- 45th New Zealand Parliament
The 45th New Zealand Parliament was a term of the Parliament of
New Zealand . Its composition was determined by the 1996 elections, and it sat until the 1999 elections.The 45th Parliament was notable in that it was the first to be elected under the new MMP electoral system, a form of
proportional representation . It was also notable for the fact that it was the first New Zealand Parliament to have an Asian,Pansy Wong , elected to it. The difference between the 45th Parliament and its predecessor were considerable — the 44th Parliament had opened with only four seats being held by minor parties, but at the opening of the 45th Parliament, minor parties held thirty-nine seats. Because of the considerably altered balance of power in Parliament, neither of the two major parties could govern alone, andNew Zealand First , the largest of the four other parties in Parliament, was put in the position of "kingmaker". In the end, New Zealand First opted for a coalition with the National Party, which had governed in the previous Parliament. The Labour Party continued in Opposition.The 45th Parliament consisted of one hundred and twenty representatives. Sixty-five of these representatives were chosen by geographical electorates, including five special Maori electorates. The remainder were elected by means of
party-list proportional representation under the MMP electoral system.Electoral boundaries for the 45th Parliament
Initial composition of the 45th Parliament
Changes during term
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Jim Gerard , a National Partylist MP , resigned from Parliament in April1997 to take up a post asHigh Commissioner inOttawa . He was replaced byAnnabel Young , the next candidate on National's list.
*Alamein Kopu , an Alliancelist MP , resigned from her party in July1997 . She eventually formed her own party,Mana Wahine Te Ira Tangata .
*Jim Bolger , having been replaced as Prime Minister byJenny Shipley in1997 , left Parliament in1998 . This caused a by-election in his Taranaki-King Country seat, won byShane Ardern of the National Party.
*Neil Kirton , aNew Zealand First list MP , resigned from his party in July1998 after ongoing conflict with its leadership. Kirton opposed his party's coalition with the National Party, and believed that the National Party was too dominant in the agreement. Kirton became an independent.
*After the collapse of the coalition between the National Party andNew Zealand First , the junior parner, New Zealand First, splintered. Eight MPs (Jenny Bloxham , Peter Brown,Brian Donnelly ,Ron Mark ,Robyn McDonald ,Winston Peters ,Doug Woolerton , andTu Wyllie ) remained with the party, and eight MPs (Ann Batten ,Tuariki Delamere ,Jack Elder ,Tau Henare ,Peter McCardle ,Tuku Morgan ,Deborah Morris , andRana Waitai ) resigned and become independents. The MPs who resigned did not remain united, and eventually split four ways.
**Batten, Elder, Henare, Morgan, and Waitai established theMauri Pacific party.
**Delamere joined theTe Tawharau party.
**Morris resigned from Parliament. She was replaced byGilbert Myles , the next candidate on her former party's list. Myles remained attached to New Zealand First.
**McCardle remained an independent.
*Jill White , a Labour Partylist MP , resigned from Parliament in1998 to becomeMayor of Palmerston North . She was replaced by Helen Duncan, the next candidate on Labour's list.
*Paul East , a National Partylist MP , resigned from Parliament in1999 to take up a post asHigh Commissioner inLondon . He was replaced byAlec Neill , the next candidate on National's list.
*Frank Grover , an Alliancelist MP , resigned from his party on11 June 1999 . He joined the Christian Heritage Party.
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