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67-588: Hauraki-Waikato is a New Zealand parliamentary Māori electorate first established for the 2008 election . It largely replaced the Tainui electorate. Nanaia Mahuta of the Labour Party , formerly the MP for Tainui, became MP for Hauraki-Waikato in the 2008 general election and was re-elected in 2011 , 2014 , 2017 and 2020 before being unseated by Hana-Rawhiti Maipi-Clarke in 2023 . The electorate includes

134-477: A $ 1.5 billion broadband plan and a new prison in its first term. On 9 October, National released its policy, promising people on the average wage or higher around $ 47 a week extra in the hand, funded through a combination of cutting contributions to KiwiSaver, eliminating a tax credit for science and development, and changing Working For Families entitlements. On calling the 2008 election, Prime Minister Helen Clark declared that it would be "about trust", labelling

201-506: A cloud; after his party being cleared of charges of serious fraud, National restated its position, saying that the result of the case has not altered it. Based on polls commissioned by the Māori news show Marae , the Māori Party appeared likely to win most of the Māori electorates and stood a chance of holding the balance of power. The party's MP for Te Tai Tokerau , Hone Harawira , stated at

268-575: A fourth consecutive term, after the National Party entered into support agreements with the ACT, United Future and Māori parties, resulting in a National minority government. Incumbent The incumbent is the current holder of an office or position. In an election , the incumbent is the person holding or acting in the position that is up for election, regardless of whether they are seeking re-election. There may or may not be an incumbent on

335-496: A list member, or other incumbent. A [REDACTED] Y or [REDACTED] N denotes status of any incumbent , win or lose respectively. Blue background denotes the winner of the electorate vote. Pink background denotes a candidate elected from their party list. Yellow background denotes an electorate win by a list member, or other incumbent. A [REDACTED] Y or [REDACTED] N denotes status of any incumbent , win or lose respectively. Blue background denotes

402-654: A list member, or other incumbent. A [REDACTED] Y or [REDACTED] N denotes status of any incumbent , win or lose respectively. Electorate (as at 26 November 2011): 33,215 Blue background denotes the winner of the electorate vote. Pink background denotes a candidate elected from their party list. Yellow background denotes an electorate win by a list member, or other incumbent. A [REDACTED] Y or [REDACTED] N denotes status of any incumbent , win or lose respectively. 2008 New Zealand general election Helen Clark Labour John Key National The 2008 New Zealand general election

469-535: A majority of 2,154 (6.77%). National reversed all of these majorities in 2008 and captured all three seats. Part of National's core vote comes from provincial centres. In 1990, when Labour lost power, it lost every seat between the southern fringe of the Auckland urban area and Porirua except Napier and Palmerston North ; in 2005, National again won several provincial seats off Labour: National also won Tauranga off New Zealand First leader Winston Peters in 2005 and

536-525: A member for the ACT Party. New Zealand elections traditionally occur after September in the third year following the last election, and snap elections occur rarely; the only three elections out of sync in the period of 1948 to 2008 took place in 1951 , 1984 and 2002 —and the last two came only a few months early. Convention in New Zealand expects Parliaments to run for a full three years unless

603-531: A new contract, in comparison with competing businesses. Political analysts in the United States and United Kingdom have noted the existence of a sophomore surge (not known as such in the United Kingdom) in which first term representatives see an increase in votes after their first election. This phenomenon is said to bring an advantage of up to 10% for first-term representatives, which increases

670-470: A plan worth $ 150 billion whereby all retail deposits would be unconditionally covered. The plan would be voluntary to join; within two days, reports appeared stating that all of New Zealand's major trading banks had signed up. Also signed up to the plan was the National Party, with deputy leader and finance spokesperson Bill English saying that there was "still time to change the...scheme if banks find it hard to borrow overseas". On 6 October, two days before

737-449: A political advantage over challengers at elections . Except when the timing of elections is determined by a constitution or by legislation, the incumbent in some countries may have the right to determine the date of an election. For most political offices, the incumbent often has more name recognition due to their previous work in the office. Incumbents also have easier access to campaign finance , as well as government resources (such as

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804-438: A programme of tax cuts." The same day Helen Clark reiterated her opinion on tax cuts beyond the government's proposal, saying "now is not the time to go out and recklessly borrow to offer tax cuts", an opinion she had first voiced in early August when the National Party used its annual conference to promise to speed up the implementation of the tax cuts, and to borrow several billion dollars to fund infrastructure projects such as

871-552: A prospective National-led government. United Future also announced that it would side with National in late October, after supporting the Labour government for six years. The Progressive Party, led by Jim Anderton , had served as a steady coalition partner to Labour and the electorate probably expected it to remain so. The Green Party, which abstained from opposing the Labour-led government in supply and confidence votes through

938-599: A range of possible outcomes on election day; some suggested Labour could form a coalition government, while others predicted National in control. Of the "minor" parties, only the Green Party consistently polled over the five-percent threshold, and United Future and the Progressive Party frequently failed to register a mention. Both ACT's and the Māori Party 's popularity since 2005 remained steady at around two percent, while New Zealand First failed to poll over

1005-552: A referendum on the incumbent." Voters will first grapple with the record of the incumbent. Only if they decide to "fire" the incumbent do they begin to evaluate whether each of the challengers is an acceptable alternative. A 2017 study in the British Journal of Political Science argues that the incumbency advantage stems from the fact that voters evaluate the incumbent's ideology individually whereas they assume that any challenger shares his party's ideology. This means that

1072-505: A safe National seat. Even though the number of South Island electorates remains fixed, the decline in the population of electorates south of Christchurch has resulted in the boundaries of electorates from Invercargill north to Rakaia shifting northwards. The seats of Aoraki , Otago , Rakaia and Banks Peninsula all gravitated towards Christchurch. In the process: Other seats in the lower South Island increased dramatically in size. In 2005 four MPs won seats with majorities of under

1139-687: A thousand: Labour's Darren Hughes beat National candidate Nathan Guy in Ōtaki by 382 votes (1.00%), and in Hamilton West , Martin Gallagher of the Labour Party won an 825-vote majority (2.46%) over National's Tim Macindoe. Both these seats saw a rematch in 2008, with the National Party candidates emerging victorious in each. The swing to National in the central North Island saw two Bay of Plenty seats produce close results: in Rotorua ,

1206-456: A time when he asked several questions in the House about the government's plans regarding rail infrastructure. New Zealand First leader Winston Peters faced an attack on his party's credibility, first over allegations that his party did not declare a $ 100,000 donation from millionaire ex-patriate property developer Owen Glenn to cover Winston Peters' legal costs in a challenge to the result in

1273-404: Is created when the term of office is limited, as in the case of terms of the U.S. president being restricted to two four-year terms, and the incumbent is prohibited from recontesting. Although the expected advantage of incumbency has gone from about two percentage points in the 1950s, to ten percentage points in the 1980s and 1990s, and then back to about two percentage points in the 2010s and 2020s,

1340-454: Is derived from the Latin verb incumbere , literally meaning "to lean or lay upon" with the present participle stem incumbent- , "leaning a variant of encumber, while encumber is derived from the root cumber , most appropriately defined: "To occupy obstructively or inconveniently; to block fill up with what hinders freedom of motion or action; to burden, load." In general, an incumbent has

1407-478: Is the case, for example, with the Presidency of France . Voters who experience the negative economic shock of a loss of income are less likely to vote for an incumbent candidate than those who have not experienced such a shock. Nick Panagakis, a pollster, coined what he dubbed the incumbent rule in 1989—that any voter who claims to be undecided towards the end of the election will probably end up voting for

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1474-525: The ACT , United Future and Māori parties. The Governor-General swore Key in as New Zealand's 38th Prime Minister on 19 November 2008. This marked the beginning of the Fifth National Government which governed for the next nine years, until the 2017 general election , when a government was formed between the Labour and New Zealand First parties, with support on confidence and supply by

1541-474: The ballot : the previous holder may have died, retired, resigned; they may not seek re-election, be barred from re-election due to term limits , or a new electoral division or position may have been created, at which point the office or position is regarded as vacant or open. In the United States , an election without an incumbent on the ballot is an open seat or open contest . The word "incumbent"

1608-424: The franking privilege ) that can be indirectly used to boost the incumbent's re-election campaign. In the United States, an election (especially for a single-member constituency in a legislature ) in which an incumbent is not seeking re-election is often called an open seat ; because of the lack of incumbency advantage, these are often amongst the most hotly contested races in any election. Also, an open contest

1675-404: The 20 hours subsidised early-childhood plan; and higher numbers of people forced onto benefits by any prospective economic downturn. Over the next fiscal year, Cullen expected GDP to rise by just 0.1%, with median house prices dropping by an estimated 10–15%. John Key responded to the news by describing the numbers as "a bit worse than we had anticipated", and stated "I'm confident we can deliver

1742-585: The 2005 election by just two percentage points, Labour held a slender lead in aggregate polling through the first half of 2006; a two-point lead in the first half of the year turned into a two-point deficit by May. Polling for a preferred Prime Minister showed Helen Clark nearly twice as popular as then National Party leader Don Brash . Things changed in early 2007, with new National leader John Key improving on Brash's preferred Prime Minister rating by ten points, and overtaking Clark as preferred Prime Minister in May; at

1809-404: The 2008 elections for other reasons. In the months preceding the election 13 Members of Parliament announced that they would not seek re-election to the House of Representatives in 2008, namely: Several list MPs elected in 2005 resigned before the end of the term; for a full list, see 48th New Zealand Parliament#Changes during term . New Zealand First received 4.07% of the party vote – below

1876-414: The 5% threshold, although lacking an obvious winnable electorate seat (co-leader Jeanette Fitzsimons had won Coromandel in 1999 , but the electorate returned to National in 2002 ). National won nine electorate seats from Labour: The Māori Party also won a seat from Labour. A number of seats elected new MPs following the retirement of their sitting Members: Having come first in the party vote at

1943-491: The Green Party. The Green Party became the third-largest party in Parliament, with nine seats. The ACT Party came joint-fourth (in terms of seats), increasing their number of seats from two to five, and reversing some of their losses from the 2005 election. The Māori Party also won five seats – out of the seven Māori electorates – creating an overhang of two seats. The New Zealand First party, which had seven MPs in

2010-589: The Maori roll had voted. The Electoral Finance Act 2007 passed by the Labour government had a "chilling effect" on political activity in 2008, according to the Electoral Commission . Some parties attempted to make this an election issue. On 5 August 2008, the Treasury announced that the New Zealand economy had entered a recession . Economic downturn has led to high-profile job losses, such as

2077-471: The Māori Party then very clearly they're starting off on the wrong foot". Marae polls released on 12 October showed 62 percent of voters polled in the two northernmost Māori electorates were resistant to the idea of a National–Māori government; co-leader Pita Sharples responded to the poll results by saying his party would be "stupid" to ignore the poll figures. See: The Labour government failed to secure

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2144-489: The National Party's recent commitments to preserve Labour Party programmes such as KiwiSaver and Kiwibank as "insincere". Members of the Labour Party accused John Key of lying about his shareholding in Tranz Rail , by not disclosing nearly half of the shares he and his family trusts owned in the company, even though this presented a clear conflict of interest with Key's role as his party's spokesperson on transport, at

2211-512: The National Party's scheduled release of details of the tax-cut plan it had over and above the governing coalition's three-stage series of tax cuts revealed in the 2008 Budget , the Government disclosed its full fiscal situation; it showed that it expected to take $ 3.1 billion less tax in 2009, forcing the government to borrow $ 5.9 billion in 2009, rising to $ 7.3 billion by 2013. This implied higher costs for KiwiSaver, Working For Families and

2278-592: The boundaries of New Zealand's parliamentary electorates following the 2006 census ; the large growth in population between censuses lead to significant boundary changes, particularly in Auckland, the area around Christchurch and the central North Island. In May 2007, the Representation Commission announced the boundary changes to take effect for the next general election, with the boundaries finalised in September 2007. The Commission announced

2345-471: The closure of factories in Foxton , in west Dunedin and in southern Hawke's Bay . At the same time, inflation hit an eighteen-year high, with an upwards tug on the prices of basics such as food and petrol, the latter crossing the two-dollar-per-litre mark in late May. At the Labour Party's campaign launch on 12 October 2008, Helen Clark became the latest world leader to guarantee bank deposits, unveiling

2412-543: The electoral fortunes of the ACT Party depended very largely on Rodney Hide retaining Epsom, which he did. Amongst other parties very aware of the 5% barrier, United Future appeared more secure in the light of Peter Dunne 's grip on Ōhariu , which he maintained, though by a narrower margin than previously; and the Progressive Party retained a very strong hold via Jim Anderton 's " safe seat " of Wigram . The Greens never appeared in danger of slipping below

2479-578: The electorate) the Commission largely reverted proposed changes to the boundaries of the Pakuranga electorate . The Commission opted to alleviate population pressures by moving the Auckland City suburb of Ōtāhuhu into Manukau East . The revised new seat received the name "Botany" to reflect its focus on the growing population-centres of Botany Downs – Dannemora . On paper, Botany counts as

2546-408: The end of September that the party could work with both Labour and National. On 28 September, National announced a commitment to abolish the Māori electorates in time for the 2014 election. The Māori Party has benefited greatly from the Māori electorates, and its co-leader Tariana Turia was unimpressed: "They think again that they can deny us the right to participate. If they want a relationship with

2613-408: The figure) and third-lowest since 1902. Turnout statistics reflect the percentage of those enrolled to vote. Political scientist Stephen Levine from Victoria University speculated that the low turnout may have resulted from the National Party's large lead over Labour in opinion polls running up to the election. Māori Party co-leader Pita Sharples expressed concern that only 55% of those on

2680-411: The final possible date for the 2008 general election. On Friday 12 September 2008, Prime Minister Helen Clark announced that the general election would take place on 8 November 2008. This set the full election timetable as: Nineteen registered political parties contested the party vote: The following parties either disappeared during the previous parliament's term (2005 to 2008), or did not contest

2747-590: The following population centres: Within the Auckland Region : Papakura , Pukekohe , Waiuku , Clarks Beach , Ramarama , Bombay , Pōkeno . Within the Waikato region: Meremere , Huntly , Whitianga , Whangamatā , Thames , Paeroa , Waihi , Hamilton , Ngāruawāhia , Morrinsville , Matamata , Cambridge , Te Awamutu , Raglan , Kawhia . In the 2007 boundary redistribution, the Tainui electorate

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2814-529: The formation of a new electorate in Greater Auckland, bringing the number of geographical constituencies to 70. The new seat, originally dubbed " Howick " (after the Auckland suburb), would have included parts of the existing Pakuranga, Manukau East and Clevedon electorates. After Pakuranga electors made strong objections to the proposed changes (which would have seen the inclusion of the population centres Panmure , Point England and Glen Innes into

2881-485: The government loses the confidence of the House, although this has not happened since 1911. The Constitution Act 1986 defines the term of Parliament as "three years from the day fixed for the return of the writs issued for the last preceding general election of members of the House of Representatives, and no longer". Since the writs for the 2005 election were returned on 6 October 2005, the ensuing 48th New Zealand Parliament expired on 6 October 2008, making 15 November

2948-530: The incumbency advantage gets more significant as political polarization increases. A 2017 study in the Journal of Politics found that incumbents have "a far larger advantage" in on-cycle elections than in off-cycle elections . In relation to business operations and competition , an incumbent supplier is usually the supplier who currently supplies the needs of a customer and therefore has an advantageous position in relation to maintaining this role or agreeing

3015-432: The incumbency advantage. However, the extent of the surge is a biased estimate of the electoral advantage of incumbency. However, there exist scenarios in which the incumbency factor itself leads to the downfall of the incumbent. Popularly known as the anti-incumbency factor , situations of this kind occur when the incumbent has proven themself not worthy of office during their tenure and the challengers demonstrate this to

3082-511: The large Asian population in the new seat, such trends may have given National candidate and victor Pansy Wong a possible advantage. Boundary changes have also shaken up the electoral landscape of the South Island. Three new seats – Selwyn , Waitaki and Rangitata , drawn respectively out of Aoraki, Otago and Rakaia, three National-held seats in 2005, damaged Labour's chances outside of Christchurch and Dunedin. On Labour's other flank,

3149-543: The law requires. This case was referred to the Serious Fraud Office for further investigation; on 11 October, New Zealand First was cleared of charges that Peters called a "waste of time" and on 24 October, New Zealand First was cleared of wrongdoing by the Electoral Commission, which was investigating donations that the party failed to declare. The Representation Commission altered many of

3216-566: The life of the 48th Parliament (2005 to 2008), said on 20 October that the only party of the two main parties it could form a coalition with was Labour. In the light of New Zealand First's run-in with the Serious Fraud Office, John Key ruled out that party as a government support partner on 31 August 2008, saying "the sheer weight of allegations and the actions of Mr Peters in the last few months means that I have lost that confidence in him". At that time, Peters' future seemed under

3283-418: The lion's share of the ACT and United parties' core votes (and in the process gained Northcote off Labour). The newly-drawn seat of Botany on Auckland's eastern fringe presented an electoral problem for the Labour Party – on 4 July 2008 a crowd of mostly Asian marchers numbered in the thousands protested against Labour's record on crime and sentencing and a perceived upswing in anti-Asian crime. Because of

3350-490: The parliamentary leader of the Labour Party. She had led the party since 1993, and had served as prime minister since the 1999 election. 2008 saw several important political figures enter Parliament, including future finance minister Grant Robertson , future National Party leader Simon Bridges , and the next two Labour Prime Ministers, Jacinda Ardern and Chris Hipkins . Former Labour minister Roger Douglas , who stepped down in 1990 returned to parliament in this election but as

3417-432: The previous parliament, failed to win any electorates or pass the 5 per cent MMP threshold, and therefore won no seats in the new parliament. In his victory speech, John Key announced the readiness of the ACT, Maori Party and United Future parties to co-operate with the National Party to form the next government, the Fifth National Government of New Zealand . In her concession speech, Helen Clark announced her resignation as

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3484-429: The probability that an incumbent will lose his or her seat has remained approximately the same over the entire period. When newcomers look to fill an open office, voters tend to compare and contrast the candidates' qualifications, positions on political issues, and personal characteristics in a relatively straightforward way. Elections featuring an incumbent, on the other hand, are, as Guy Molyneux puts it, "fundamentally

3551-455: The same time National jumped out to a sizeable lead over Labour ranging from between eight and eighteen points, spending most of 2007 and 2008 with support from around fifty percent of the electorate. Labour's popularity slumped, hitting its lowest point in the winter of 2008, before beginning a slow climb into the high thirties in August and September. Leading up to the election, polls indicated

3618-543: The seat of Tauranga . This was referred to a House of Representatives Privileges Committee . On 22 September, the committee determined that Peters had "provided misleading information" and recommended he be censured ; this was done by the House of Representatives in a 62–56 vote two days later. The second allegation revolved around the party's failure to declare the use of a secret trust to funnel large donations into New Zealand First's bank account, even though no donations over $ 10,000 to New Zealand First has been declared, as

3685-491: The sitting Labour MP Steve Chadwick prevailed by just 662 votes (2.17%) over National's Gil Stehbens, and in Tauranga , property developer Bob Clarkson defeated New Zealand First's leader and seven-term MP for Tauranga Winston Peters by 730 votes (2.02%). Rotorua fell to National's Todd McClay in 2008, while Simon Bridges held Tauranga for National by a wide margin, preventing Peters from returning to Parliament. Besides

3752-483: The three Labour-held narrow-margin seats mentioned above (Otaki, Hamilton West and Rotorua), National had prospects of gaining Taupō , where boundary changes have added the National-leaning town of Cambridge and with it nearly 20,000 different voters – putting sitting MP Mark Burton 's 2005 majority of just 1,285 votes (4.43%) at risk. Similarly, the seat of West Coast-Tasman gave Labour's Damien O'Connor

3819-533: The three Māori electorates that it held last time against a strong Māori Party challenge were in danger of falling as they did in 1996 when New Zealand First broke Labour's sixty-year stranglehold. Nanaia Mahuta again faced Angeline Greensill for the new Hauraki-Waikato seat, and narrowly held it. Māori Affairs Minister Parekura Horomia also held on by a small margin against veteran broadcaster Derek Fox in Ikaroa-Rāwhiti . Incumbent Mahara Okeroa , however,

3886-416: The threshold after December 2006. The polls gave varied results for preferred Prime Minister, with some giving Clark a slight lead, and others giving Key a sturdy margin. The coalition preferences of various parties played a role during the campaign, due to the likelihood that no party would get an absolute majority of seats in the House. ACT emerged as the first "minor" party to announce that it would support

3953-457: The threshold of 5% – and failed to win an electorate seat. The party's seven MPs lost their seats: The rolls listed almost 3 million people registered to vote in the election, a record number representing 95.3% of the estimated eligible voting population. In contrast, voter turnout of 79.5% of enrolled voters came in lower than in most previous elections, the second-lowest since 1978 (when a large number of outdated and duplicate enrolments deflated

4020-460: The voters. An anti-incumbency factor can also be responsible for bringing down incumbents who have been in office for many successive terms despite performance indicators, simply because the voters are convinced by the challengers of a need for change. It is also argued that the holders of extensively powerful offices are subject to immense pressure which leaves them politically impotent and unable to command enough public confidence for re-election; such

4087-480: The winner of the electorate vote. Pink background denotes a candidate elected from their party list. Yellow background denotes an electorate win by a list member, or other incumbent. A [REDACTED] Y or [REDACTED] N denotes status of any incumbent , win or lose respectively. Blue background denotes the winner of the electorate vote. Pink background denotes a candidate elected from their party list. Yellow background denotes an electorate win by

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4154-480: The winner of the electorate vote. Pink background denotes a candidate elected from their party list. Yellow background denotes an electorate win by a list member, or other incumbent. A [REDACTED] Y or [REDACTED] N denotes status of any incumbent , win or lose respectively. Blue background denotes the winner of the electorate vote. Pink background denotes a candidate elected from their party list. Yellow background denotes an electorate win by

4221-432: Was contracted to east of Manurewa . Following an objection raised by the Labour Party which emphasised Waiheke Island 's ferry connections to Auckland, the island was moved to Tāmaki Makaurau. The electorate includes the following tribal areas: Ngāi Tai , Ngāti Huia , Ngāti Mahuta , Ngāti Maru , Ngāti Paoa , Ngāti Raukawa , Ngāti Tamaterā , Ngāti Te Ata , Waikato-Tainui , Ngāti Porou ki Hauraki The electorate

4288-533: Was defeated by Rahui Katene in Te Tai Tonga , giving the Māori Party an additional seat. The seats of Tauranga and Epsom provided particular resonances: Winston Peters failed to retake the marginal Tauranga (and Ron Mark failed to win the Rimutaka seat), meaning New Zealand First 's chances of returning to the House depended on winning 5% of the party vote, which they did not accomplish. Similarly,

4355-446: Was held on 8 November 2008 to determine the composition of the 49th New Zealand Parliament . The liberal-conservative National Party , headed by its parliamentary leader John Key , won the largest share of votes and seats, ending nine years of government by the social-democratic Labour Party , led by Helen Clark . Key announced a week later that he would lead a National minority government with confidence-and-supply support from

4422-527: Was originally proposed by Elections New Zealand as "Pare Hauraki-Pare Waikato" to even out the numbers on the voting roll in Tainui and Te Tai Hauauru . Labour's Nanaia Mahuta won the 2008 election against Angeline Greensill of the Māori Party . In the 2011 election , Mahuta defeated Greensill with a greatly increased margin of 35.5% of the candidate vote. Mahuta won the 2014 election with another decisive majority. Key     Labour     Te Pāti Māori Blue background denotes

4489-533: Was reduced in size by transferring the tribal area of Ngāti Maniapoto to the Te Tai Hauāuru electorate, and in the process, the electorate was renamed as Hauraki-Waikato. The electorate saw no boundary adjustment in the 2013/14 redistribution. In 2020, following the relatively higher population growth in the Hauraki-Waikato electorate than that of Tāmaki Makaurau , Hauraki-Waikato's northern boundary

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