The 2005 New Zealand general election on Saturday 17 September 2005 determined the membership of the
48th New Zealand Parliament. One hundred and twenty-one MPs were elected to the
New Zealand House of Representatives
The House of Representatives () is the Unicameral, sole chamber of the New Zealand Parliament. The House passes Law of New Zealand, laws, provides Ministers in the New Zealand Government, ministers to form the Cabinet of New Zealand, Cabinet, ...
: 69 from single-member
electorates, including one
overhang seat, and 52 from party lists (one extra due to the overhang).
No
party
A party is a gathering of people who have been invited by a Hospitality, host for the purposes of socializing, conversation, recreation, or as part of a festival or other commemoration or celebration of a special occasion. A party will oft ...
won a majority, but the
Labour Party of
Prime Minister
A prime minister or chief of cabinet is the head of the cabinet and the leader of the ministers in the executive branch of government, often in a parliamentary or semi-presidential system. A prime minister is not the head of state, but r ...
Helen Clark
Helen Elizabeth Clark (born 26 February 1950) is a New Zealand politician who served as the 37th prime minister of New Zealand from 1999 to 2008 and was the administrator of the United Nations Development Programme from 2009 to 2017. She was ...
secured two more seats than nearest rival, the
National Party of Dr
Don Brash. With the exception of the newly formed
Māori Party, which took four
Māori electorates from Labour, most of the other parties polled lower than in the previous election, losing votes and seats.
Brash deferred conceding defeat until 1 October, when National's election-night 49 seats fell to 48 after special votes were counted. The official count increased the Māori Party share of the party vote above 2%, entitling them to three rather than two seats from the party vote. With four electorate seats, the election night
overhang of two seats was reduced to one, and as National had the 120th seat allocated under the party vote, National lost one list seat (that of
Katrina Shanks) that they appeared to have won on election night.
The election was a strong recovery for National which won 21 more seats than at the
2002 election, where it suffered its worst result in its history, and the highest party vote percentage for the party since 1990; indeed, National saw its first vote share gain since 1990. Despite its resurgence, National failed to displace Labour as the largest party in Parliament. National's gains apparently came mainly at the expense of smaller parties, while Labour won only two seats less than in 2002.
On 17 October, Clark announced a new coalition agreement that saw the return of her
minority government
A minority government, minority cabinet, minority administration, or a minority parliament is a government and cabinet formed in a parliamentary system when a political party or coalition of parties does not have a majority of overall seats in ...
coalition with the
Progressive Party, with
confidence and supply
In parliamentary system, parliamentary democracies based on the Westminster system, confidence and supply is an arrangement under which a minority government (one which does not control a majority in the legislature) receives the support of one ...
support from
New Zealand First and from
United Future. New Zealand First parliamentary leader
Winston Peters and United Future parliamentary leader
Peter Dunne became ministers of the Crown outside
Cabinet, Peters as
Minister of Foreign Affairs
In many countries, the ministry of foreign affairs (abbreviated as MFA or MOFA) is the highest government department exclusively or primarily responsible for the state's foreign policy and foreign relations, relations, diplomacy, bilateralism, ...
and Dunne as Minister of Revenue. The
Green Party which had supported Labour before the election received no cabinet post (see below), but gained several concessions from the coalition on matters such as energy and transport, and agreed to support the government on matters of
confidence and supply
In parliamentary system, parliamentary democracies based on the Westminster system, confidence and supply is an arrangement under which a minority government (one which does not control a majority in the legislature) receives the support of one ...
. This was the second time that Labour won three consecutive elections, and to date it is the only time it has won three consecutive peacetime elections.
The election
The total votes cast in 2005 was 2,304,005 (2,164,595 & 139,510 Māori). Turnout was 80.92% of those on the rolls, or 77.05% of voting age population. Turnout was higher than in the previous 2002 election (72.5% and 76.98% respectively), and the Māori roll turnout at 67.07% was significantly higher than 2002 (57.5%).
In the election 739 candidates stood, and there were 19 registered parties with party lists. Of the candidates, 525 were electorate and list, 72 were electorate only and 142 were list only. All but 37 represented registered parties (on the list or in the electorate or both). Only 35 candidates from registered parties chose to stand as an electorate candidate only. 71% of candidates (523) were male and 29% (216) female; the same percentages as in 2002.
Labour had achieved a third term in office for the first time since 1943.
MPs retiring in 2005
Eight MPs intended to retire at the end of the 47th Parliament.
Detailed results
Parliamentary parties
, colspan=12 align=center,

, - style="text-align:center;"
! colspan=2 rowspan=2 style="width:213px;" , Party
! Colspan=3 , Party vote
! Colspan=3 , Electorate vote
! Colspan=4 , Seats
, - style="text-align:center;"
! Votes
! %
! Change
(
pp)
! Votes
! %
! Change
(
pp)
! List
! Electorate
! Total
! +/-
, -
,
, 935,319
, 41.10
, 0.16
, 902,072
, 40.35
, 4.34
, 19
, 31
, 50
, 2
, -
,
, 889,813
, 39.10
, 18.17
, 902,874
, 40.38
, 9.84
, 17
, 31
, 48
, 21
, -
,
, 130,115
, 5.72
, 4.66
, 78,117
, 3.49
, 0.49
, 7
, 0
, 7
, 6
, -
,
, 120,521
, 5.30
, 1.70
, 92,164
, 4.12
, 1.23
, 6
, 0
, 6
, 3
, -
,
, 48,263
, 2.12
, ''new''
, 75,076
, 3.36
, ''new''
, 0
, 4
, 4
, ''new''
, -
,
, 60,860
, 2.67
, 4.02
, 63,486
, 2.84
, 1.52
, 2
, 1
, 3
, 5
, -
,
, 34,469
, 1.51
, 5.63
, 44,071
, 1.97
, 1.58
, 1
, 1
, 2
, 7
, -
,
, 26,441
, 1.16
, 0.54
, 36,638
, 1.64
, 0.20
, 0
, 1
, 1
, 1
, -
,
, 14,210
, 0.62
, ''new''
, 17,608
, 0.79
, ''new''
, 0
, 0
, 0
, ''new''
, -
,
, 5,748
, 0.25
, 0.39
, 2,601
, 0.12
, 0.05
, 0
, 0
, 0
,
, -
,
, 2,821
, 0.12
, 1.23
, 1,296
, 0.06
, 1.99
, 0
, 0
, 0
,
, -
,
, 1,641
, 0.07
, 1.20
, 1,901
, 0.09
, 1.60
,
, 0
, 0
,
, -
,
, 1,178
, 0.05
, ''new''
, 1,045
, 0.05
, ''new''
, 0
, 0
, 0
, ''new''
, -
,
, 1,079
, 0.05
, ''new''
, 565
, 0.03
, ''new''
, 0
, 0
, 0
, ''new''
, -
,
, 946
, 0.04
, 0.04
, 781
, 0.03
,
, 0
, 0
, 0
,
, -
,
, 782
, 0.03
, ''new''
, 1,934
, 0.09
, ''new''
,
, 0
, 0
, ''new''
, -
,
, 601
, 0.03
, ''new''
, —
, —
, —
, 0
, 0
, 0
, ''new''
, -
,
, 478
, 0.02
, 0.07
, 214
, 0.01
, 0.12
,
, 0
, 0
,
, -
,
, 344
, 0.02
, ''new''
, 131
, 0.01
, ''new''
, 0
, 0
, 0
, ''new''
, -
, style="background-color:#ffffff" ,
, style="text-align:left;" , Unregistered parties
, —
, —
, —
, 1,466
, 0.07
, 0.12
, 0
, 0
, 0
,
, -
,
, —
, —
, —
, 11,829
, 0.53
, 0.22
, 0
, 0
, 0
,
, -
! colspan=2 style="text-align:left;" , Valid votes
! 2,275,629
! 98.77
! 0.07
! 2,235,869
! 97.04
! 0.05
! Colspan=4 ,
, -
, colspan=2 style="text-align:left;" , Informal votes
, 10,561
, 0.46
, 0.04
, 24,801
, 1.08
, 0.21
, Colspan=4 ,
, -
, colspan=2 style="text-align:left;" , Disallowed votes
, 17,815
, 0.77
, 0.03
, 43,335
, 1.88
, 0.26
, Colspan=4 ,
, -
! colspan=2 style="text-align:left;" , Total
! 2,304,005
! 100
!
! 2,304,005
! 100
!
! 52
! 69
! 121
! 1
, -
, colspan=2 style="text-align:left;" , Eligible voters and Turnout
, 2,847,396
, 80.92
, 3.94
, 2,847,396
, 80.92
, 3.94
, Colspan=4 ,
The election saw an 81% voter turnout.
The results of the election give a
Gallagher index of disproportionality of 1.11.
Votes summary
Electorate results

The table below shows the results of the 2005 general election:
Key:
, -
, colspan="10" style="background:#eee; text-align:center;", Māori electorates
, -
! Electorate !! colspan=2 , Incumbent !! colspan=2 , Winner !! Majority !! colspan=2 , Runner up
, -
List results
MPs returned via party lists, and unsuccessful candidates, were as follows:
;Notes:
# These party list members later entered parliament in the term as other list MPs elected resigned from parliament.
# These party list members later resigned during the parliamentary term.
Changes during parliamentary term
Party vote by electorate
Analysis of results
Going into the election, Labour had assurances of support from the Greens (six seats in 2005, down three from 2002) and from the Progressives (one seat, down one). This three-party bloc won 57 seats, leaving Clark four seats short of the 61 seats needed for a majority in the 121-seat Parliament (decreased from the expected 122 because the final results gave the Māori Party only one
overhang seat, after it appeared to win two overhang seats on election night). On 5 October the Māori Party began a series of
hui to decide whom to support. That same da
reportsemerged that a meeting between Helen Clark and Māori co-leader
Tariana Turia on 3 October had already ruled out a formal coalition between Labour and the Māori Party. Māori Party representatives also held discussions with National representatives, but most New Zealanders thought the Māori Party more likely to give confidence-supply support to a Labour-dominated government because its supporters apparently heavily backed Labour in the party vote.
Had Turia and her co-leader
Pita Sharples opted to join a Labour-Progressive-Green coalition, Clark would have had sufficient support to govern with support from a grouping of four parties (Labour, Green, Māori and Progressive). Without the Māori Party, Labour needed the support of New Zealand First (seven seats, down six) and United Future (three seats, down five) to form a government. New Zealand First said it would support (or at least abstain from opposing in confidence-motions) the party with the most seats. Clark sought from New Zealand First a positive commitment rather than abstention. United Future, which had supported the previous Labour-Progressive
minority government
A minority government, minority cabinet, minority administration, or a minority parliament is a government and cabinet formed in a parliamentary system when a political party or coalition of parties does not have a majority of overall seats in ...
in confidence and supply, said it would talk first to the party with the most seats about support or coalition. 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.
Brash had only one possible scenario to become Prime Minister: a centre-right coalition with United Future and
ACT (two seats, down seven). Given the election results, however, such a coalition would have required the confidence-and-supply votes of both New Zealand First and the Māori Party. This appeared highly unlikely on several counts. New Zealand First's involvement in such a coalition would have run counter to Peters' promise to deal with the biggest party, and Turia and Sharples would have had difficulty in justifying supporting National after their supporters' overwhelming support for Labour in the party vote. Turia and Sharples probably remembered the severe mauling New Zealand First suffered in the
1999 election. (Many of its supporters in 1996 believed they had voted to get rid of National, only to have Peters go into coalition ''with'' National; New Zealand First has never really recovered.) Even without this to consider, National had indicated it would abolish the
Maori seats if it won power.
The new government as eventually formed consisted of Labour and Progressive in coalition, while New Zealand First and United Future entered agreements of support on confidence and supply motions. In an unprecedented move, Peters and Dunne became Foreign Affairs Minister and Revenue Minister, respectively, but remained outside cabinet and had no obligatory
cabinet collective responsibility on votes outside their respective portfolios.
Possible government setups
Background

The governing
Labour Party retained office at
2002 election. However, its junior coalition partner, the
Alliance
An alliance is a relationship among people, groups, or sovereign state, states that have joined together for mutual benefit or to achieve some common purpose, whether or not an explicit agreement has been worked out among them. Members of an a ...
, lost most of its support after internal conflict and disagreement and failed to win parliamentary representation. Labour formed a coalition with the new
Progressive Coalition, formed by former Alliance leader
Jim Anderton
James Patrick Anderton (born Byrne; 21 January 1938 – 7 January 2018) was a New Zealand politician who led a succession of Left-wing politics, left-wing parties after leaving the New Zealand Labour Party, Labour Party in 1989.
Anderton's pol ...
. The Labour-Progressive coalition then obtained an agreement of support ("confidence and supply") from
United Future, enabling it to form a stable minority government. The
National Party, Labour's main opponents, suffered a major defeat, winning only 21% of the vote (22.5% of the seats), its weakest showing in an election.
The collapse of National's vote led ultimately to the replacement of its Parliamentary party leader
Bill English with parliamentary newcomer
Don Brash, the former governor of the
Reserve Bank of New Zealand, on 28 October 2003. Brash began an aggressive campaign against the Labour-dominated government. A major boost to this campaign came with his "
Orewa speech" (27 January 2004), in which he attacked the Labour-dominated government for giving "special treatment" to the
Māori population, particularly over the
foreshore and seabed controversy. This resulted in a surge of support for the National Party, although most polls indicated that this subsequently subsided. National also announced it would not stand candidates in the
Māori electorates, with some smaller parties following suit.
The foreshore-and-seabed controversy also resulted in the establishment of the Māori Party in July 2004. The Māori Party hoped to break Labour's traditional (and then current) dominance in the Māori electorates, just as
New Zealand First had done in the
1996 election.
A large number of so-called "minor" parties also contested the election. These included
Destiny New Zealand (the political branch of the
Destiny Church) and the
Direct Democracy Party.
Polls

A series of opinion polls published in June 2005 indicated that the National Party had moved ahead of Labour for the first time since June 2004. Commentators speculated that a prominent billboard campaign may have contributed to this. Some said the National Party had peaked too early. The polls released throughout July showed once more an upward trend for Labour, with Labour polling about 6% above National. The release by the National Party of a series of
tax-reform proposals in August 2005 appeared to correlate with an increase in its ratings in the polls.
Direct comparisons between the following polls have no statistical validity:
No single political event can explain the significant differences between most of these polls over the period between them. They show either volatility in the electorate and/or flaws in the methods of polling. In the later polls, the issue of National's knowledge of a series of pamphlets (distributed by members of the
Exclusive Brethren and attacking the Green and Labour parties) appeared not to have reduced National Party support.
Candidates
For lists of candidates in the 2005 election see:
*
Candidates grouped by electorate
*
Candidates grouped by party list
Major policy platforms
Labour Party
The Labour Party platform included:
*
student loan
A student loan is a type of loan designed to help students pay for post-secondary education and the associated fees, such as tuition, books and supplies, and living expenses. It may differ from other types of loans in the fact that the interest ...
s: writing off interest if the recipient stays in New Zealand
*
health
Health has a variety of definitions, which have been used for different purposes over time. In general, it refers to physical and emotional well-being, especially that associated with normal functioning of the human body, absent of disease, p ...
: a pledge of extra
public-hospital operations
*
Treaty of Waitangi
The Treaty of Waitangi (), sometimes referred to as ''Te Tiriti'', is a document of central importance to the history of New Zealand, Constitution of New Zealand, its constitution, and its national mythos. It has played a major role in the tr ...
: accepting no lodgements for Treaty-claims after 1 September 2008
* increasing
rates
Rate or rates may refer to:
Finance
* Rate (company), an American residential mortgage company formerly known as Guaranteed Rate
* Rates (tax), a type of taxation system in the United Kingdom used to fund local government
* Exchange rate, rate ...
-rebates
* a "
KiwiSaver" program, aimed at getting first homeowners into their own homes
* sponsoring 5,000 new
apprenticeship
Apprenticeship is a system for training a potential new practitioners of a trade or profession with on-the-job training and often some accompanying study. Apprenticeships may also enable practitioners to gain a license to practice in a regulat ...
s
* increasing community police-force numbers by 250.
* a "
Working for Families" tax-relief/benefit programme aimed at lower to middle-income families
National Party
The National Party campaigned on the platform of
National Party Press Release:
*
taxation
A tax is a mandatory financial charge or levy imposed on an individual or legal person, legal entity by a governmental organization to support government spending and public expenditures collectively or to Pigouvian tax, regulate and reduce nega ...
: lowering income-tax rates. The party ran a television advertisement parodying the
telethon
A telethon (a portmanteau of "television" and "marathon") is a televised fundraising event that lasts many hours or days, the purpose of which is to raise money for a charitable, political or other cause.
Most telethons feature heavy solicitatio ...
s aired by TVNZ in the 1980s, rewording the telethon theme song "Thank you very much for your kind donation" (itself a cover of the 1967 The Scaffolds song "Thank U Very Much") to "Thank you very much for your high taxation"
* removing references to the
Treaty of Waitangi
The Treaty of Waitangi (), sometimes referred to as ''Te Tiriti'', is a document of central importance to the history of New Zealand, Constitution of New Zealand, its constitution, and its national mythos. It has played a major role in the tr ...
from existing legislation; and resolving all
treaty
A treaty is a formal, legally binding written agreement between sovereign states and/or international organizations that is governed by international law. A treaty may also be known as an international agreement, protocol, covenant, convention ...
claims amicably by 2010
* by 1 April 2006, make
student-loan repayments and $5000 of pre-school childcare costs recoupable to mainstream New Zealanders
* "reworking" the New Zealand
Resource Management Act 1991
The Resource Management Act (RMA) passed in 1991 in New Zealand is a significant, and at times, controversial Act of Parliament. The RMA promotes the sustainable management of natural and physical resources such as land, air and water. New Zea ...
to make
development
Development or developing may refer to:
Arts
*Development (music), the process by which thematic material is reshaped
* Photographic development
*Filmmaking, development phase, including finance and budgeting
* Development hell, when a proje ...
easier
* "removing excessive
bureaucracy
Bureaucracy ( ) is a system of organization where laws or regulatory authority are implemented by civil servants or non-elected officials (most of the time). Historically, a bureaucracy was a government administration managed by departments ...
" in the education system, in particular by overhauling the
NCEA, and by re-introducing "bulk funding" of schools
* abolishing early
parole
Parole, also known as provisional release, supervised release, or being on paper, is a form of early release of a prisoner, prison inmate where the prisoner agrees to abide by behavioral conditions, including checking-in with their designated ...
for violent criminals. (As of 2005 most prisoners became eligible for parole after serving one-third of their sentence)
* a return to "market rents" for
state-housing tenants, including a system of paying housing-subsidies (for the poorest tenants) directly to private landlords
* increase Nationwide Maths and English standards
* welfare Reform – reduce the waste of having 300,000 working age New Zealand adults on benefits and to ensure all of those on benefits really need the help
* a "work-for-the-
dole" scheme
* abolishing the
Maori electorates
Voting
Postal voting for New Zealanders abroad began on 31 August. Ballot voting took place on Saturday 17 September, from 9am to 7pm. The Chief Electoral Office released a provisional result at 12:05am on 18 September.
Party funding
New Zealand operates on a system whereby the Electoral Commission allocates funding for advertising on television and on radio. Parties must use their own money for all other forms of advertising, but may not use any of their own money for television or radio advertising.
*Must register for funding
Source
Electoral Commission
Controversies
Police investigated six political parties for alleged breaches of election-spending rules relating to the 2005 election, but brought no prosecutions,
determining that "there was insufficient evidence to indicate that an offence under s214b of the Electoral Act had been committed."
The
Auditor-General has also investigated publicly funded party-advertising for the 2005 election, with a leaked preliminary finding of much of the spending as unlawful. Observers expected the release of a final report in October 2006.
References
Further reading
*
External links
Elections New Zealand joint website of the Electoral Enrolment Centre, Chief Electoral Office, and Electoral Commission.
2005 General Election Resultsfrom the Chief Electoral Office, Ministry of Justice
nzvotes.org comparative information on parties, candidates and electorates
''New Zealand Herald'' Election 2005 website
{{New Zealand elections
September 2005 in New Zealand