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2011 New Zealand general election

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
General election in New Zealand

2011 New Zealand general election

← 2008
26 November 2011 (2011-11-26)[1]
2014 →

All 121 seats in theHouse of Representatives, including oneoverhang seat
61 seats needed for a majority
Opinion polls
Turnout2,278,989 (74.21%)Decrease5.25%
 First partySecond partyThird party
 
LeaderJohn KeyPhil GoffRussel Norman
Metiria Turei
PartyNationalLabourGreen
Leader since27 November 200611 November 20083 June 2006
30 May 2009
Leader's seatHelensvilleMount RoskillList
List
Last election58 seats, 44.93%43 seats, 33.99%9 seats, 6.72%
Seats before58429
Seats won593414
Seat changeIncrease1Decrease9Increase5
Electorate vote1,027,696
47.31%

Increase0.71pp
762,897
35.12%
Decrease0.10 pp
155,492
7.16%
Increase1.53 pp
Party vote1,058,638
47.31%

Increase2.38pp
614,936
27.48%
Decrease6.51 pp
247,370
11.06%
Increase4.34 pp

 Fourth partyFifth partySixth party
 
LeaderWinston PetersTariana Turia
Pita Sharples
Hone Harawira
PartyNZ FirstMāori PartyMana
Leader since18 July 19937 July 200430 April 2011
Leader's seatListTe Tai Hauāuru
Tāmaki Makaurau
Te Tai Tokerau
Last election0 seats, 4.07%5 seats, 2.39%(not yet founded)
Seats before041
Seats won831
Seat changeIncrease8Decrease1Steady
Electorate vote39,892
1.84%
Increase0.15 pp
39,320
1.81%
Decrease1.53 pp
29,872
1.38%
new
Party vote147,544
6.59%
Increase2.52 pp
31,982
1.43%
Decrease0.96 pp
24,168
1.08%
new

 Seventh partyEighth party
 
LeaderDon BrashPeter Dunne
PartyACTUnited Future
Leader since28 April 201116 November 2000
Leader's seatRan inNorth Shore (lost)Ōhariu
Last election5 seats, 3.65%1 seat, 0.87%
Seats before51
Seats won11
Seat changeDecrease4Steady
Electorate vote31,001
1.43%
Decrease1.56 pp
18,792
0.87%
Decrease0.26 pp
Party vote23,889
1.07%
Decrease2.58 pp
13,443
0.60%
Decrease0.27 pp

Results by electorate, shaded by winning margin

Prime Minister and coalition before election

John Key (National)
National (C&S:ACT,Māori,United Future)

Subsequent Prime Minister and coalition

John Key (National)
National (C&S:Māori,ACT,United Future)

Parliamentary makeup prior to the 2011 election.
Government:
  National (58)
  Māori (4)
  ACT (1)
  United Future (1)
Opposition:
  Labour (42)
  Green (9)
  Progressive (1)
  Mana (1)
  Independent (1)

Ageneral election took place in New Zealand on 26 November 2011[1] to determine the membership of the50th New Zealand Parliament.

One hundred and twenty-one MPs were elected to theNew Zealand House of Representatives, 70 from single-memberelectorates, and 51 from party lists including oneoverhang seat. New Zealand since 1996 has used theMixed Member Proportional (MMP) voting system, giving voters two votes: one for a political party and the other for their local electorate MP. Areferendum on the voting system was held at the same time as the election,[2] with voters voting by majority to keep the MMP system.[3]

A total of 3,070,847 people were registered to vote in the election, with over 2.2 million votes cast and aturnout of 74.21%[4] – the lowest turnout since 1887.[5] The incumbentNational Party, led byJohn Key, gained the plurality with 47.3% of the party vote and 59 seats, two seats short of holding a majority. The opposingLabour Party, led byPhil Goff, lost ground winning 27.5% of the vote and 34 seats, while theGreen Party won 11.1% of the vote and 14 seats – the biggest share of the party vote for a minor party since 1996.New Zealand First, having won no seats in 2008 due to its failure to either reach the 5% threshold or win an electorate, made a comeback with 6.6% of the vote entitling them to eight seats.

National's confidence and supply partners in the 49th Parliament meanwhile suffered losses.ACT New Zealand won less than a third of the party vote it received in 2008, reducing from five seats to one. TheMāori Party was reduced from five seats to three, as the party vote split between the Māori Party and former Māori Party MPHone Harawira'sMana Party.United Future lost party votes, but retained their one seat in Parliament.

Following the election, National reentered intoconfidence and supply agreements with ACT and United Future on 5 December 2011,[6][7] and with the Māori Party on 11 December 2011,[8] to form aminority government with a seven-seat majority (64 seats to 57) and give theFifth National Government a second term in office.

Background

[edit]

Election date and other key dates

[edit]

The election date was set as Saturday 26 November 2011, as predicted by the media.[9] Breaking with tradition, Prime Minister John Key announced the election date in February. Traditionally, the election date is a closely guarded secret, announced as late as possible. The date follows the tradition of holding the general election on the last Saturday of November unless the schedule is interrupted by a snap election or to circumvent holding a by-election.

TheGovernor-General must issuewrits for an election within seven days of the expiration or dissolution of Parliament.[10] Under section 17 of theConstitution Act 1986, Parliament expires three years "from the day fixed for the return of the writs issued for the last preceding general election of members of the House of Representatives, and no longer." The writs for the previous general election were returnable on 27 November 2008.[11] As a result, the49th Parliament would have expired, if not dissolved earlier, on 27 November 2011. As that day was a Sunday, the last available working day was 25 November 2011. Consequently, the last day for issuance of writs of election was 2 December 2011. Except in some circumstances (such a recount or the death/incapacitation of an electorate candidate), the writs must be returned within 50 days of their issuance with the last possible working day being 20 January 2012.[12] Because polling day must be a Saturday,[12] the last possible polling date for the election was 7 January 2012, allowing time for the counting of special votes.[13] The Christmas/New Year holiday period made the last realistic date for the election Saturday 10 December 2011. TheRugby World Cup 2011 was hosted by New Zealand between 9 September and 23 October 2011, and ruled out all the possible election dates in this period. This left two possible windows for the general election: on or before 2 September and 29 October to 10 December.

Key dates of the election were:[14]

2 February 2011Prime Minister John Key announces election to be held on 26 November
6 October 2011Last sitting day for the 49th Parliament
20 October 2011Governor-General Jerry Mateparae dissolves the 49th Parliament
26 October 2011Writ Day – Governor-General issues formal direction to the Electoral Commission to hold the election.
Electoral roll closes for printing (all people enrolling after this date must cast special declaration votes).
2 November 2011Details of candidates for election and polling places released.
9 November 2011Advance and overseas voting begins.
25 November 2011Advance voting ends. Overseas voting ends 4:00pm local time.
26 November 2011Election Day – polling places open 9:00am to 7:00pm. Preliminary results released progressively after 7:00pm.
10 December 2011Official results released
15 December 2011Writ for election returned; official declaration of elected members

However, as the recount of theWaitakere was not completed in time for the writ to be returned on 15 December, the return of the writ was delayed to 17 December 2011.

49th Parliament, 2008–2011

[edit]

Following the2008 general election,National Party leader and Prime MinisterJohn Key announced a confidence and supply agreement withACT, theMāori Party andUnited Future to form theFifth National Government. These arrangements gave the National-led government a majority of 16 seats, with 69 on confidence-and-supply in the 122-seat Parliament.

Labour,Greens and theProgressives are all in opposition, although only the Labour and Progressive parties formally constitute theformal Opposition; the Greens have a minor agreement with the government but are not committed toconfidence and supply support.

At the 2008 election, the National Party had 58 seats, the Labour Party 43 seats, Green Party 9 seats, ACT and Māori Party five each, and Progressive and United Future one each. During the Parliament session, two members defected from their parties –Chris Carter was expelled from Labour in August 2010, andHone Harawira left the Māori Party in February 2011. Carter continued as anindependent, while Harawira resigned from parliament to recontest hisTe Tai Tokerau electorate ina by-election under his newly formedMana Party. Two MPs resigned from Parliament before the end of the session,John Carter of National and Chris Carter, but as they resigned within 6 months of an election, their seats remained vacant.

At the dissolution of the 49th parliament on 20 October 2011, National held 57 seats, Labour 42 seats, Green 9 seats, ACT 5 seats, Māori 4 seats, and Progressive, United Future and Mana one each.

Marginal seats in 2008

[edit]

At the2008 election, the following seats were won by a majority of less than 1000 votes:

ElectorateMember of ParliamentIncumbent partyMajoritySecond placeSecond party
New PlymouthJonathan YoungNational105Harry DuynhovenLabour
WaimakaririClayton CosgroveLabour390Kate WilkinsonNational
WaitakerePaula BennettNational632Lynne PillayLabour
RimutakaChris HipkinsLabour753Richard WhitesideNational
Hauraki-WaikatoNanaia MahutaLabour888Angeline GreensillMāori Party
Christchurch CentralBrendon BurnsLabour935Nicky WagnerNational
West Coast-TasmanChris AuchinvoleNational971Damien O'ConnorLabour

MPs retiring in 2011

[edit]

Nineteen MPs, including all five ACT MPs and the sole Progressive MP, intended to retire at the end of the 49th Parliament. One of the ACT MPs, John Boscawen, contestedTāmaki, but did not expect to win and was not on the party list. National MP Allan Peachey died three weeks before the election.

PartyNameElectorate
ACTRoger Douglas(List)[15]
Rodney HideEpsom[16][17]
Heather Roy(List)[18]
Hilary Calvert(List)[19]
John Boscawen(List)[20]
GreenSue Kedgley(List)[21][22]
Keith Locke(List)[23]
ProgressiveJim AndertonWigram[24]
LabourAshraf Choudhary(List)[25]
George HawkinsManurewa[26]
Pete HodgsonDunedin North[27]
Lynne Pillay(List)[28]
Mita Ririnui(List)[29]
NationalJohn CarterNorthland[30]
Sandra GoudieCoromandel[31]
Wayne MappNorth Shore[32]
Simon PowerRangitīkei[33]
Allan PeacheyTāmaki[34]
Georgina te Heuheu(List)[35]

Electorate boundaries

[edit]
Advance voting in campervans in Christchurch. Campervans were used as many of the polling stations used at previous elections are unavailable due to the2010 and2011 earthquakes.

Electorates in the election were the same as at the 2008 election.

Electorates and their boundaries in New Zealand are reviewed every five years after theNew Zealand census. The last review took place in 2007, following the2006 census. The next review is not due until 2014, following the2013 census (the 2011 census was cancelled due to the 22 February2011 Christchurch earthquake).

Election procedures

[edit]

On 17 September 2010, Justice MinisterSimon Power announced the government was introducing legislation making this the first election where voters would be able to re-enrol completely on-line. Enrolments on-line beforehand still required the election form to be printed, signed, and sent by post.[36]

Voters in theChristchurch region were encouraged to cast their votes before election day if they had doubt about being able to get to a polling booth on election day or to avoid long queues, as many traditional polling booths are unavailable due to the earthquakes. Nineteen advance voting stations were made available, with three of them campervans, which are usually only used in rural areas of New Zealand. TheChristchurch Central electorate, for example, has 33 polling stations in 2011 compared to 45 in 2008.[37]

Contesting parties and candidates

[edit]
Main articles:Candidates in the New Zealand general election 2011 by electorate andParty lists in the 2011 New Zealand general election

At the close of nominations, 544 individuals had been nominated to contest the election, down from 682 at the 2008 election. Of those, 91 were list-only, 73 were electorate-only (43 from registered parties, 17 independents, and 13 from non-registered parties), and 380 contested both list and electorate.[38]

Political parties registered with the Electoral Commission on Writ Day can contest the general election as a party, allowing it to submit a party list to contend the party vote, and have a party election expenses limit in addition to individual candidate limits. At Writ Day, sixteen political parties were registered to contend the general election.[39] At the close of nominations, thirteen registered parties had put forward a party list to the commission to contest the party vote, down from nineteen in 2008.[38][40]

PartyLeader(s)Party vote %
(2008 election)
Seats
(October 2011)
Electorate
candidates
Party list
candidates
Parties with seats in the 49th Parliament
ACTRodney Hide3.6555055
GreenRussel Norman /Metiria Turei6.7295961
LabourPhil Goff33.99427065
ManaHone Harawira[a]12120
Māori PartyPita Sharples /Tariana Turia2.3941117
NationalJohn Key44.93576365
United Future New ZealandPeter Dunne0.8711915
Other parties
AllianceAndrew McKenzie /Kay Murray0.08514
ConservativeColin Craig[a]5230
DemocratsStephnie de Ruyter0.051424
Legalise CannabisMichael Appleby0.411828
LibertarianzRichard McGrath0.05927
NZ FirstWinston Peters4.073133
^[a] Party was founded after the 2008 election

The Kiwi Party, theNew Citizen Party and theProgressive Party were registered, but did not contend the election under their own banners. The Kiwi Party and the New Citizen Party stood candidates for the Conservative Party.[41]

In addition to the registered parties and their candidates, thirteen candidates from nine non-registered parties contested electorates. TheHuman Rights Party contested Auckland Central, theCommunist League Manukau East and Mount Roskill, theNga Iwi Morehu Movement contested Hauraki-Waikato and Te Tai Hauauru, thePirate Party contested Hamilton East and Wellington Central, theSovereignty Party contested Clutha-Southland and Te Tai Hauauru, Economic Euthenics contested Wigram,New Economics contested Wellington Central,Restore All Things In Christ contested Dunedin South, and the Youth Party contested West Coast-Tasman.

Seventeenindependent candidates also contested the electorates in thirteen electorates: Christchurch Central, Coromandel, Epsom (two), Hamilton West (two), New Plymouth, Ōtaki, Rangitikei (two), Rongotai, Tāmaki (two), Tauranga, Waitaki, Wellington Central, and Ikaroa-Rawhiti

Campaigning

[edit]
[icon]
This sectionneeds expansion. You can help byadding missing information.(October 2011)

Epsom and the Tea Tape scandal

[edit]
Main article:Tea Tape scandal

On 11 November, National Party leader John Key met withJohn Banks, the ACT candidate forEpsom, over a cup of tea at a cafe inNewmarket to send a signal to Epsom voters about voting tactically.[42] The National Party passively campaigned for Epsom voters to give their electorate vote to ACT while giving their party vote to National. This would allow ACT to bypass the 5% party vote threshold and enter Parliament by winning an electorate seat, thereby providing a coalition partner for National. However, in October and November 2011,polls of the Epsom electorate vote taken by various companies showed that the National candidate for Epsom, Paul Goldsmith,[43] was leading in the polls and likely to win the seat. During the meeting, the two politicians' discussion was recorded by a device left on the table in a black pouch. The recording tapes were leaked toThe Herald on Sunday newspaper, and subsequently created a media frenzy over the content of the unreleased tapes.[44]

Debates

[edit]

TVNZ held three party leaders' debates: two between the Prime Minister and the Leader of the Opposition, and one between the leaders of the smaller parties.[45]TV3 hosted a single debate between the Prime Minister and the Leader of the Opposition.[46]

DateHostLeadersPresenter / Moderator
30 OctoberTVNZDon Brash, Metiria Turei, Hone Harawira, Pita Sharples, Peter DunnePaul Holmes
Highlights – The debate included a variety of topics, ranging from the age of superannuation eligibility to youth unemployment to asset sales. Peter Dunne won the debate, with Metiria Turei coming second.[47]
31 OctoberTVNZJohn Key, Phil GoffMark Sainsbury /Guyon Espiner
Highlights – The economy, asset sales, the cost of living, education, welfare, environment and mining, crisis management and recovery, leadership and New Zealand's involvement in Afghanistan. A text poll conducted alongside gave the debate to John Key with 61%.[48]
16 NovemberTVNZDon Brash, Russel Norman, Hone Harawira, Tariana Turia, Winston Peters, Peter DunneMark Sainsbury / Guyon Espiner
Highlights – The debate included the economy, the age of superannuation eligibility, Māori affairs, the environment, the Emissions Trading Scheme, theTea Tape scandal, thevoting system referendum, and potential partners after the election. A text poll conducted alongside gave the debate to Winston Peters with 36%, with Hone Harawira coming second with 27%.[49][50]
21 NovemberTV3John Key, Phil GoffJohn Campbell
Highlights – A studio audience of undecided voters gave positive or negative reactions to the leaders, which showed up on a reactor worm. Aside from claims that the studio audience was biased, Phil Goff won the debate.[51]
23 NovemberTVNZJohn Key, Phil GoffMark Sainsbury / Guyon Espiner
Highlightsto be completed

Pre-election coalition preferences

[edit]

The National Party ruled out working with New Zealand First's Winston Peters after the election.[52] ACT confirmed it would work with National after the elections.

The Labour Party leaderPhil Goff ruled out a coalition agreement with Hone Harawira's newMana Party, but left open the possibility of reaching an agreement with New Zealand First.[53]

In the 16 November minor parties debate, leaders from the minor parties stated their preferences:[48]

  • The Green's preference was it would work in a coalition government with Labour, but wouldn't completely rule out working with National.
  • Mana would not work in a coalition government with National and/or ACT
  • Māori would not work in a coalition government with ACT.
  • No preference was stated for New Zealand First, but later said it would not work with National or Labour.
  • United Future ruled out working with Labour

Media bias

[edit]

A Massey University study released in November 2012 suggested newspaper coverage was favourable towards National and John Key. In the month leading up to the election, the big four newspapers in New Zealand –The New Zealand Herald,The Herald on Sunday,The Dominion Post andThe Sunday Star-Times – printed 72 percent more photos of Key than his opponent, Phil Goff, and devoted twice as many column inches of text coverage.[54]

Opinion polling

[edit]
Main article:Opinion polling for the 2011 New Zealand general election
Graphical representation of poll results

The nature of the Mixed Member Proportional voting system, whereby the share of seats in Parliament a party gets is determined by its share of the nationwide party vote, means aside from normal polling bias and error, opinion polling in New Zealand is fairly accurate in predicting the outcome of an election compared with other countries.

Opinion polls were undertaken periodically since the 2008 election byMediaWorks New Zealand (3 News Reid Research),The New Zealand Herald (Herald Digipoll),Roy Morgan Research, andTelevision New Zealand (One NewsColmar Brunton), with polls having also being conducted byFairfax Media (Fairfax Media Research International) since July 2011. The graph on the right shows the collated results of all five polls for parties that have polled above the 5% electoral threshold.

After the 2008 election, National gained in popularity, and since 2009 has regularly polled in the 50–55% range, peaking at 55% in August 2009 and October 2011, before falling to 51% in the week before the election. Labour and Green meanwhile kept steady after the election at 31–34% and 7–8% respectively until July 2011, when Labour started to lose support, falling to just 26% before the election. The majority of Labour's loss was the Green's gain, rising to 13% in the same period. No other party peaked on average above 5% in the period.

Results

[edit]

Parliamentary parties

[edit]
Party vote percentage
  1. National (47.3%)
  2. Labour (27.5%)
  3. Green (11.1%)
  4. NZ First (6.59%)
  5. Conservative (2.65%)
  6. Māori (1.43%)
  7. Mana (1.08%)
  8. ACT (1.07%)
  9. United Future (0.60%)
  10. Other (0.73%)
Seating diagram, after 2011 election
Summary of the 26 November 2011 election for theHouse of Representatives[55]
PartyParty voteElectorate voteSeats
Votes%Change
(pp)
Votes%Change
(pp)
ListElectorateTotal+/-
National1,058,63647.31Increase2.381,027,69647.31Increase0.71174259Increase1
Labour614,93727.48Decrease6.50762,89735.12Decrease0.10122234Decrease9
Green247,37211.06Increase4.33155,4927.16Increase1.5314014Increase5
NZ First147,5446.59Increase2.5339,8921.84Increase0.15808Increase8
Māori Party31,9821.43Decrease0.9639,3201.81Decrease1.53033Decrease2
Mana24,1681.08new29,8721.38new011new
ACT23,8891.07Decrease2.5831,0011.43Decrease1.56011Decrease4
United Future13,4430.60Decrease0.2718,7920.87Decrease0.26011Steady
Conservative59,2372.65new51,6782.38new000new
Legalise Cannabis11,7380.52Increase0.126,3840.29Increase0.12000Steady
Democrats1,7140.08Increase0.032,2550.10Increase0.02000Steady
Libertarianz1,5950.07Increase0.021,4590.07Decrease0.01000Steady
Alliance1,2090.05Decrease0.031,2450.06Decrease0.02000Steady
Unregistered parties1,5570.07Increase0.010Steady
Independent2,8940.13Decrease0.400Steady
Valid votes2,237,46498.18Decrease0.482,172,43495.32Decrease1.47
Informal votes19,8720.87Increase0.3753,3322.34Increase1.27
Disallowed votes21,6530.95Increase0.1153,2232.34Increase0.20
Belowelectoral threshold75,4933.31
Total2,278,9891002,278,9891005170121Decrease1
Eligible voters and Turnout3,070,84774.21Decrease5.253,070,84774.21Decrease5.25

Votes summary

[edit]
Constituency Vote
National
47.31%
Labour
35.12%
Green
7.16%
Conservative
2.38%
NZ First
1.84%
Māori
1.81%
ACT
1.43%
Mana
1.38%
United Future
0.87%
Others
0.70%
Party Vote
National
47.31%
Labour
27.48%
Green
11.06%
NZ First
6.59%
Conservative
2.65%
Māori
1.43%
Mana
1.08%
ACT
1.07%
United Future
0.60%
Others
0.73%
Parliament seats
National
48.76%
Labour
28.09%
Green
11.57%
NZ First
6.61%
Māori
2.47%
Mana
0.83%
ACT
0.83%
United Future
0.83%

Electorate results

[edit]
Party affiliation of winning electorate candidates.

Prior to the election, the National Party held the majority of the electorate seats with 41. Labour held 20 seats, Māori held four seats, and ACT, Mana, Progressive, United Future and an ex-Labour independent held one seat each.

After the election, National gained one seat to hold 42 seats, Labour gained three seats to hold 23 electorates, Māori lost one seat to hold three, and ACT, Mana, and United Future held steady with one seat each.[56] A National or Labour candidate took second place in all the general electorates exceptRodney, where it was Conservative Party leaderColin Craig.[57]

In eleven electorates, the incumbents did not seek re-election, and new MPs were elected. InCoromandel,North Shore,Northland,Rangitikei, Rodney andTāmaki, the seats were passed from incumbent National MPs to new National MPs; inEpsom, the seat was passed from the incumbent ACT MP to the new ACT MP; and inDunedin North andManurewa, the seats were passed from incumbent Labour MPs to new Labour MPs. Labour also wonTe Atatū from the retiring ex-Labour independent, andWigram from the retiring Progressive MP.

Of the 59 seats where the incumbent sought re-election, four changed hands. InWest Coast-Tasman, Labour's Damien O'Connor regained the seat from National's Chris Auchinvole, who defeated him for the seat in 2008. InWaimakariri, National's Kate Wilkinson defeated Labour MP Clayton Cosgrove, and inTe Tai Tonga, Labour's Rino Tirikatene defeated Maori Party MP Rahui Katene.Christchurch Central on election night ended with incumbent Labour MPBrendon Burns and National'sNicky Wagnertied on 10,493 votes each, and on official counts, swung to Nicky Wagner with a 45-vote majority, increasing to 47 votes on ajudicial recount.[58][59] Despite losing their electorate seats, Chris Auchinvole and Clayton Cosgrove were re-elected into parliament via the party list.

On election night,Waitakere was won by incumbent National MPPaula Bennett with a 349-vote majority over Labour'sCarmel Sepuloni. On official counts, it swung to Sepuloni with a majority of 11 votes, and Bennett subsequently requested a judicial recount, and on the recount, the seat swung back to Bennett with a majority of nine votes.[60] Bennett was declared elected, and Sepuloni was not returned via the party list due to her list ranking, being replaced in the Labour caucus withRaymond Huo.

Five electorates returned with the winner having a majority of less than one thousand – Waitakere (9), Christchurch Central (47), Waimakariri (642),Auckland Central (717) andTāmaki Makaurau (936).[56]

The table below shows the results of the 2011 general election:

Key:

  National  Labour  NZ First  ACT
  United Future  Māori Party  Mana Party  Conservative
Electorate results of the 2011 New Zealand general election[61]
ElectorateIncumbentWinnerMajorityRunner up
Auckland CentralNikki Kaye717Jacinda Ardern
Bay of PlentyTony Ryall17,760Carol Devoy-Heena
BotanyPansy WongJami-Lee Ross10,741Chao-Fu Wu
Christchurch CentralBrendon BurnsNicky Wagner47Brendon Burns
Christchurch EastLianne Dalziel5,334Aaron Gilmore
Clutha-SouthlandBill English16,168Tat Loo
CoromandelSandra GoudieScott Simpson12,740Hugh Kininmonth
Dunedin NorthPete HodgsonDavid Clark3,489Michael Woodhouse
Dunedin SouthClare Curran4,175Jo Hayes
East CoastAnne Tolley4,774Moana Mackey
East Coast BaysMurray McCully14,641Vivienne Goldsmith
EpsomRodney HideJohn Banks2,261Paul Goldsmith
Hamilton EastDavid Bennett8,275Sehai Orgad
Hamilton WestTim Macindoe4,418Sue Moroney
HelensvilleJohn Key21,066Jeremy Greenbrook-Held
HunuaPaul Hutchison16,797Richard Hills
Hutt SouthTrevor Mallard4,825Paul Quinn
IlamGerry Brownlee13,312John Parsons
InvercargillEric Roy6,263Lesley Soper
KaikōuraColin King11,445Liz Collyns
ManaKris Faafoi2,230Hekia Parata
MāngereWilliam Sio15,159Claudette Hauiti
Manukau EastRoss Robertson15,838Kanwaljit Singh Bakshi
ManurewaGeorge HawkinsLouisa Wall8,610Cam Calder
MaungakiekieSam Lotu-Iiga3,021Carol Beaumont
Mt AlbertDavid Shearer10,021Melissa Lee
Mt RoskillPhil Goff7,271Jackie Blue
NapierChris Tremain3,701Stuart Nash
NelsonNick Smith7,088Maryan Street
New LynnDavid Cunliffe5,190Tim Groser
New PlymouthJonathan Young4,270Andrew Little
North ShoreWayne MappMaggie Barry15,228Ben Clark
NorthcoteJonathan Coleman9,379Paula Gillon
NorthlandJohn CarterMike Sabin11,362Lynette Stewart
ŌhariuPeter Dunne1,392Charles Chauvel
ŌtakiNathan Guy5,231Peter Foster
PakurangaMaurice Williamson13,846Sunny Kaushal
Palmerston NorthIain Lees-Galloway3,285Leonie Hapeta
PapakuraJudith Collins9,890Jerome Mika
Port HillsRuth Dyson3,097David Carter
RangitataJo Goodhew6,537Julian Blanchard
RangitīkeiSimon PowerIan McKelvie9,382Josie Pagani
RimutakaChris Hipkins3,286Jonathan Fletcher
RodneyLockwood SmithMark Mitchell12,222Colin Craig
RongotaiAnnette King9,047Chris Finlayson
RotoruaTodd McClay7,357Steve Chadwick
SelwynAmy Adams19,451Jo Mclean
TāmakiAllan PeacheySimon O'Connor17,786Nick Iusitini Bakulich
Taranaki-King CountryShane Ardern15,089Rick Barker
TaupōLouise Upston14,115Frances Campbell
TaurangaSimon Bridges17,264Deborah Mahuta-Coyle
Te AtatūChris CarterPhil Twyford5,416Tau Henare
TukitukiCraig Foss9,660Julia Haydon-Carr
WaikatoLindsay Tisch14,198Kate Sutton
WaimakaririClayton CosgroveKate Wilkinson642Clayton Cosgrove
WairarapaJohn Hayes7,135Michael Bott
WaitakerePaula Bennett9Carmel Sepuloni
WaitakiJacqui Dean14,143Barry Monks
Wellington CentralGrant Robertson6,376Paul Foster-Bell
West Coast-TasmanChris AuchinvoleDamien O'Connor2,539Chris Auchinvole
WhanganuiChester Borrows5,046Hamish McDouall
WhangareiPhil Heatley12,447Pat Newman
WigramJim AndertonMegan Woods1,500Sam Collins
Māori Electorates
Hauraki-WaikatoNanaia Mahuta5,935Angeline Greensill
Ikaroa-RāwhitiParekura Horomia6,541Na Raihania
Tāmaki MakaurauPita Sharples936Shane Jones
Te Tai HauāuruTariana Turia3,221Soraya Peke-Mason
Te Tai TokerauHone Harawira1,165Kelvin Davis
Te Tai TongaRahui KateneRino Tirikatene1,475Rahui Katene
WaiarikiTe Ururoa Flavell1,883Annette Sykes
  • ^† These people entered Parliament at the election as list MPs
Notes

^† These people subsequently entered Parliament at the election as list MPs

List results

[edit]
Main article:Party lists in the 2011 New Zealand general election
Highest polling party in each electorate.

The election was notable for the entry in Parliament of New Zealand's first ever profoundly deaf MP,Mojo Mathers, number 14 on the Green Party's list.[62][63]

NationalLabourGreenNZ First
Lockwood Smith (03)
Chris Finlayson (09)
David Carter (10)
Tim Groser (12)
Steven Joyce (13)
Hekia Parata (18)
Michael Woodhouse (31)
Melissa Lee (34)
Kanwal Singh Bakshi (35)
Jian Yang (36)
Alfred Ngaro (37)
Katrina Shanks (38)
Paul Goldsmith (39)
Tau Henare (40)
Chris Auchinvole (43)
Jackie Blue (46)
Cam Calder (50)
David Parker (04)
Maryan Street (07)
Clayton Cosgrove (08)
Sue Moroney (10)
Charles Chauvel (11)
Jacinda Ardern (13)
Andrew Little (15)
Shane Jones (16)
Darien Fenton (18)
Moana Mackey (19)
Rajen Prasad (20)
Raymond Huo (21)
Metiria Turei (01)
Russel Norman (02)
Kevin Hague (03)
Catherine Delahunty (04)
Kennedy Graham (05)
Eugenie Sage (06)
Gareth Hughes (07)
David Clendon (08)
Jan Logie (09)
Steffan Browning (10)
Denise Roche (11)
Holly Walker (12)
Julie Anne Genter (13)
Mojo Mathers (14)
Winston Peters (01)
Tracey Martin (02)
Andrew Williams (03)
Richard Prosser (04)
Barbara Stewart (05)
Brendan Horan (06)
Denis O'Rourke (07)
Asenati Taylor (08)

Unsuccessful list candidates

[edit]
NationalAaron Gilmore*,Paul Quinn,Paul Foster-Bell*,Claudette Hauiti*,Jo Hayes*, Leonie Hapeta, Sam Collins, Jonathan Fletcher, Heather Tanner,Denise Krum, Carolyn O'Fallon, Viv Gurrey, Karen Rolleston,Brett Hudson,Linda Cooper, Karl Varley
LabourCarol Beaumont*,Kelvin Davis*,Carmel Sepuloni,Rick Barker, Deborah Mahuta-Coyle,Stuart Nash,Brendon Burns,Michael Wood,Steve Chadwick, Kate Sutton, Jerome Mika, Josie Pagani,Lynette Stewart, Jordan Carter,Christine Rose, Glenda Alexander, Susan Zhu, Sehai Orgad, Mea'ole Keil,Richard Hills,Anahila Suisuiki,Hamish McDouall, Louis Te Kani, Tat Loo,Soraya Peke-Mason, Julian Blanchard, Peter Foster, Pat Newman, Julia Haydon-Carr, Michael Bott, Vivienne Goldsmith, Nick Bakulich, Chris Yoo, Barry Monks, Hugh Kininmonth, Jo Kim, Paula Gillon, Carol Devoy-Heena, Ben Clark, Chao-Fu Wu
GreenJames Shaw, David Hay, Richard Leckinger, Aaryn Barlow, Jeanette Elley,Sea Rotmann, Michael Gilchrist, Dora Langsbury, David Kennedy, Tane Woodley, Joseph Burston, Mikaere Curtis, Shane Gallagher, Saffron Toms, Stephen Tollestrup, Zachary Dorner, Paul Bailey, Rick Bazeley, Maree Brannigan, Caroline Conroy, Sue Coutts, Pauline Evans, Rachael Goldsmith, Cameron Harper, John Kelcher, Alex Kruize, Tom Land, Gerrie Ligtenberg, Jim MacDonald, Nick Marryatt, Zane McCarthy, Jack McDonald, Ian McLean, John Milnes, Darryl Monteith, Robert Moore, Teresa Moore, David Moorhouse, Todd Ross, Brett Stansfield, Geoff Steedman, Gary Stewart,Vernon Tava, Corrina Tucker, Pieter Watson, Charmaine Watts, Richard Wesley
NZ FirstHelen Mulford, Hugh Barr,Fletcher Tabuteau,Pita Paraone,Brent Catchpole, Ben Craven, Jerry Ho,Bill Gudgeon, Kevin Gardener, Ray Dolman, David Scott, Randall Ratana,Mahesh Bindra,Edwin Perry, Dion Jelley, John Hall, Kevin Stone, Doug Nabbs, Brett Pierson, Olivia Ilalio, Gordon Stewart, Tamati Reid, Ian Brougham, Bill Woods, Allen Davies
ConservativeColin Craig, Kathy Sheldrake,Larry Baldock, Fa'avae Gagamoe, Brian Dobbs, Roy Brown, Simonne Dyer, Simon Kan, Litia Simpson, Kevin Campbell, Paul Young, Leighton Baker, Feleti Key, Claire Holley, Frank John Naea, Frank Poching, Jesse Misa, Bob Daw, Lance Gedge, Robyn Jackson, Pat Gregory, Timothy de Vries, Melanie Taylor, Cynthia Liu, Craig Jensen, Oliver Vitali, Danny Mountain, Ivan Bailey, Brent Reid, Michael Cooke
Māori PartyWaihoroi Shortland, Kaapua Smith, Wheturangi Walsh-Tapiata, Tina Porou, Awanui Black,Davina Murray, Josie Peita, Paora Te Hurihanganui, Fallyn Flavell, Daryl Christie, Tom Phillips, Tim Morrison, Tamai Nicholson, Aroha Rickus
ACTDon Brash,Catherine Isaac, Don Nicolson,David Seymour, Chris Simmons, Stephen Whittington, Kath McCabe, Robyn Stent, John Thompson, John Ormond, Lyn Murphy, Kevin Moratti, Robin Grieve, Pratima Nand, Dominic Costello,Toni Severin, Richard Evans, Ian Cummings, Gareth Veale,Toby Hutton, Daniel Stratton, Robert Burnside, Hayden Fitzgerald, Alex Speirs, Peter McCaffrey, Shane Atkinson, Allan Birchfield, Robin Boom, Stephen Boyle,Barry Brill, Ian Carline, Tom Corbett, Casey Costello, Alwyn Courtenay, Alan Daniel Davidson, Kimberly Hannah, Beth Houlbrooke, Paul Hufflett, Rosanne Jollands, Nick Kearney, Tim Kronfeld, Joel Latimer, Jonathan Macfarlane,Garry Mallett, Guy McCallum, Colin Nicholls, John Norvill, David Peterson, James Read, Geoff Russell, Andrew Sharrock, Barbara Steinijans, Michael Warren, Vince Ashworth
United Future New Zealand Doug Stevens, Rob Eaddy, Sultan Eusoff, Alan Simmons, Bryan Mockridge, Vanessa Roberts, Pete George, Ram Prakash, Martin Gibson,Clyde Graf,Damian Light, Andrew McMillan, Diane Brown, Brian Carter, Johnny Miller, Ian Gaskin
ManaAnnette Sykes,John Minto,Sue Bradford, Misty Harrison, James Papali’i, Tawhai McClutchie,Angeline Greensill, Jayson Gardiner, Richard Shortland Cooper, Peter Cleave, Val Irwin, Sharon Stevens, Keriana Reedy, Pat O'Dea, Rod Paul, Grant Rogers, Te Nguha Huirama-Patuwai, Barry Tumai, Ngawai Herewini
Legalise CannabisMichael Appleby, Michael Britnell, Maki Herbert, Julian Crawford, Jeff Lye, Jasmin Hewlett, Emma-Jane Mihaere-Kingi, Steven Wilkinson, Richard Goode, Fred MacDonald, Leo Biggs, Jay Fitton, Romana Manning, Geoff McTague, Jamie Dombroski, Christine Mitchell, Dwayne Sherwood,Abe Gray, Sean Norris, Adrian McDermott, Philip Pophristoff, Neville Yates, Mark Bradford, Blair Anderson, Kevin O'Connell, Paula Lambert, Irinka Britnell, Paul McMullan
DemocratsStephnie de Ruyter, John Pemberton, Warren Voight, Katherine Ransom, Carolyn McKenzie, Hessel van Wieren, Heather Smith, Jeremy Noble, Barry Pulford, John McCaskey, Huia Mitchell, Ken Goodhue, Les Port, Robert Mills, Harry Alchin-Smith, Errol Baird, Peter Adcock-White, John Ring, Kelly Balsom, David Espin, Ross Hayward, Gary Gribben, Ron England, David Tranter
LibertarianzRichard McGrath, Sean Fitzpatrick, Peter Cresswell, Reagan Cutting, Peter Osborne, Michael Murphy, Shane Pleasance, Robert Palmer,Bernard Darnton, Helen Hughes, Colin Cross, Nik Haden, Luke Howison, Phil Howison, Andrew Couper, Mike Webber, Bruce Whitehead, Donald Rowberry, Ken Riddle, Peter Linton, Allan Munro, Ian Hayes, Shirley Riddle, Callum McPetrie, Elahrairah Zamora, Euan McPetrie, Mitch Lees
AllianceKay Murray, Andrew McKenzie,Kevin Campbell,Jim Flynn,Paul Piesse,Victor Billot, Mary O'Neill, Kelly Buchanan, Robert van Ruyssevelt, Jen Olsen, Tom Dowie, Thomas O'Neill, Eunice Billot, Norman MacRitchie
Notes
  1. These party list members would eventually enter parliament in the term as other list MPs elected resigned from parliament.
  2. These party list members have since resigned.

Changes in MPs

[edit]

In total, 25 new MPs were elected to Parliament, and three former MPs returned.

New MPs:Scott Simpson,Maggie Barry,Mike Sabin,Ian McKelvie,Mark Mitchell,Simon O'Connor,Alfred Ngaro,Jian Yang,Paul Goldsmith,David Clark,Rino Tirikatene,Megan Woods,Andrew Little,Eugenie Sage,Jan Logie,Steffan Browning,Denise Roche,Holly Walker,Julie Anne Genter,Tracey Martin,Andrew Williams,Richard Prosser,Denis O'Rourke,Asenati Taylor,Brendan Horan

Returning MPs:John Banks,Winston Peters,Barbara Stewart

Defeated MPs:Paul Quinn,Steve Chadwick,Stuart Nash,Carmel Sepuloni,Rick Barker,Rahui Katene

Defeated MPs who later returned during the 50th ParliamentAaron Gilmore,Carol Beaumont,Kelvin Davis

Election expenses

[edit]

The Electoral Commission released party electoral expense returns on 21 March 2012, stating how much each party spent on campaigning between 26 August and 25 November 2011. Candidate only expenses were excluded.[64]

Of note in the party expenses was the $1.88 million spent by the Conservative Party, spending more than but gaining less than one-tenth of the votes of the Labour Party. Translated into dollars spent per party vote gained, the Conservatives spent $31.71 per vote, compared to Labour's $2.91 and National's $2.19.

PartyCampaign expenditureParty votes receivedExpenditure per party vote
National$2,321,2161,058,636$2.19
Conservative$1,878,48659,237$31.71
Labour$1,789,152614,937$2.91
Green$779,618247,372$3.15
ACT$617,03523,889$25.83
NZ First$155,903147,544$1.06
Māori Party$72,17331,982$2.26
Mana$60,08224,168$2.49
Democrats$34,6761,714$20.23
United Future New Zealand$27,71913,443$2.06
Legalise Cannabis$4,00311,738$0.34
Libertarianz$2,7601,595$1.73
Alliance$2,4071,209$1.99
Total/Average$7,745,0812,237,464$3.46

Post-election events

[edit]

Changes in party leadership

[edit]

For the ACT party the mediocre election results on 26 November 2011 (1.1% of the party vote, with no list MPs, 1 electorate MP) resulted inDon Brash tendering his resignation as leader, stating that he took full responsibility for the party's poor performance.[65][66]

On 29 November the leader of the Labour partyPhil Goff and the deputy leaderAnnette King tendered their resignations to a meeting of the caucus, effective on Tuesday 13 December 2011.[67] After a fortnight-long leadership campaign and election,David Shearer, with deputyGrant Robertson, won Labour caucus support over the ticket ofDavid Cunliffe andNanaia Mahuta.[68]

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[edit]
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Further reading

[edit]
  • Johansson, Jon; Levine, Stephen (2012).Kicking the tyres: the New Zealand general election and electoral referendum of 2011. Wellington, N.Z.: Victoria University Press.ISBN 9780864738349.

External links

[edit]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to2011 New Zealand election.

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