Wairarapa (New Zealand electorate) explained

Wairarapa
Parl Name:New Zealand House of Representatives
Map2:Wairarapa electorate, 2014
Map Entity:Wairarapa
Map Year:2014
Year:1859
Type:Single-member
Blank1 Name:Current MP
Blank1 Info:Mike Butterick
Blank2 Name:Party
Blank2 Info:National
Region:Hawke's Bay, Manawatū-Whanganui and Wellington
Towns:Masterton
Area:11860.1km2

Wairarapa is a New Zealand parliamentary electorate. It was first created in 1858 (with the first election in 1859) and existed until 1881. It was recreated in 1887 and has since existed continuously. The current Wairarapa electorate MP is Mike Butterick.

Population centres

The initial 24 New Zealand electorates were defined by Governor George Grey in March 1853, based on the New Zealand Constitution Act 1852 that had been passed by the British government. The Constitution Act also allowed the House of Representatives to establish new electorates, and this was first done in 1858, when four new electorates were formed by splitting existing electorates. Wairarapa was one of those four electorates, and it was established by splitting the electorate, and incorporating areas that previously did not belong to any electorate. Settlements in the initial area were Featherston, Carterton, Eketāhuna, and Pahiatua. For the 1860 election, there were 266 voters registered.In the early years, the electorate was for a time represented by two members.

In the 1887 electoral redistribution, although the Representation Commission was required through the Representation Act 1887 to maintain existing electorates "as far as possible", rapid population growth in the North Island required the transfer of three seats from the South Island to the north. Ten new electorates were created, and one former electorate, Wairarapa, was recreated.

The electorate boundaries were last adjusted in the 2007 redistribution.[1] No boundary adjustments were undertaken in the subsequent 2013/14 or 2019/20 redistributions.[2]

The current electorate includes the following population centres (approximate population in brackets) from the Wairarapa area of the Wellington region, the Tararua District (part of the Manawatū-Whanganui region) and the Central Hawke's Bay District (part of the Hawke's Bay region):

During the 2019/20 boundary review done by the Electoral Commission, Kieran McAnulty, a List MP based in the electorate, and Central Hawke's Bay Mayor Alex Walker, proposed that the electorate be renamed to Wairarapa and Central Hawke's Bay in order to acknowledge the communities included in the electorate.[3] Ultimately the commission decided against changing the name.

History

The first election was held on 7 November 1859, and Charles Carter was the first representative until 1865, when he resigned. He was succeeded by Henry Bunny from 1865 to 1881. Since 1871, the electorate had two representatives, and the second one was John Chapman Andrew until he resigned in 1877, succeeded by George Beetham from 1877 to 1881.

From 1881 to 1887 Wairarapa was replaced by two electorates; Wairarapa North and Wairarapa South. From 1887, they were replaced by the Masterton and Wairarapa electorates.

Between 1899 and 1919 the Wairarapa electorate swung between Walter Clarke Buchanan the Conservative then Reform candidate and J. T. Marryat Hornsby the Liberal candidate, changing hands in 1902, 1905, 1908 and 1914. Buchanan's support was in the rural areas, and Hornsby's was in the small towns.

From 1919 to 1928 the electorate was represented by Alex McLeod for Reform. In 1928 he was defeated by Thomas William McDonald the United (Liberal) candidate, but in 1931 McLeod won the seat back.

Ben Roberts represented the electorate for the Labour Party from the until 1946, when he retired. In the, Roberts was unsuccessfully challenged by National's Jimmy Maher.

In the, Reg Boorman won the initial count by one vote, but Wyatt Creech later challenged that result on the grounds that Boorman had violated new laws about election spending. Creech also challenged more than 200 votes (on various grounds). The Electoral Court upheld Creech's petition, and Creech won the seat in 1988 with a majority of 34 votes (9994 to 9960).[4]

Creech held the Wairarapa electorate for four parliamentary terms. In December 1997, he became Deputy Leader of the National Party. That gave him number two on the National party list, and he did not contest an electorate in the . The National Party stood Paul Henry in the election, but to the general surprise of political commentators, the typically right-leaning electorate was won by Labour's Georgina Beyer with a 3,033 vote majority to become the world's first transsexual member of parliament.[5] At the, Beyer was easily re-elected with an increased majority of 6,372 votes.[6] Beyer stood in the as a list-only candidate, and the Wairarapa electorate was won by John Hayes of the National Party.[7]

Hayes held the electorate for three parliamentary terms and retired at the,[8] when he was succeeded by National's Alastair Scott.[9] Scott retired at the 2020 election. The seat was won by Kieran McAnulty in a surprise Labour Party swing, with new National candidate Mike Butterick taking second place. Mike Butterick won the seat at the 2023 election and is the current Wairarapa MP. McAnulty returned to Parliament via the Labour Party list.

Members of Parliament

Key

Single-member electorate

width=100 Electionwidth=175 colspan=2 Winner
1859 electionCharles Carter
1860 election
Henry Bunny

Multi-member electorate

width=100 ElectionWinner
Henry BunnyJohn Chapman Andrew
1876 election
George Beetham

Single-member electorate

width=100 Electionwidth=175 colspan=2 Winner
Walter Clarke Buchanan
J. T. Marryat Hornsby
Walter Clarke Buchanan
J. T. Marryat Hornsby
Walter Clarke Buchanan
J. T. Marryat Hornsby
Alex McLeod
Thomas McDonald
Alex McLeod
Ben Roberts
Garnet Mackley
Bert Cooksley
Haddon Donald
Jack Williams
Ben Couch
Reg Boorman
1988[10] Wyatt Creech
Georgina Beyer
John Hayes
Alastair Scott
Kieran McAnulty
Mike Butterick

List MPs

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

width=100 Electionwidth=175 colspan=2 Winner
Edwin Perry
height=15 style="border-bottom:solid 0 grey; background:"Ron Mark
height=15 style="border-top:solid 0 grey; background:"
Kieran McAnulty
Kieran McAnulty
2024 [11] Celia Wade-Brown
  1. Book: Report of the Representation Commission 2007 . 978-0-477-10414-2 . Representation Commission . 4 October 2014 . 9. 14 September 2007.
  2. Book: Report of the Representation Commission 2014 . 978-0-477-10414-2 . Representation Commission . 4 October 2014 . 9. 4 April 2014.
  3. Web site: Submission to the electorate boundary review - change of name of Wairarapa electorate. 2023-11-20 .
  4. News: Tunnah . Helen . Winston Peters threatens court bid . 10 October 2014 . . 16 September 2005.
  5. News: Trevett . Claire . Georgina Beyer joins Mana Party . 10 October 2014 . . 27 July 2014.
  6. Web site: Official Count Results – Wairarapa . . 10 August 2002 . 27 December 2011.
  7. Web site: John Hayes . . 10 October 2014 . 22 September 2014.
  8. News: Wairarapa MP Hayes calls time . Vernon . Small . Vernon Small . 18 January 2014 . 20 September 2014 . The Dominion Post.
  9. Web site: Official Count Results – Wairarapa . . 10 October 2014 . 10 October 2014.
  10. The election of Reg Boorman was overturned by the Electoral Court on 12 July 1988
  11. Entered Parliament following the resignation of Green Party MP Golriz Ghahraman on 16 January 2024

Election results

2011 election

Electorate (as at 26 November 2011): 46,425[12]

1890 election

References

External links