Tāmaki (New Zealand Electorate)
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Tāmaki is a parliamentary
electorate Electorate may refer to: * The people who are eligible to vote in an election, especially their number e.g. the term ''size of (the) electorate'' * The dominion of a prince-elector in the Holy Roman Empire until 1806 * An electoral district ...
, returning one Member of Parliament 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, ...
. The electorate is named after the Tāmaki River that runs immediately east of the seat. The electorate is represented by Brooke van Velden, the deputy leader of the
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party.


Population centres

The 1941 New Zealand census had been postponed due to World War II, so the 1946 electoral redistribution had to take ten years of population growth and movements into account. The
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gained a further two electorates from the
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due to faster population growth. The abolition of the country quota through the ''Electoral Amendment Act, 1945'' reduced the number and increased the size of rural electorates. None of the existing electorates remained unchanged, 27 electorates were abolished, eight former electorates were re-established, and 19 electorates were created for the first time, including Tamaki. Tāmaki is based around the Auckland isthmus north-eastern beach suburbs, Mission Bay, Meadowbank, Saint Heliers, Kohimarama and Glendowie; it also contains the working-class suburb of Glen Innes on its southern fringe. Tāmaki is the home of a selection of New Zealand's emblematic historical moments: Ngāti Whatua activism at Bastion Point (sparking a chain of events leading to the modern Treaty of Waitangi grievance settlement process) occurred inside the seat's boundaries, a seat at the time represented by the contentious Robert Muldoon, the Prime Minister responsible for the Crown's response to the occupation of Bastion Point. Among other Ngāti Whatua land taken through governmental application of public works legislation is Paratai Drive, once New Zealand's most expensive street. The area around Mission Bay is also home to the Savage Memorial, a huge site dedicated to the memory of former Labour Michael Joseph Savage, architect of the welfare state in New Zealand.


History

The National Party held Tāmaki in all its various incarnations from 1960 until
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, their domination beginning when future Prime Minister Robert Muldoon (later Sir Robert) began his parliamentary career by ousting the Labour Party's Bob Tizard. Muldoon remained firmly in place until his self-selected departure from parliament at the end of 1991. In four elections (1972, 1975, 1978 and 1981) Bill Andersen of the Socialist Unity Party ran against him, receiving between 39 and 188 votes. Muldoon's departure caused a by-election in 1992, where candidate
Clem Simich Clement Rudolph "Clem" Simich or Šimić (born 2 June 1939) is a New Zealand politician for the New Zealand National Party, National Party. Early life Simich was born in Te Kōpuru, Northland in 1939. Member of Parliament He was fir ...
won despite fierce competition in an environment where both major parties were out of favour with the electorate. Simich gave up his seat ahead of the 2005 election to high school principal Allan Peachey. Simich was returned to parliament from his party's list, having chosen to move from standing for one of his party's safest seats to instead contest Māngere, easily Labour's safest seat. From 2005, Tāmaki was represented by Allan Peachey, who announced his retirement at the end of the parliamentary term in 2011 for health reasons, and subsequently died shortly before the election. Simon O'Connor was chosen by the National Party to contest the electorate in the 2011 general election. O'Connor won the seat comfortably in the general elections held in 2011, 2014, 2017 and 2020 but later stirred controversy with his conservative views. O'Connor was one of only eight members of parliament to vote against the
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, published a
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post welcoming the
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's overtuning of Roe v. Wade and made comments in Parliament that linked a mass shooting in the US to remarks that Marama Davidson, co-leader of the Greens, had made about white cisgender men. In response to O'Connor's controversial views several Tāmaki residents called for O'Connor to resign as their Member of Parliament, and he faced ultimately unsuccessful challenges to his candidacy for the National Party in the lead up to the 2023 general election. Brook van Velden of the ACT New Zealand party subsequently won the seat in the 2023 general election, ending the six-decade reign of the National Party.


Members of Parliament

Unless otherwise stated, all MPs terms began and ended at general elections. Key 1Robert Muldoon resigned effective December 1991
2Allan Peachey announced that, due to his ill-health he would retire at the , but he died twenty days before election day


List MPs

Members of Parliament elected from party lists in elections where that person also unsuccessfully contested the Tāmaki electorate. Unless otherwise stated, all MPs terms began and ended at general elections.


Election results


2023 election


2020 election


2017 election


2014 election


2011 election

Electorate (as at 26 November 2011): 49,080


2008 election


2005 election


1999 election

Refer to Candidates in the New Zealand general election 1999 by electorate#Tamaki for a list of candidates.


1993 election


1992 by-election

1 Alliance vote increase over 3,556 combined vote for Green Party, New Labour and Democrats in 1990 election.
2 Based on 1990 election figures.


1990 election


1987 election


1984 election


1981 election


1978 election


1975 election


1972 election


1969 election


1966 election


1963 election


1960 election


1957 election


1954 election


1951 election


1949 election


1946 election


Notes


References

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External links


Electorate Profile
''Parliamentary Library'' {{DEFAULTSORT:Tamaki (New Zealand Electorate) New Zealand electorates in the Auckland Region Politics of the Auckland Region 1946 establishments in New Zealand