50th New Zealand Parliament


The 50th New Zealand Parliament was elected at the 2011 general election. It had 121 members, and was in place from December 2011 until September 2014, followed by the 2014 general election. The first sitting of the 50th Parliament was held on 20 December 2011, where members were sworn in and Lockwood Smith was elected Speaker of the House. This was followed by the speech from the throne on 21 December. John Key continued to lead the Fifth National Government. Following the resignation of Smith, David Carter was elected Speaker.
The Parliament was elected using the mixed-member proportional representation voting system. Members of Parliament represent 70 geographical electorates: 16 in the South Island, 47 in the North Island and 7 Māori electorates. The remaining 51 members were elected from party lists using the Sainte-Laguë method to realise proportionality.

Electorate boundaries for 50th Parliament

The Representation Commission is tasked with reviewing electorate boundaries every five years following each New Zealand census. The last review was undertaken in 2007 following the 2006 census, and the electorate boundaries determined then were used in both the and 2011 general elections.
The next census was scheduled for 8 March 2011, but it was postponed due to the disruption caused by the 22 February 2011 Christchurch earthquake. The new date for the census was 5 March 2013, and this allowed enough time to review the electoral boundaries for the 51st New Zealand Parliament prior to the. The Representation Commission undertook the review between October 2013 and April 2014 and changed the boundaries of 46 electorates, created two new electorates in the Auckland area, and abolished one electorate in Auckland. A total of twenty general and five Maori electorates remained unchanged.

2011 general election

The 2011 New Zealand general election was held on Saturday, 26 November 2011 and determined the membership of the 50th New Zealand Parliament.
One hundred and twenty-one MPs were elected to the New Zealand House of Representatives, 70 from single-member electorates, including one overhang seat, and 51 from party lists. Since the, New Zealand has used the Mixed Member Proportional voting system, giving voters two votes: one for a political party and the other for their local electorate MP. A referendum on the voting system was held at the same time as the election, in which 57.8% of voters voted to keep the MMP voting system.
A total of 3,070,847 people were registered to vote in the election, with over 2.2 million votes cast and a turnout of 73.83%—the lowest turnout since 1887. The poor turnout was partially explained with many voters expecting the outcome to be a foregone conclusion, and a similar attitude was observed in, when the Labour Party was well ahead in the polls and a low turnout resulted.
The preliminary results published on election night indicated that the incumbent National Party, led by John Key gained the plurality with 47.99% of the party vote and 60 seats, one seat short of holding a majority. The opposing Labour Party, led by Phil Goff, lost ground winning 27.13% of the vote and 34 seats, while the Green Party won 10.62% of the vote and 13 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 6.81% of the vote entitling them to eight seats.
National's confidence and supply partners in the 49th Parliament meanwhile suffered losses. Preliminary results indicated that ACT New Zealand won less than a third of the party vote it received in 2008, reducing from five seats to one. The Māori Party was reduced from five seats to three, as the party vote split between the Māori Party and former Māori Party MP Hone Harawira's Mana Party. United Future lost party votes, but retained their one seat in Parliament.
The poor results for both the Labour Party and ACT resulted in changes to their leaderships. Labour leader Phil Goff and deputy Annette King announced on 29 November 2011 that they had tendered their resignations from the party leadership effective 13 December 2011, with both keeping their electorate representations. ACT leader Don Brash failed to get re-elected to Parliament due to the poor party vote and resigned his party leadership on the night of the election.
On 10 December, the final results were published after the counting of the special votes. The main changes were that the National Party's vote share had decreased to 47.31%, resulting in 59 seats—one less than the 60 based on the preliminary results. The Green Party vote rose to 11.06%, which gained it one seat and is now eligible for 14 seats. The redistribution of the seats means that the lowest-placed National member who qualified based on the preliminary results, Aaron Gilmore, was not returned again. The next person on the Green Party list, Mojo Mathers, took the seat.
The Christchurch Central electorate, where the incumbent Brendon Burns and Nicky Wagner had received the same number of votes on election night, was won by Wagner with a majority of 45 votes, with Burns thus out of Parliament, as his list position is not high enough. In the electorate, Labour's Carmel Sepuloni achieved a majority of 11 votes as opposed to a 349-vote majority for National's Paula Bennett as indicated by the preliminary results. Sepuloni would not have entered Parliament again without winning the electorate as her list placing was not high enough, meaning that she replaced the lowest-ranked Labour list candidate who qualified based on the preliminary results, Raymond Huo. However, both electorates were subject to a judicial recount at the request of the Labour and National Parties, respectively, due to the tightness of each result. As a result of the recount, Nicky Wagner was confirmed as the winner of Christchurch Central with a majority 47 votes on 14 December, while in Waitakere, the recount swung the seat back to Paula Bennett with a majority of nine votes on 17 December.
On election night, 25 new MPs entered Parliament. With the changes in seats for National and the Green Party once the final count was released, this increased to 26 new MPs, with Mathers having joined the newcomers. The final turnout of enrolled electors was 74.21%.

Members

The tables below show the members of the 50th Parliament based on preliminary counts of the 2011 general election.

Overview

The table below shows the number of MPs in each party following the 2014 election and at dissolution:
Notes
The National Party won 47.31% of the vote, entitling it to 59 seats. As it won 42 electorates, an additional 17 members were taken from the party list.
Nine new National Party members were elected, six from electorates and three from the party list. Fifty members from the 49th Parliament were returned.

New Zealand Labour Party (34)

The Labour Party won 27.48% of the vote, entitling it to 34 seats. As it won 22 electorates, an additional 12 members were taken from the party list.
Four new Labour Party members were elected, three from electorates and one from the list. Thirty members from the 49th Parliament were returned.

Green Party of Aotearoa New Zealand (14)

The Green Party won 11.06% of the vote, entitling it to 14 seats. As it did not win any electorate, all members were taken from the party list.
Seven new Green Party members were elected, with seven members from the 49th Parliament returning.
Mojo Mathers, elected as number 14 on the list, is New Zealand's first profoundly deaf MP.
NameElectorate Term in officePortfolios & Responsibilities
Russel Norman2008–
  • Co-leader of the Green Party
  • Spokesperson for Environment
  • Spokesperson for Economics & Finance
Metiria Turei2002–
  • Co-leader of the Green Party
  • Spokesperson for Social Equity
  • Spokesperson for Electoral Reform
  • Spokesperson for Māori and Treaty Issues
  • Spokesperson for Housing
  • Spokesperson for Children
  • Steffan Browning2011–
  • Spokesperson for Agriculture
  • Spokesperson for Fisheries
  • Spokesperson for Organics
  • Spokesperson for GE
  • Spokesperson for Forestry
  • Spokesperson for Biosecurity & Customs
  • Spokesperson for Security & Intelligence
  • David Clendon2009–
  • Spokesperson for Small Business
  • Spokesperson for Corrections and Courts
  • Spokesperson for Tertiary Education
  • Spokesperson for Research & Technology
  • Spokesperson for Police
  • Spokesperson for Commerce
  • Spokesperson for Tourism
  • Catherine Delahunty2008–
  • Spokesperson for Education
  • Spokesperson for Mining
  • Spokesperson for Toxics
  • Spokesperson for Te Tiriti o Waitangi
  • Julie Anne Genter2011–
  • Spokesperson for Transport
  • Spokesperson for Justice
  • Spokesperson for Broadcasting
  • Kennedy Graham2008–
  • Spokesperson for Disarmament
  • Spokesperson for Global Affairs
  • Spokesperson for Climate Change
  • Spokesperson for Trade & Foreign Investment
  • Spokesperson for Constitutional Issues
  • Spokesperson for Defence
  • Spokesperson for Population
  • Kevin Hague2008–
  • Spokesperson for Health and Wellbeing
  • Spokesperson for Commerce
  • Spokesperson for Small Business
  • Spokesperson for Tourism
  • Spokesperson for Biosecurity & Customs
  • Spokesperson for Cycling & Active Transport
  • Spokesperson for Sport & Recreation
  • Spokesperson for Rainbow Issues
  • Spokesperson for Rural Affairs; associate spokesperson on Community Economic Development, Gambling, and Community & Voluntary Sector
  • Gareth Hughes2010–
  • Musterer
  • Spokesperson for Energy
  • Spokesperson for Oceans
  • Spokesperson for Mining
  • Spokesperson for ICT
  • Spokesperson for Libraries & Archives
  • Jan Logie2011–
  • Spokesperson for Income Support
  • Spokesperson for Immigration
  • Spokesperson for Women
  • Spokesperson for Pacific Island Affairs
  • Spokesperson for Ethnic Affairs
  • Spokesperson for Human Rights
  • Spokesperson for Rainbow Issues
  • Spokesperson for Overseas Development Aid
  • Mojo Mathers2011–
  • Spokesperson for Food
  • Spokesperson for Animal Welfare
  • Spokesperson for Disability Issues
  • Spokesperson for Consumer Affairs
  • Spokesperson for Civil Defence
  • Spokesperson for Natural Health
  • Denise Roche2011–
  • Spokesperson for Industrial Relations
  • Spokesperson for Community & Voluntary sector
  • Spokesperson for Community Economic Development
  • Spokesperson for Waste
  • Spokesperson for Gambling
  • Spokesperson for Auckland
  • Spokesperson for State Services
  • Eugenie Sage2011–
  • Spokesperson for Environment
  • Spokesperson for Conservation
  • Spokesperson for Water
  • Spokesperson for Local Government
  • Spokesperson for Christchurch
  • Spokesperson for Land Information
  • Spokesperson for Resource Management issues
  • Holly Walker2011–
  • Spokesperson for Housing
  • Spokesperson for Electoral Reform
  • Spokesperson for Children
  • Spokesperson for Open Government
  • Spokesperson for Arts Culture & Heritage
  • Spokesperson for Youth & Students
  • New Zealand First (7)

    won 6.59% of the vote, entitling it to eight seats. As it did not win any electorate, all members were taken from the party list. Six new members were elected, in addition to two former members.
    The party was reduced to seven MPs when it expelled Brendan Horan in December 2012. Horan remained in Parliament as an independent MP.

    Māori Party (3)

    The Māori Party won 1.43% of the vote, which is short of the 5% threshold. The Māori Party won three electorates and will thus be represented by three electorate MPs. The 1.43% party vote share entitles the party to two seats and with three electorates won, an overhang was caused, increasing the size of the 50th Parliament to 121 seats.
    NameElectorate Term in officePortfolios & Responsibilities
    Pita SharplesTāmaki Makaurau2005–
    Tariana TuriaTe Tai Hauāuru1996–
  • Minister for Disability Issues
  • Minister Responsible for Whānau Ora
  • Associate Minister of Health
  • Associate Minister of Housing
  • Associate Minister for Social Development
  • Associate Minister for Tertiary Education, Skills and Employment
  • Co-leader of the Māori Party
  • Te Ururoa FlavellWaiāriki2005–

    Mana Party (1)

    The Mana Party won 1.08% of the vote, which is short of the 5% threshold. Mana won one electorate and will thus be represented by one electorate MP. The 1.08% party vote share entitles the party to one seat.
    NameElectorate Term in officePortfolios & Responsibilities
    Hone HarawiraTe Tai Tokerau2005–
    • Leader of the Mana Party

    United Future (1)

    won 0.60% of the vote, which is short of the 5% threshold. United Future won one electorate and will thus be represented by one electorate MP. The 0.61% party vote share entitles the party to one seat.
    NameElectorate Term in officePortfolios & Responsibilities
    Peter DunneŌhariu1984–

    NZ Independent Coalition (1)

    ACT New Zealand (0)

    won 1.07% of the vote, which is short of the 5% threshold. ACT won one electorate and was thus represented by one electorate MP. The 1.07% party vote share entitled the party to one seat. Their sole MP resigned from Parliament on 13 June 2014.

    Parliamentary business

    The first sitting of the 50th Parliament was on 20 December 2011, with its main business the swearing in of new members and the election of the speaker. The State Opening was held on the following day by the Governor-General, Sir Jerry Mateparae.

    By-elections during 50th Parliament

    There were a number of changes during the term of the 50th Parliament.

    Summary of changes during term