The Liberal Reform Party was a rural based political party in New Zealand. It was the successor to the Country Party that contested the .
The party was launched as a revival of the decades earlier Country Party by the New Zealand Free Enterprise Movement in 1968 feeling that voters needed a genuine free enterprise choice in elections as, in their view, New Zealand was caught between monopoly business interests and overly empowered trade unions.[1]
The Liberal Reform Party main goals were individual freedom, self reliance and maximised free enterprise. In addition it had other policy platforms it campaigned on:[1]
The party stood 26 candidates at the but performed poorly, winning only 0.29% of the vote with all candidates losing their deposits.[2]