr Fritch and four ministers of violating the electoral law which bans politicians from using taxpayers' money to travel to political meetings.
Mr Conroy, who was instrumental in the demise of Gaston Flosse for his corruption convictions, is adamant that there is no escape for Mr Fritch because of the case law emanating from the Nicolas Sarkozy affair.
It is not known if the Tahoeraa will also file a formal challenge to back up its allegations of cheating.
In 2004, it succeeded in getting the Tahiti election annulled after saying that the blue curtains at the voting booths in Mahina favoured the Tavini of Mr Temaru.
Both Edouard Fritch and Gaston Flosse are to appear in the criminal court at a date yet to be set for their actions as former and current mayors of the town of Pirae.
They are alleged to have arranged for the town administration to pay for the water supply to the upmarket Erima neighbourhood, where Flosse used to lived.
The new assembly is due to be convened on the 17th of May to elect an assembly president and a day later to choose the president of the territorial government.
This is Walter Zweifel.