The Tari-Pori MP is expected to go up against prime minister Peter O'Neill as the latter faces a vote of no confidence in parliament.
A former close ally of the prime minister, Mr Marape's resignation as finance minister last month sparked a series of resignations from the ruling People's National Congress party which has resulted in the most serious challenge to Mr O'Neill's leadership since 2012.
The MPs who left the PNC, plus several defectors from other coalition parties, have merged with the opposition as it plans to table a motion of no confidence against the prime minister today.
If the motion is in order, the vote of no confidence will be held next week
Mr Marape and others who left the government have raised concern about its signing of the Papua LNG Gas Project agreement with French company Total SA, and the government's handling of natural resources wealth.
A number have also claimed that corruption is out of control and that Mr O'Neill failed to consult with them in government.
"We're a Melanesian society, we're a country of Melanesian consensus-style leadership, not one man-style dictatorship," Mr Marape said, shortly before the alternative government, camped at Port Moresby's Laguna Hotel, met to make its nomination.
Mr Marape said he wanted a new government to lay foundations for a younger leadership to build the country's future.
Across town at the Crown Hotel where his government group is based, Mr O'Neill released a statement on Monday afternoon saying that at present his coalition had more than 60 MPs in the 111-seat parliament.
The prime minister branded the alternative government as a group of selfish individuals who were threatening PNG's political stability of the past seven years.
But discontent with Mr O'Neill is deep within his own party, where a number of members have sought to replace him as leader with his deputy Charles Abel.
MPs on the opposition side said they were confident of more MPs coming to join it for the confidence vote.
However a number of MPs have been seen in both camps on the same day over the past several days, signalling the situation remains fluid.
Of yore, the dukes of talk… if memory is not too dim, an ‘English nursery rhyme’ had variety of applications and appeared in several languages, and various persons may have mention.
The second stanza is recalled as:
"When they were up, they were up,
And when they were down, they were down,
And when they were only halfway up,
They were neither up nor down."
See: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Grand_Old_Duke_of_York
OK, part way there, not stagnant, pressing on?
Posted by: Lindsay F Bond | 09 May 2019 at 12:03 AM