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48th New Zealand Parliament

Term of the Parliament of New Zealand

48th New Zealand Parliament

Term of the Parliament of New Zealand

FieldValue
name48th Parliament of New Zealand
imageFile:Parliament House, Wellington, New Zealand (50).JPG
captionParliament House, Wellington
bodyNew Zealand Parliament
election[2005 New Zealand general election](2005-new-zealand-general-election)
governmentFifth Labour Government
term_start7 November 2005
term_end3 October 2008
before[47th Parliament](47th-new-zealand-parliament)
after[49th Parliament](49th-new-zealand-parliament)
website
chamber1House of Representatives
chamber1_imageFile:48th New Zealand Parliament Seating.png
membership1121
chamber1_leader1_typeSpeaker of the House
chamber1_leader1Margaret Wilson
chamber1_leader2_typeLeader of the House
chamber1_leader2Michael Cullen
chamber1_leader3_typePrime Minister
chamber1_leader3Helen Clark
chamber1_leader4_typeLeader of the Opposition
chamber1_leader4John Key
— Don Brash until [27 November 2006](2006-new-zealand-national-party-leadership-election)
chamber2Sovereign
chamber2_leader1_typeMonarch
chamber2_leader1Elizabeth II
chamber2_leader2_typeGovernor-General
chamber2_leader2Anand Satyanand from 23 August 2006
— Silvia Cartwright until 4 August 2006

— Don Brash until 27 November 2006 — Silvia Cartwright until 4 August 2006 The 48th New Zealand Parliament was a term of the Parliament of New Zealand. Its composition was determined at a general election held on 17 September 2005. The new parliament met for the first time on 7 November 2005. It was dissolved on 3 October 2008.

The Labour Party and the Progressive Party, backed by New Zealand First and United Future, established a majority at the beginning the 48th Parliament. The Labour-led administration was in its third term. The National Party and ACT form the formal opposition to the government. Other non-government parties are the Greens (who promised to abstain on confidence and supply votes) and the Māori Party.

The 48th Parliament consists of 121 representatives. This represents an overhang of one seat, with the Māori Party having won one more electorate than its share of the vote would otherwise have given it. In total, sixty-nine of the MPs were chosen by geographical electorates, including seven Māori electorates. The remainder were elected by means of party-list proportional representation under the MMP electoral system.

Electorate boundaries for 48th Parliament

Oath of office

All of the Māori Party MPs attempted to alter their oath of office by adding references to the Treaty of Waitangi. They were all required to retake their oaths.

Election result

Government: the third and final term of the Fifth Labour Government, in power from 1999 until 2008; minority coalition with Progressive Party since 2002

Prime Minister: Helen Clark (Labour) from 1999 to 2008

Governor General: Dame Silvia Cartwright to August 2006; Anand Satyanand August 2006–

Deputy Prime Minister: Michael Cullen (Labour) 2002–2008

Leader of the Opposition: Don Brash (National Party), to November 2006; John Key (National) November 2006 –

Speaker : Margaret Wilson (Labour)

Deputy Speaker: Clem Simich (National)

Assistant Speaker: Ross Robertson (Labour) and Ann Hartley (Labour)

Leader of the House: Michael Cullen (Labour)

Overview of seats

The table below shows the number of MPs in each party following the 2005 election and at dissolution:

AffiliationMembersAt [2002 election](2002-new-zealand-general-election)At dissolution
50**49**
1**1**
3**2**
7**7**
***Government total****61****59***
6***6***
**Government with Cooperation total****67****65**
48**48**
2**2**
4**4**
02
***Opposition total****54****56***
**Total**
121**121**
**Working Government majority**13**9**

Notes

  • United Future and NZ First supported the Labour-Progressive coalition on a confidence and supply basis.
  • Both New Zealand First and United Future said they would not support a Labour-led coalition which included Greens in Cabinet posts. However, United Future indicated it could support a government where the Greens gave supply-and-confidence votes. The Working Government majority is calculated as all Government MPs less all other parties.

Members of the 48th Parliament

48th New Zealand Parliament – MPs elected to Parliament

List MPs are ordered by allocation as determined by the Chief Electoral Office and the party lists.

PartyNameElectorateTerm
First
Sixth
Fifth
Sixth
Christchurch CentralFourth
Christchurch EastSixth
Second
Clutha-SouthlandSixth
Second
Sixth
Dunedin SouthThird
Second
Seventh
Fourth
First
Fourth
HelensvilleSecond
Seventh
Fourth
Fourth
First
Third
Fifth
Seventh
Sixth
Fourth
Ninth
Eighth
First
NelsonSixth
New LynnThird
Sixth
North ShoreFourth
First
Seventh
Eighth
First
OtakiSecond
Seventh
Sixth
Third
Third
Second
RangitikeiThird
Sixth
Eighth
Seventh
Third
TamakiFirst
Fourth
TaupoFifth
First
Te AtatuFourth
First
Third
First
WaitakereSecond
Fourth
West Coast-TasmanFifth
First
Third
Eighth
Third
Fourth
Tāmaki MakaurauFirst
Te Tai HauāuruFourth
First
Third
First
Party list, rank 01Ninth
Party list, rank 01Fourth
Party list, rank 02Fourth
Party list, rank 02Fourth
Party list, rank 03Fourth
Party list, rank 03Third
Party list, rank 02Second
Party list, rank 04Fourth
Party list, rank 04Third
Party list, rank 02Ninth
Party list, rank 05Fourth
Party list, rank 03Third
Party list, rank 01Second
Party list, rank 10Fourth
Party list, rank 08Fifth
Party list, rank 11Seventh
Party list, rank 05Third
Party list, rank 10Third
Party list, rank 15Third
Party list, rank 13First
Party list, rank 21Fifth
Party list, rank 16Third
Party list, rank 24Fifth
Party list, rank 18Sixth
Party list, rank 03Second
Party list, rank 25Second
Party list, rank 19Fourth
Party list, rank 27First
Party list, rank 06Second
Party list, rank 20Fourth
Party list, rank 28Fifth
Party list, rank 02Second
Party list, rank 30Third
Party list, rank 27First
Party list, rank 35Third
Party list, rank 28First
Party list, rank 06Second
Party list, rank 36First
Party list, rank 29Third
Party list, rank 37Second
Party list, rank 34First
Party list, rank 38Second
Party list, rank 36First
Party list, rank 39Second
Party list, rank 07Second
Party list, rank 38First
Party list, rank 41Second
Party list, rank 39First
Party list, rank 42First
Party list, rank 41First
Party list, rank 43First
Party list, rank 45First

Changes during parliamentary term

  • Rod Donald, co-leader of the Green Party, died on 6 November 2005 before he was sworn in as a member of the 48th Parliament. He was replaced by the next person on the Green Party's list, former MP Nándor Tánczos, on 16 November.
  • Jim Sutton, a Labour list MP, retired from politics on 31 July 2006. He was replaced by the next person on the Labour Party's list, Charles Chauvel.
  • Don Brash, a National list MP and former leader of the National Party, retired from Parliament on 7 February 2007. He was replaced by the next person on the National Party's list, Katrina Shanks.
  • Georgina Beyer, a Labour list MP, announced her retirement on 15 December 2006, and officially resigned from Parliament when it resumed on 13 February 2007. On 20 February she was replaced by the next person on the Labour Party's list, former MP Lesley Soper.
  • Taito Phillip Field, Labour MP for Mangere, quit the Labour party after being threatened with expulsion on 16 February 2007. He continued to serve as an MP, and formed the New Zealand Pacific Party in January 2008.
  • Gordon Copeland, a United Future list MP, left the party to become an independent MP in May 2007, and contested the 2008 election as a candidate for The Kiwi Party.
  • Ann Hartley, a Labour list MP, was elected to the North Shore City Council in the 2007 local body elections. She left Parliament when it resumed in 2008, and was replaced by the next person on the Labour list, Louisa Wall, a former Silver Ferns netballer, on 4 February 2008.
  • Brian Donnelly, a New Zealand First MP, resigned from Parliament from 12 February 2008, and was replaced by Dail Jones on 15 February 2008. Donnelly was appointed as New Zealand's High Commissioner to the Cook Islands.
  • Dianne Yates, a Labour list MP, stood unsuccessfully for the Hamilton City Council in the 2007 local body elections. She resigned as an MP on 29 March 2008{{cite web |author-link = New Zealand Parliament |access-date = 7 June 2008 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20080630003711/http://theyworkforyou.co.nz/resignations/2008/apr/01/dianne_yates_nz_labour |archive-date = 30 June 2008 |url-status = dead and was replaced by William Sio on 1 April 2008 as the next person on Labour's list. |author-link = New Zealand Parliament |access-date = 7 June 2008 |url-status = dead |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20100515131716/http://theyworkforyou.co.nz/list_member_vacancy/2008/apr/01 |archive-date = 15 May 2010
  • Nándor Tánczos resigned from Parliament and was replaced by Green Party co-leader Russel Norman on 27 June 2008.

Seating plan

Start of term

The chamber is in a horseshoe-shape.

[](georgina-beyer)[](steve-chadwick)[](moana-mackey)[](darien-fenton)

End of term

The chamber is in a horseshoe-shape.

[](russell-fairbrother)[](dave-hereora)[](lesley-soper)[](louisa-wall)

References

References

  1. (6 October 2024). "Dissolving the Parliament of New Zealand".
  2. "Actual Quotients for Party List Seat Allocation".
  3. (15 February 2008). "New List MP For New Zealand First Party". [[Scoop.co.nz]].
  4. (27 June 2008). "Greens co-leader now an MP". [[The Dominion Post (Wellington).
  5. "Debating Chamber".
  6. "Debating Chamber".
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