After 10 years, five leaders and a name tweak, the Opportunity Party is on the cusp of making it into Parliament for the first time.It registered 4.6 percent support in the latest 1News Verian poll, just outside the 5 percent threshold to make it into Parliament.Since the first MMP election in 1996, no genuinely new party - as opposed to one founded or led by veterans of an existing parliamentary party - has made it into Parliament.For example, ACT was founded by former Labour and National MPs, New Zealand First splintered off National and the Greens first entered under the Alliance banner, which was a spinoff from Labour. United Future was another Labour splinter, as was the original Māori Party, which itself birthed Mana.To get into Parliament, Opportunity will need to either poll over the 5 percent threshold at the election or win an electorate seat - the latter of which has been a lifeline in the past for the likes of ACT and Te Pāti Māori.So how do they rate their chances? And what are they all about?Qiulae Wong, who became leader near the end of 2025, speaks to Morning Report.