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Leader of the New Zealand Labour Party

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Highest ranked politician within the party

Leader of the Labour Party
Incumbent
Chris Hipkins
since 22 January 2023
Term lengthNo fixed term1
Inaugural holderAlfred Hindmarsh
Formation7 July 1916
DeputyDeputy Leader of the New Zealand Labour Party
WebsiteLabour Party profile
1. The leader must be endorsed by the party caucus following a general election, usually every three years, but this does not automatically trigger a new leadership election.

Theleader of the Labour Party is the highest-ranked political position within theNew Zealand Labour Party, who serves as theparliamentary leader and leadingspokesperson of the party. The current leader isChris Hipkins, afterJacinda Ardern resigned.

History

[edit]

The post of leader of the Labour Party was officially created upon the party's inception in 1916, though the title "leader" was often substituted and/or complemented with the title "chairman".[1] At the1935 election,Michael Joseph Savage led the Labour Party to victory, becoming the first Labourprime minister. In 1963,Arnold Nordmeyer became the first New Zealand-born leader of the party; three previous leaders had been born in Australia and one each in England and Scotland. The most electorally successful Labour leader to date isHelen Clark, who won three elections, in1999,2002 and2005. Clark is also the party's longest-serving leader, having served for 14 years, 346 days between 1993 and 2008.[2]Peter Fraser is the longest-serving Labour prime minister, serving 9 years, 261 days between 1940 and 1949.

Selection

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A leadership candidate must be a member ofparliament (MP). A new leader is elected whenever a vacancy arises, whether due to resignation, incapacitation, or following amotion of no confidence by the parliamentarycaucus.[3]

The current election rules were adopted in 2021, replacing earlier rules adopted in 2012.[4] Candidates need 10% of the caucus to nominate. The caucus votes viaexhaustive ballot (absent MPs canvote by proxy), and a candidate requires the support of two-thirds of the caucus to be elected. If no one can get two-thirds the candidate with the fewest votes is eliminated.[5] If there are two candidates left and neither got two-thirds, there may be multiple rounds of voting to identify a consensus candidate. If one cannot be found then the leadership is determined by anelectoral college comprising the caucus (40% of the total vote), party members (40%) andaffiliated trade unions (20%).[4]

No later than three months following ageneral election, there must be a caucus vote to endorse the leader. If they fail to receive endorsement then the position of party leader is vacated and an election is triggered.[3]

Role

[edit]

When the Labour Party forms theParliamentary Opposition, as is the case now, the party leader commonly takes on the position of theleader of the Opposition and chairs aShadow Cabinet. Likewise, when the party is inGovernment, the leader typically becomes theprime minister.[6]

Unique to Labour, the party's caucus possesses the right to elect MPs toCabinet, rather than the leader choosing them. The practice began following the1940 leadership election.[7]Michael Joseph Savage was the only leader to solely appoint his own cabinet following the election victories in1935 and1938.

List of leaders

[edit]

The following is a complete list of Labour Party leaders (includingacting leaders):

Key:
  Labour  Reform  United  National
PM:Prime Minister
LO:Leader of the Opposition
†: Died in office

No.Leader
(Birth–Death)
PortraitElectorateTerm BeganTerm EndedTime in officePositionPrime Minister
1Alfred Hindmarsh
(1860–1918)
Wellington South7 July 191613 November 1918†2 years, 129 daysMassey
1912–25
2Harry Holland
(1868–1933)
Grey (1918–19)
Buller (1919–33)
27 August 19198 October 1933†14 years, 42 days
Bell
1925
LO1926–1928Coates
Junior coalition partner
1928–1931
Ward
LO1931–1933Forbes
3Michael Joseph Savage
(1872–1940)
Auckland West12 October 193327 March 1940†6 years, 167 daysLO1933–1935
PM1935–1940himself
4Peter Fraser
(1884–1950)
Wellington Central (1918–46)
Brooklyn (1946–50)
1 April 194012 December 1950†10 years, 255 daysPM1940–1949himself
LO1949–1950Holland
1949–57
5Walter Nash
(1882–1968)
Hutt17 January 195131 March 196312 years, 73 daysLO1951–1957
Holyoake
1957
PM1957–1960himself
LO1960–1963Holyoake
1960–72
6Arnold Nordmeyer
(1901–1989)
Island Bay1 April 196316 December 19652 years, 259 daysLO1963–1965
7Norman Kirk
(1923–1974)
Lyttelton (1957–69)
Sydenham (1969–74)
16 December 196531 August 1974†8 years, 258 daysLO1965–1972
Marshall
1972
PM1972–1974himself
Hugh Watt[note 1]
(1912–1980)
Onehunga31 August 19746 September 19747 daysPM1974himself
8Bill Rowling
(1927–1995)
Tasman6 September 19743 February 19838 years, 150 daysPM1974–1975himself
LO1975–1983Muldoon
9David Lange
(1942–2005)
Mangere3 February 19838 August 19896 years, 186 daysLO1983–1984
PM1984–1989himself
10Geoffrey Palmer
(born 1942)
Christchurch Central8 August 19894 September 19901 year, 27 daysPM1989–1990himself
11Mike Moore
(1949–2020)
Christchurch North4 September 19901 December 19933 years, 88 daysPM1990himself
LO1990–1993Bolger
1990–97
12Helen Clark
(born 1950)
Mount Albert1 December 199311 November 200814 years, 346 daysLO1993–1999
Shipley
1997–99
PM1999–2008herself
13Phil Goff
(born 1953)
Mount Roskill11 November 200813 December 20113 years, 32 daysLO2008–2011Key
2008–16
14David Shearer
(born 1957)
Mount Albert13 December 201115 September 20131 year, 276 daysLO2011–2013
15David Cunliffe
(born 1963)
New Lynn15 September 201330 September 20141 year, 15 daysLO2013–2014
David Parker[note 1]
(born 1960)
List MP30 September 201418 November 201449 daysLO2014
16Andrew Little
(born 1965)
List MP18 November 20141 August 20172 years, 256 daysLO2014–2017
English
2016–17
17Jacinda Ardern
(born 1980)
Mount Albert1 August 201722 January 20235 years, 174 daysLO2017
PM2017–2023herself
18Chris Hipkins
(born 1978)
Remutaka22 January 2023Incumbent2 years, 301 daysPM2023himself
LO2023–presentLuxon
2023–present
  1. ^abDeputy leader who assumed the role of party leader temporarily because of the death or resignation of the incumbent, serving until the election of a new leader.

Timeline

[edit]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^Paul, John Thomas (1946).Humanism in Politics; New Zealand Labour Party Retrospect. The University of Michigan. pp. 64–65. Retrieved22 November 2020.
  2. ^Audrey Young (12 February 2008)."Clark beats record of longest-serving Labour leader – probably".The New Zealand Herald. Retrieved12 February 2008.
  3. ^ab"Constitution and Rules"(PDF). New Zealand Labour Party. 2019. pp. 63–64. Retrieved19 January 2020 – via New Zealand Electoral Commission.
  4. ^abMalpass, Luke (6 November 2021)."Labour Party changes rules to elect leader, hands first call back to caucus".Stuff. Retrieved19 January 2023.
  5. ^"How the Labour Party vote will work – and why we might know the next PM by Saturday".RNZ. 20 January 2023. Retrieved20 January 2023.
  6. ^Trimble, Linda (18 January 2018).Ms. Prime Minister: Gender, Media, and Leadership. University of Toronto Press. p. 17.ISBN 978-1-4426-6297-1. Retrieved11 September 2024.
  7. ^Beaglehole, Tim."Fraser, Peter".Dictionary of New Zealand Biography.Ministry for Culture and Heritage. Retrieved11 December 2011.
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