5th New Zealand Parliament explained

5th Parliament of New Zealand
Body:New Zealand Parliament
Election:1871 New Zealand general election
Government:Third Fox ministry (until 1872)
Third Stafford ministry (1872)
Waterhouse ministry (1872–1873)
Fourth Fox ministry (1873)
First Vogel ministry (1873–1875)
Pollen ministry (from 1875)
Term Start:14 August 1871
Term End:21 October 1875
Before:4th Parliament
After:6th Parliament
Chamber1:House of Representatives
Membership1:78
Chamber1 Leader1 Type:Speaker of the House
Chamber1 Leader1:Dillon Bell
Chamber1 Leader2 Type:Premier
Chamber1 Leader2:Julius Vogel
— 8 April 1873 – 6 July 1875
William Fox
— 3 March 1873 – 8 April 1873

Edward Stafford
— 10 September 1872 – 11 October 1872
William Fox
— until 10 September 1872
Chamber2:Legislative Council
Membership2:45 (at start)
44 (at end)
Chamber2 Leader1 Type:Speaker of the Council
Chamber2 Leader1:John Richardson
Chamber2 Leader2 Type:Premier
Chamber2 Leader2:Daniel Pollen
— from 6 July 1875

George Waterhouse
— 11 October 1872 – 3 March 1873
Chamber3:Sovereign
Chamber3 Leader1 Type:Monarch
Chamber3 Leader1:HM Victoria
Chamber3 Leader2 Type:Governor
Chamber3 Leader2:HE The Marquess of Normanby
— HE Rt. Hon. Sir James Fergusson from 14 June 1873 until 3 December 1874
— HE Rt. Hon Sir George Bowen until 19 March 1873

The 5th New Zealand Parliament was a term of the New Zealand Parliament. Elections for this term were held in 68 European electorates between 14 January and 23 February 1871. Elections in the four Māori electorates were held on 1 and 15 January 1871. A total of 78 MPs were elected. Parliament was prorogued in December 1875. During the term of this Parliament, six Ministries were in power.

Sessions

The fifth Parliament opened on 14 August 1871, following the 1871 general election. It sat for five sessions, and was prorogued on 6 December 1875.

Session Opened Adjouned
first 14 August 1871 16 November 1871
second 16 July 1872 25 October 1872
third 15 July 1873 3 October 1873
fourth 3 July 1874 31 August 1874
fifth 20 July 1875 21 October 1875

Historical context

Political parties had not been established yet; this only happened after the 1890 election. Anyone attempting to form an administration thus had to win support directly from individual MPs. This made first forming, and then retaining a government difficult and challenging.

Ministries

Since June 1869, the third Fox Ministry was in power, led by Premier William Fox. On 10 September 1872, the third Stafford Ministry was formed, which lasted 13 months. This was followed by the Waterhouse Ministry, from 11 October 1872 to 3 March 1873. The fourth Fox Ministry was short lived, from 3 March 1873 to 8 April 1873. The first Vogel Ministry was in power from 8 April 1873 to 6 July 1875. It was succeeded by the Pollen Ministry, which lasted into the term of the sixth Parliament.

Initial composition of the fifth Parliament

78 seats were created across the electorates.[1] 68 European electorates and 4 Māori electorates were defined by the Representation Act 1870. Six of the general electorates had two representatives, the rest were single member electorates. Hence, 78 MPs were elected.[2]

This compares to 61 electorates used in the previous general election in 1866, and 65 electorates after the Māori electorates were created in 1867. Electorates that were first formed for the 1871 elections were,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, and .

Changes during term

There were numerous changes during the term of the fifth Parliament.

AkaroaRobert Heaton Rhodes resigned on 18 February 1874. William Montgomery won the subsequent 24 April 1874 by-election. In July 1874, a select committee declared Montgomery's election to be "null and void", as he had a contract for the supply of railway sleepers with the general government in breach of election rules. The select committee accepted that the breach was inadvertent.[3] Montgomery stood for re-election in a 10 August 1874 by-election[4] and was returned unopposed.[5]
CavershamRichard Cantrell resigned on 31 July 1872. He was succeeded by William Tolmie in a 28 August 1872 by-election, and he served until his death on 8 August 1875. Robert Stout, a later Prime Minister, first entered Parliament through the resulting 20 August 1875 by-election.
ColeridgeJohn Karslake Karslake resigned on 12 April 1872 to return to England (he drowned on the voyage home on 21 June 1872).[6] William Bluett succeeded him through the 22 July 1872 by-election.
CollingwoodArthur Collins resigned on 8 October 1873. The resulting 9 December 1873 by-election was won by William Gibbs.
City of DunedinBathgate resigned in 1874 and was succeeded by Nathaniel Wales.
City of NelsonLightband resigned in 1872 to return to England. He was succeeded by David Luckie.
EgmontGisborne resigned in 1872 and was succeeded by Harry Atkinson.
FranklinClark resigned in 1874 and was succeeded by Joseph May.

References

Notes and References

  1. Web site: General elections 1853–2005 – dates & turnout . Elections New Zealand . 6 June 2010 . https://web.archive.org/web/20100527022404/http://www.elections.org.nz/elections/resultsdata/elections-dates-turnout.html . 27 May 2010 . dead .
  2. Web site: Representation Act 1870 . 15 November 2010.
  3. News: House of Representatives. 1998. 31 July 1874. The Star. 2. 9 April 2010.
  4. News: MR MONTGOMEEY AT AKAROA. 8 August 1874. 2005. The Star. 9 April 2010.
  5. News: LATEST TELEGRAMS. 10 August 1874. 2006. The Star. 9 April 2010.
  6. News: Monday, September 9, 1872 . 29 September 2010 . . VIII . 188 . 9 September 1872 . 2 . https://archive.today/20120714235558/http://slbplone.natlib.govt.nz/cgi-bin/paperspast?a=d&cl=search&d=EP18720909.2.7 . 14 July 2012 . dead .