Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
geography/new-zealand

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

16th New Zealand Parliament

Term of the Parliament of New Zealand


Term of the Parliament of New Zealand

FieldValue
name16th Parliament of New Zealand
imageEmerald Hours in New Zealand (1906) · Lowth · 114.jpg
bodyNew Zealand Parliament
election1905 New Zealand general election
governmentLiberal Government
term_start27 June 1906
term_end10 October 1908
before15th Parliament
after17th Parliament
website
chamber1House of Representatives
chamber1_imageFile:16th New Zealand Parliament Seating.png
membership180
chamber1_leader1_typeSpeaker of the House
chamber1_leader1Arthur Guinness
chamber1_leader2_typePrime Minister
chamber1_leader2Joseph Ward
William Hall-Jones until 6 August 1906 as Premier
chamber1_leader3_typeLeader of the Opposition
chamber1_leader3William Massey
chamber2Legislative Council
membership244
chamber2_leader1_typeSpeaker of the Council
chamber2_leader1Charles Bowen
chamber3Sovereign
chamber3_leader1_typeMonarch
chamber3_leader1HM Edward VII
chamber3_leader2_typeGovernor
chamber3_leader2HE Rt. Hon. The Lord Plunket

| chamber1_alt– = William Hall-Jones until 6 August 1906 as Premier The 16th New Zealand Parliament was a term of the New Zealand Parliament. It was elected at the 1905 general election in December of that year.

Changes to the electoral law

The 1903 City Single Electorates Act declared that at the dissolution of the 15th Parliament, the four multi-member electorates would be abolished and replaced each with three single-member electorates. It was also the year absentee voting was introduced for all electors unable to be in their own electorate on election day. The first Chief Electoral Officer was appointed.

Accordingly, the multi-member urban electorates of , , and were abolished and replaced with the following single-member seats:

Nine of these twelve electorates had existed before. Wellington Central, Wellington North, and Dunedin North were established for the first time.

1905 general election

Main article: 1905 New Zealand general election

The 1905 general election was held on Wednesday, 6 December in the general electorates and on Wednesday, 20 December in the Māori electorates, respectively. A total of 80 MPs were elected; 38 represented North Island electorates, 38 represented South Island electorates, and the remaining four represented Māori electorates. 476,473 voters were enrolled and the official turnout at the election was 83.3%.

Sessions

The 16th Parliament sat for four sessions (there were two sessions in 1906), and was prorogued on 29 October 1908.

SessionOpenedAdjourned
first27 June 190629 June 1906
second21 August 190629 October 1906
third27 June 190725 November 1907
fourth29 June 190810 October 1908

Ministries

The Liberal Government of New Zealand had taken office on 24 January 1891. The Seddon Ministry under Richard Seddon had taken office in 1893 during the term of the 11th Parliament. The Seddon Ministry remained in power for the whole term of this Parliament and held power until Seddon's death on 10 June 1906. Seddon was travelling overseas at the time of his death, and William Hall-Jones was a reluctant acting Premier at the time. Joseph Ward would normally have been acting premier, but he was also overseas. So upon Seddon's death, Hall-Jones was sworn in as Prime Minister (the first time this new title was used) and formed the Hall-Jones Ministry on 21 June 1906. Upon Ward's return from overseas, the leadership was offered to him, which he accepted. Hall-Jones resigned as prime minister, succeeded by Ward who formed the Ward Ministry on 6 August 1906. The Ward Ministry remained in power for the remainder of the parliamentary term and subsequently until Ward's resignation as prime minister in 1912.

Party composition

Start of term

PartySeats
Source

Initial composition of the 16th Parliament

By-elections during 16th Parliament

There were a number of changes during the term of the 16th Parliament.

Electorate and by-electionDateIncumbentCauseWinner

Notes

References

References

  1. "General elections 1853–2005 - dates & turnout". Elections New Zealand.
  2. Hamer, David. "Seddon, Richard John - Biography".
  3. {{DNZB. Hall-Jones. John. 2h7. Hall-Jones, William 1851-1936. 10 December 2011
  4. {{DNZB. Bassett. Michael. 2W9. Ward, Joseph George 1856–1930. 10 December 2011
  5. "1890–1993 general elections {{!}} Elections".
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about 16th New Zealand Parliament — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report