Eastern Hutt


title: "Eastern Hutt" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["historical-electorates-of-new-zealand", "lower-hutt", "1978-establishments-in-new-zealand", "1996-disestablishments-in-new-zealand", "politics-of-the-wellington-region"] topic_path: "politics" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eastern_Hutt" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::callout[type=note] For the river, see Eastern Hutt River. ::

::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/5/50/Eastern_Hutt_electorate,_1993.png" caption="Eastern Hutt electorate boundaries between 1993 and 1996."] ::

Eastern Hutt is a former New Zealand parliamentary electorate from 1978 to 1996. It was represented by two Labour MPs.

Population centres

The 1977 electoral redistribution was the most overtly political since the Representation Commission had been established through an amendment to the Representation Act in 1886, initiated by Muldoon's National Government. As part of the 1976 census, a large number of people failed to fill out an electoral re-registration card, and census staff had not been given the authority to insist on the card being completed. This had little practical effect for people on the general roll, but it transferred Māori to the general roll if the card was not handed in. Together with a northward shift of New Zealand's population, this resulted in five new electorates having to be created in the upper part of the North Island. The electoral redistribution was very disruptive, and 22 electorates were abolished, while 27 electorates were newly created (including Eastern Hutt) or re-established. These changes came into effect for the .

In the 1977 electoral redistribution, the existing Western Hutt moved west, and the Eastern Hutt electorate was formed from areas that previously belonged to Western Hutt and the electorate, the latter of which was abolished. The Eastern Hutt electorate incorporated the eastern part of Lower Hutt in the Hutt Valley up to the suburb of Haywards in the north. In the 1983 electoral redistribution, the northern part of the electorate transferred to the Western Hutt electorate (including Haywards) and the electorate moved slightly further east.

History

In the 1978 election, the Eastern Hutt electorate was won by Trevor Young, who had been MP for the Hutt electorate since 1968. Young retired at the and was succeeded by Paul Swain. When Eastern Hutt was replaced in 1996 by the electorate, Swain transferred to the electorate to the north of Hutt South.

Members of Parliament

The electorate was represented by two Labour MPs.

Key

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(Electorate abolished in 1996; see )
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Election results

1993 election

|party = New Zealand Labour Party |candidate = Paul Swain |votes = 9,346 |percentage = 51.32 |change = +4.77 |party = New Zealand National Party |candidate = Peter MacMillan |votes = 4,628 |percentage = 25.41 |change = |party = Alliance (New Zealand political party) |candidate = Irene Ruth |votes = 2,467 |percentage = 13.54 |change = +4.56 |party = New Zealand First |candidate = Makere Jordan |votes = 1,000 |percentage = 5.49 |change = |party = Christian Heritage Party of New Zealand |candidate = Wayne Chapman |votes = 526 |percentage = 2.88 |change = |party = McGillicuddy Serious Party |candidate = Karen Anne Nicholls |votes = 150 |percentage = 0.82 |change = |party = Independent politician |candidate = Philip McHale |votes = 54 |percentage = 0.29 |change = |party = Natural Law Party of New Zealand |candidate = Marie-Louise Hodgson |votes = 37 |percentage = 0.20 |change = |votes = 4,718 |percentage = 25.91 |change = +21.43 |votes = 18,208 |percentage = 83.13 |change = +1.04 |reg. electors = 21,901

1990 election

|party = New Zealand Labour Party |candidate = Paul Swain |votes = 8,312 |percentage = 46.55 |change = |party = New Zealand National Party |candidate = Rosemary Thomas |votes = 7,511 |percentage = 42.06 |change = |party = NewLabour Party (New Zealand) |candidate = Irene Ruth |votes = 1,605 |percentage = 8.98 |change = |party = Democrats for Social Credit |candidate = M L Baird |votes = 426 |percentage = 2.38 |change = |votes = 801 |percentage = 4.48 |change = |votes = 17,854 |percentage = 82.09 |change = -3.66 |reg. electors = 21,749

1987 election

|party = New Zealand Labour Party |candidate = Trevor Young |votes = 10,977 |percentage = 60.05 |change = +4.49 |party = New Zealand National Party |candidate = Penn Pattison |votes = 6,237 |percentage = 34.12 |change = |party = Democrats for Social Credit |candidate = Trevor Barnard |votes = 1,064 |percentage = 5.82 |change = |votes = 4,740 |percentage = 25.93 |change = -4.92 |votes = 18,278 |percentage = 85.75 |change = -6.04 |reg. electors = 21,314

1984 election

|party = New Zealand Labour Party |candidate = Trevor Young |votes = 10,816 |percentage = 55.56 |change = +0.86 |party = New Zealand National Party |candidate = Joy McLauchlan |votes = 4,811 |percentage = 24.71 |change = |party = New Zealand Party |candidate = Maureen Harvey |votes = 2,832 |percentage = 14.54 |change = |party = Social Credit Party (New Zealand) |candidate = Ian McRae |votes = 1,005 |percentage = 5.16 |change = -11.80 |votes = 6,005 |percentage = 30.85 |change = +4.28 |votes = 19,464 |percentage = 91.79 |change = +1.86 |reg. electors = 21,203

1981 election

|party = New Zealand Labour Party |candidate = Trevor Young |votes = 10,335 |percentage = 54.80 |change = -2.13 |party = New Zealand National Party |candidate = Alex Duthie |votes = 5,324 |percentage = 28.23 |change = |party = Social Credit Party (New Zealand) |candidate = Ian McRae |votes = 3,199 |percentage = 16.96 |change = +4.16 |votes = 5,011 |percentage = 26.57 |change = -2.17 |votes = 18,858 |percentage = 89.93 |change = +18.09 |reg. electors = 20,969

1978 election

|party = New Zealand Labour Party |candidate = Trevor Young |votes = 10,640 |percentage = 56.93 |change = |party = New Zealand National Party |candidate = Rosemary Young |votes = 5,267 |percentage = 28.18 |change = |party = Social Credit Party (New Zealand) |candidate = Ian McRae |votes = 2,394 |percentage = 12.80 |change = |party = Values Party |candidate = Malcolm White |votes = 400 |percentage = 2.14 |change = |party = Independent politician |candidate = M E Gee |votes = 168 |percentage = 0.89 |change = |votes = 5,373 |percentage = 28.74 |change = |votes = 18,689 |percentage = 71.84 |change = |reg. electors = 26,012

Notes

References

References

  1. (25 September 2008). "Paul Swain leaves Parliament with sense of humour intact". [[The National Business Review]].
  2. (1993). "Part 1: Votes recorded at each polling place". New Zealand Chief Electoral Office.
  3. (1990). "Part 1: Votes recorded at each polling place". New Zealand Chief Electoral Office.

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historical-electorates-of-new-zealandlower-hutt1978-establishments-in-new-zealand1996-disestablishments-in-new-zealandpolitics-of-the-wellington-region