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2020 New Zealand general election

The 2020 New Zealand general election was held on Saturday 17 October 2020 to determine the composition of the 53rd New Zealand Parliament.[2][3] Voters elected 120 members to the House of Representatives, 72 from single-member electorates and 48 from closed party lists. Two referendums, one on the personal use of cannabis and one on euthanasia, were also held on the same day.[4][5] Official results of the election and referendums were released on 6 November.[6]

2020 New Zealand general election

← 2017 17 October 2020 2023 →

All 120 seats in the House of Representatives
61 seats needed for a majority
Opinion polls
Turnout2,919,073 (82.24%; 2.49 pp)
  First party Second party Third party
 
Leader Jacinda Ardern Judith Collins James Shaw
Marama Davidson
Party Labour National Green
Leader since 1 August 2017 14 July 2020 30 May 2015
8 April 2018
Leader's seat Mount Albert Papakura List
Last election 46 seats
36.89%
56 seats
44.45%
8 seats
6.27%
Seats before 46 56 8
Seats won 65 33 10
Seat change 19 23 2
Electorate vote 1,357,501
48.07%

10.19 pp
963,845
34.13%
9.92 pp
162,245
5.74%
1.17 pp
Party vote 1,443,545
50.01%

13.12 pp
738,275
25.58%
18.87 pp
226,757
7.86%
1.59 pp

  Fourth party Fifth party Sixth party
 
Leader David Seymour John Tamihere
Debbie Ngarewa-Packer
Winston Peters
Party ACT Māori Party NZ First
Leader since 4 October 2014 15 April 2020 18 July 1993
Leader's seat Epsom Ran in Tāmaki Makaurau (lost)[a]
List
List (lost)
Last election 1 seat
0.50%
0 seats
1.18%
9 seats
7.20%
Seats before 1 0 9
Seats won 10 2 0
Seat change 9 2 9
Electorate vote 97,697
3.46%
2.45 pp
60,837
2.15%
0.04 pp
30,209
1.07%
4.38 pp
Party vote 219,031
7.59%
7.08 pp
33,630
1.17%
0.01 pp
75,020
2.60%
4.60 pp


Prime Minister before election

Jacinda Ardern
Labour

Subsequent Prime Minister

Jacinda Ardern
Labour

The governing Labour Party, led by incumbent Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern, won the election in a landslide victory against the National Party, led by Judith Collins.[7] Labour won 65 seats, enough for a majority government. It is the first time that a party has won enough seats to govern alone since the mixed-member proportional representation (MMP) system was introduced in 1996.[8] Labour also achieved the highest percentage of the party vote (50.0%) since MMP was introduced, winning the plurality of party vote in 71 of the 72 electorates (Epsom being the sole exception). This is also the best nationwide result in the popular vote for a main party since 1951, the most seats any party has won since 1990 and the first time Labour has won an absolute majority of the vote since 1946.[9][10] Ardern subsequently became the most successful New Zealand politician of the MMP era, overtaking John Key by number of seats won under a single premiership. Conversely, this election was the second-worst result for the National Party, which performed poorer only in the 2002 general election.[11] In terms of the difference between National's and Labour's vote share, this was the worst result in the party's history.

With the election being highly centred around the government's praised response to the COVID-19 pandemic, it led to the unprecedented flipping of traditionally National-voting seats to Labour, often with very comfortable margins.[12] Examples included the rural seats of Wairarapa, East Coast, Ōtaki and Rangitata, the latter having never previously voted for Labour.[13][14] In another blow to National's heartlands, every city except Auckland and Tauranga gave their seats entirely to Labour. In a surprise victory, the left-wing environmentalist Green Party's Chlöe Swarbrick won the Auckland Central seat vacated by National's retiring Nikki Kaye with a margin of 1,068 votes over Labour's Helen White.[15] The right-wing libertarian ACT Party and the Greens both increased their number of seats due to the collapse of National's support base. The Māori Party, representing the cause of indigenous rights, re-entered Parliament with two seats after Rawiri Waititi won the Waiariki electorate. Populist nationalist party New Zealand First, led by Deputy Prime Minister Winston Peters in coalition with Labour, suffered its worst-ever result, losing all its seats.[16][17]

Ardern moved the Labour Party further to the centre during its campaign, promising to cut spending during the remainder of COVID-19 recession and controversially cancelling the government's promise to make the standard three years of tertiary education tuition-free.[18][19][20] Doing so alienated some left-wing Labour supporters, giving the Green Party a boost in seat numbers and their victory in Auckland Central.[21] While results of opinion polls early in the year were neck-and-neck between the two major parties, Ardern and the Labour Government were praised for their response to the COVID-19 pandemic in New Zealand. Following the Level 4 lockdown in March 2020, polls began to suggest that Labour could either attain a majority government or could govern with confidence-and-supply from the Greens.[22] In contrast, the leadership of the National Party changed twice in less than three months, unable to improve its poor polling results after collapsing in April 2020.[23] Heading a campaign widely perceived as centrist or centre-leaning,[24][25] Labour gained support from a large demographic of moderate swing voters, many of whom had previously voted for National under John Key. Approximately 16% of Labour's voters had voted for National in the previous election.[26][27]

Background edit

 
Parliamentary makeup prior to the 2020 election.
Government:
  Labour (46)
  NZ First (9)
  Green (8)
Opposition:
  National (55)
  ACT (1)
  Independent (1)

The final results of the 23 September 2017 election gave National 56 seats, while Labour and the Greens combined had 54 seats. New Zealand First won 9 seats and held the balance of power; it was in a position to give either National or Labour the 61 seats needed to form a government. On 19 October 2017, Winston Peters, leader of New Zealand First, announced that he would form a coalition government with Labour.[28] On the same day, James Shaw, leader of the Green Party, announced that his party would give confidence and supply to a Labour–NZ First government.[29] Thus, Labour regained power after nine years in opposition, ending the Fifth National Government which had been in power for three terms (2008–2017). The 2017 election also marked the first time under MMP in New Zealand that a party led a government without commanding the plurality of the party vote.[30]

On 22 May 2020, a leadership election occurred following two poor polling results for the National Party, in which Todd Muller replaced Simon Bridges as leader and Leader of the Opposition, and Nikki Kaye replaced Paula Bennett as deputy leader of the party.[31] Muller himself then resigned on 14 July 2020 citing health reasons, leading to another leadership election later that day, in which Collins was voted into the National leadership position.[32]

Electoral system edit

New Zealand uses a mixed-member proportional (MMP) voting system to elect the House of Representatives. Each voter gets two votes, one for a political party (the party vote) and one for a local candidate (the electorate vote). Political parties that meet the threshold (5% of the party vote or one electorate seat) receive seats in the House in proportion to the percentage of the party vote they receive. 72 of the 120 seats are filled by the MPs elected from the electorates, with the winner in each electorate determined by the first-past-the-post method (i.e. most votes wins). The remaining 48 seats are filled by candidates from each party's closed party list.[30] If a party wins more electorates than seats it is entitled to under the party vote, an overhang results; in this case, the House will add extra seats to cover the overhang.[33]

A political party or parties with the support of the majority of members in the House form the Government. Prior to this election, from the introduction of MMP in 1996 no single party had won enough votes to win an outright majority of seats; when no party has commanded a majority, parties have had to negotiate with other parties to form a coalition government or a minority government.[34]

Electorate boundaries edit

 
The 2014 electoral boundaries showing electorates out of tolerance following the 2018 census and Māori electoral option. Orange electorates were more than 5% above quota and therefore had to drop population. Blue electorates were more than 5% below quota and therefore had to add population.

Electorate boundaries for the next election are required to be redrawn after each New Zealand census.[35] The most recent census was held in 2018.

By law, the number of South Island general electorates is fixed at 16,[36][37] with the number of North Island general electorates and Māori electorates increasing or decreasing in proportion to the population. Each electorate must have the same population, with a tolerance of plus or minus five percent.[37] For the 2014 and 2017 elections, there were 48 North Island general electorates and 7 Māori electorates, which, along with the 16 South Island electorates, gives a nationwide total of 71 electorates.[38]

On 23 September 2019, Statistics New Zealand announced that population growth necessitated one additional North Island general electorate,[39] bringing the total number of North Island general electorates to 49 and the overall number of electorates to 72 (reducing the number of list seats available by one).[40] Statistics New Zealand also announced that 11 North Island, three South Island, and two Māori electorates were above 5% tolerance, while five South Island electorates and one Māori electorate were below 5% tolerance.[41]

The Representation Commission undertook a review of electoral boundaries. This review was commenced in October 2019 and was completed in April 2020.[42] The boundaries will apply in the 2020 general election, and the subsequent general election. In total, 36 electorates remained unchanged, 35 electorates were modified, and one new electorate created. The most significant boundary changes occurred in the Auckland, Waikato, central Canterbury, and Otago regions, with smaller changes in the Northland and Tasman regions.[43]

The new electorate was created in South Auckland and named Takanini. Taking area from the Hunua, Manurewa, and Papakura electorates, Takanini is predicted to be a National-tilting to marginal electorate.[44] Takanini's creation cascaded existing electorates north through Auckland and south through Waikato. Significant changes to the north include Manukau East taking Sylvia Park and Panmure from Maungakiekie, with the electorate renamed Panmure-Ōtāhuhu; New Lynn taking the Waitakere Ranges from Helensville; Helensville taking Wellsford, Warkworth and the Kowhai Coast from Rodney and Northland, with the electorate renamed Kaipara ki Mahurangi; and Rodney taking Dairy Flat from Helensville and being renamed Whangaparāoa. To the south, Papakura took the entire Hunua electorate east of State Highway 1, in exchange for Hunua taking the northern part of the Waikato electorate as far south as, and including, Te Kauwhata. Hunua subsequently returned to its pre-2008 name, Port Waikato. Waikato took Te Aroha and the remainder of the Matamata-Piako District area from Coromandel, allowing Coromandel to take Ōmokoroa from Bay of Plenty.[45]

In the South Island, Selwyn lost the Rakaia area to Rangitata, Mcleans Island and Christchurch Airport to Ilam, and Hornby South to Wigram. Ilam gained Avonhead from Wigram, allowing Wigram to take Aidanfield from Port Hills, which in turn allowed Port Hills to take the entire Banks Peninsula from Selwyn. Port Hills subsequently returned to its pre-2008 name of Banks Peninsula. Clutha-Southland lost the Tuatapere-Te Waewae area to Invercargill and Balclutha, Milton and the lower Clutha Valley to Dunedin South, while gaining Alexandra, Clyde and the Clutha Valley upstream of Beaumont from Waitaki. Waitaki in turn took the Palmerston area from Dunedin North, allowing Dunedin North to take the Otago Peninsula from Dunedin South. The Otago-Southland boundary changes saw three electorates change names: Clutha-Southland to Southland, Dunedin North to Dunedin, and Dunedin South to Taieri. In the Tasman region, the town of Brightwater moved from Nelson to West Coast-Tasman to bring the latter electorate within quota.[45]

Two electorates had name changes to correct their spelling. Rimutaka was renamed Remutaka in line with its namesake, the Remutaka Range, which was renamed in 2017 as part of a Treaty of Waitangi settlement. The Whangārei electorate was renamed by adding a macron to the second "a".[45]

Schedule edit

 
Governor-General Dame Patsy Reddy (right) issues the writ for the election before the chief electoral officer, Alicia Wright (left), on 13 September 2020.

Unless an early election is called or the election date is set to circumvent holding a by-election, a general election is held every three years.[46] The previous election was held on 23 September 2017.

The governor-general (Patsy Reddy) must issue writs for an election within seven days of the expiration or dissolution of the current parliament. Under section 17 of the Constitution Act 1986, parliament expires three years "from the day fixed for the return of the writs issued for the last preceding general election of members of the House of Representatives, and no longer." The writs for the 2017 election were returned on 12 October 2017;[47] as a result, the 52nd Parliament would have to dissolve no later than 12 October 2020. Consequently, the last day for issuance of the writs of election is 19 October 2020. Since the passage of the Electoral Amendment Act 2020,[48] which came into force on 11 March 2020, the writs must be returned within 60 days of their issuance (save for any judicial recount, death of a candidate, or emergency adjournment),[49] which would be 18 December 2020. Because polling day must be on a Saturday,[49] and ten days is required for counting of special votes,[50] the last possible date for this general election is 21 November 2020.[51][52]

On 28 January 2020, Ardern announced that the election would be held on 19 September,[51] with the 52nd Parliament holding its last sitting day on 6 August and dissolving on 12 August.[53] On 17 August 2020, Ardern delayed the election to 17 October,[2] with the dissolution of Parliament delayed until 6 September.[54] The writ date for the election, which was originally set for 16 August,[55] was subsequently delayed until 13 September.[56] Political parties would have had to be registered by this day to contest the party vote.[57]

The timetable for the general election was as follows:[56][58]

28 January 2020 (Tuesday) Prime Minister Ardern announces the general election will be held on 19 September.
6 July 2020 (Monday) Electoral Commission begins enrolment update campaign.
18 July 2020 (Saturday) Election hoardings may be erected (subject to local council rules).
17 August 2020 (Monday) Prime Minister Ardern changes the election date to 17 October due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
18 August 2020 (Tuesday) The regulated election advertising period begins.
6 September 2020 (Sunday) The 52nd Parliament is dissolved.
13 September 2020 (Sunday) Writ day – Governor-General issues formal direction to the Electoral Commission to hold the election.
Last day to ordinarily enrol to vote (late enrolments must cast special votes)
Official campaigning begins; radio and television advertising begins
17 September 2020 (Thursday) Deadline (12:00) for registered parties to lodge bulk nominations of candidates and party lists.
18 September 2020 (Friday) Deadline (12:00) for individual candidates to lodge nominations.
30 September 2020 (Wednesday) Overseas voting begins
3 October 2020 (Saturday) Advance voting begins
16 October 2020 (Friday) Advance and overseas voting ends.
Last day to enrol to vote (except in-person at polling places).
The regulated election advertising period ends; all election advertising must be taken down by 23:59.
17 October 2020 (Saturday) Election day – polling places open 09:00 to 19:00.
People may enrol in-person at polling places.
Preliminary election results released progressively after 19:00
30 October 2020 (Friday) Preliminary referendum results released
6 November 2020 (Friday) Official election and referendum results declared
20 November 2020 (Friday) Writ for election returned; official declaration of elected members (subject to judicial recounts)
25 November 2020 (Wednesday) The 53rd Parliament meets for the first time

Impact of the COVID-19 pandemic edit

The original date of 19 September was announced before the COVID-19 pandemic had reached New Zealand. In April 2020, the National Party doubted that the public would be ready for an election in September, and New Zealand First leader Winston Peters called for the election to be delayed to 21 November.[59][60] In May 2020, Ardern said she did not intend to change the date of the election and Chief Electoral Officer Alicia Wright said that the Electoral Commission was working to the dates originally set by the Prime Minister.[61]

After new cases of community transmission in Auckland were reported on 11 August 2020, with the COVID-19 alert level being raised to level 3 in the Auckland region and level 2 elsewhere, there were growing calls to delay the dissolution of Parliament and the election.[62] The following day, Collins called for the election to be delayed until at least after November with the aim of allowing parties more time to campaign,[63] and all major political parties suspended their campaigns.[64] Delaying the dissolution of parliament beyond 12 October 2020, and therefore the election date beyond 28 November 2020, would require a legislative amendment. As the length of the parliamentary term is entrenched, such an amendment would require a 75% supermajority to pass.[65]

On 12 August 2020, Prime Minister Ardern delayed the dissolution of Parliament until 17 August and was seeking advice from the Electoral Commission regarding the election timeline. On 17 August, Ardern announced that the general election would be pushed back to 17 October while the dissolution of Parliament would be delayed until 6 September.[2][54]

The Chief Electoral Officer has powers under the Electoral Act to delay polling at some or all polling places for up to three days due to unforeseen circumstances. This can be extended for up to seven days at a time following consultation with the Prime Minister and the Leader of the Opposition.[66]

Parties and candidates edit

Political parties registered with the Electoral Commission can contest the general election as a party. To register, parties must have at least 500 financial members, an auditor, and an appropriate party name.[67] A registered party may submit a party list to contest the party vote, and can have a party campaign expenses limit in addition to limits on individual candidates' campaigns. Unregistered parties and independents can contest the electorate vote only.[68]

Seventeen of the eighteen registered parties submitted a list and contested the general election. The Mana Party did not submit a party list or apply for a broadcasting allocation, and has endorsed and offered its resources to the Māori Party.[69]

Party Leader(s) Founded Ideology 2017 result 2017 seats
National Judith Collins 1936 Liberal conservatism 44.45% 56
Labour Jacinda Ardern 1916 Social democracy 36.89% 46
NZ First Winston Peters 1993 Nationalism, populism 7.20% 9
Green James Shaw / Marama Davidson 1990 Green politics, social democracy 6.27% 8
ACT David Seymour 1994 Classical liberalism, right-libertarianism 0.50% 1
Opportunities (TOP) Geoff Simmons 2016 Radical centrism, environmentalism 2.44% 0
Māori Party John Tamihere[a] / Debbie Ngarewa-Packer 2004 Māori rights 1.18% 0
Legalise Cannabis Maki Herbert / Michael Appleby 1996 Cannabis legalisation 0.31% 0
New Conservative Leighton Baker 2011 Conservatism, right-wing populism 0.24% 0
Outdoors Sue Grey / Alan Simmons 2015 Environmentalism, conspiracism 0.06% 0
Social Credit Chris Leitch 1953 Social credit, economic democracy 0.03% 0
Advance NZ Jami-Lee Ross / Billy Te Kahika 2020 Conspiracism 0[i]
Heartland Mark Ball 2020 Agrarianism 0
ONE Edward Shanly / Stephanie Harawira 2020 Christian fundamentalism 0
Sustainable NZ Vernon Tava 2019 Environmentalism, centrism 0
TEA John Hong / Susanna Kruger 2020 Anti-racism, fiscal conservatism 0
Vision NZ Hannah Tamaki 2019 Christian nationalism 0
  1. ^ Jami-Lee Ross, the leader of Advance, was an incumbent member of parliament, having been elected as a National MP in 2017 before leaving the party. However, officially he was an independent MP and not affiliated with a party.[70]

MPs not standing for re-election edit

Name Party Electorate/List Term in office Date announced Notes
David Carter National List 1994–2020 17 October 2018[71]
Ruth Dyson Labour Port Hills 1993–2020 3 March 2019[72]
Alastair Scott National Wairarapa 2014–2020 25 June 2019[73]
Nathan Guy National Ōtaki 2005–2020 30 July 2019[74]
Clare Curran Labour Dunedin South 2008–2020 27 August 2019[75]
Maggie Barry National North Shore 2011–2020 5 November 2019[76]
Gareth Hughes Green List 2010–2020 17 November 2019[77]
Sarah Dowie National Invercargill 2014–2020 11 February 2020[78] Initially re-selected as Invercargill candidate
Nicky Wagner National List 2005–2020
Clayton Mitchell NZ First List 2014–2020 5 June 2020[79]
Anne Tolley National East Coast 1999–2002
2005–2020
27 June 2020[80] Initially announced on 20 December 2019 as list-only with intention of becoming Speaker of the House[81]
Paula Bennett National Upper Harbour 2005–2020 29 June 2020[82] Initially announced on 14 August 2019 as list-only[83]
Hamish Walker National Clutha-Southland 2017–2020 8 July 2020 Was re-selected as candidate for the Southland electorate but resigned after leaking private information of COVID-19 patients.[84]
Jian Yang National List 2011–2020 10 July 2020[85]
Nikki Kaye National Auckland Central 2008–2020 16 July 2020[86] Was re-selected as candidate for the Auckland Central electorate but resigned following the resignation of Todd Muller, to whom she was deputy.
Amy Adams National Selwyn 2008–2020 Announced intention to retire from politics at upcoming election on 25 June 2019,[87] and a new National candidate was subsequently selected for Selwyn.[88] After a leadership change in the National Party, she reversed her decision and announced she would stand again as a list-only candidate.[89] Adams announced her retirement again shortly after Todd Muller resigned as the party leader.
Raymond Huo Labour List 2008–2014
2017–2020
21 July 2020 Initially re-selected as a list-only candidate (rank 26) but later announced he would not contest the election.[90]
Iain Lees-Galloway Labour Palmerston North 2008–2020 22 July 2020 Initially re-selected as candidate for Palmerston North and ranked 13 on the Labour Party list, but later announced he would not contest the election after being removed as a Minister for having a consensual, but inappropriate relationship with a former staff member.[91]

MPs standing for re-election as list-only MPs edit

Some incumbents who had previously stood in an electorate (but may have been returned as list representatives) stood as list-only candidates in the 2020 election.

Name Party Electorate/List Term in office Date announced Notes
Kris Faafoi Labour Mana 2010–present 8 February 2020[92]
Paulo Garcia National List 2019–2020 11 February 2020[93] Stood in the New Lynn electorate at the 2017 election
Julie Anne Genter Green List 2011–present 25 May 2020[94] Stood in the Mount Albert electorate at the 2017 election
Louisa Wall Labour Manurewa 2008
2011–present
29 May 2020 Faced two challengers at the 30 May reselection as the Labour candidate in Manurewa, but withdrew to stand as a list-only candidate[95]
Jami-Lee Ross Independent
(Advance NZ)
Botany 2011–2020 15 September 2020 Previously a National MP, Ross left that party in 2018 and began sitting as an independent. He announced he would contest Botany for the Advance New Zealand party, but later decided to only seek a list position.[96]

Campaigning edit

Expense limits and broadcasting allocations edit

 
Election hoardings lining the Dunedin Northern Motorway, August 2020

During the regulated period prior to election day, parties and candidates have limits on how much they may spend on election campaigning. The limits are updated every year to reflect inflation. It is illegal in New Zealand to campaign on election day itself, or within 10 metres of an advance polling booth.[97]

For the 2020 general election, the regulated period ran from 18 August to 16 October 2020. Every registered party contending the party vote was permitted to spend $1,199,000 plus $28,200 per electorate candidate on campaigning during the regulated period, excluding radio and television campaigning (broadcasting funding is allocated separately). For example, a registered party with candidates in all 72 electorates was permitted to spend $3,229,400 on campaigning for the party vote. Electorate candidates were permitted to spend $28,200 each on campaigning for the electorate vote.[98]

Registered parties are allocated a separate broadcasting budget for radio and television campaigning. Only money from the broadcasting allocation can be used to purchase airtime; production costs can come from the general election expenses budget. The Electoral Commission determines how much broadcasting funding each party gets, set out by part 6 of the Broadcasting Act 1989. The allocation is based a number of factors including the number of seats in the current Parliament, results of the previous general election and any by-elections since, and support in opinion polls.[99]

A joint statement was released on 9 June 2020 by the Social Credit Party, Māori Party, New Conservative Party, New Zealand Outdoors Party, and Aotearoa Legalise Cannabis Party in which they condemn the broadcasting allocations and call for reform.[100]

An initial broadcasting statement was released from the Electoral Commission on 29 May 2020, including parties that have not yet registered but intend to.[101] The broadcasting allocation was revised on 11 September 2020, redistributing funds from parties that failed to register in time for the election.[102] For comparison, the cost of a 30-second slot on TVNZ in October 2020 ranged from $250 in overnight slots up to $22,000 for slots during the 1 News at 6pm bulletin.[103][104]

Party Broadcasting
allocation (NZD)
National $1,335,255
Labour $1,249,111
Green $323,046
NZ First $323,046
ACT $150,755
Māori Party $150,755
Opportunities $150,755
Advance NZ $64,609
Legalise Cannabis $64,609
New Conservative $64,609
ONE $53,840
Outdoors $53,840
Social Credit $53,840
Sustainable NZ $53,840
Vision NZ $53,840

Third-party promoters, such as trade unions and lobby groups, can campaign during the regulated period. The maximum expense limit for the election is $338,000 for those promoters registered with the Electoral Commission, and $13,600 for unregistered promoters.[98] As of 29 September 2020, the following third-party promoters were registered for the general election (i.e. excluding those solely registered for one or both of the referendums).[105]

Party campaigns edit

After the announcement of 19 September as election date, parties started their campaigns.[106] Party campaigns throughout 2020 were heavily impacted by COVID-19, with parties unable to host events during alert levels 3 and 4.

National edit

The National Party initially chose Paula Bennett as its campaign manager. (All previous elections since 2005 had seen National with Steven Joyce as campaign manager.[106]) On 2 February 2020, Simon Bridges announced that National would not want to form a coalition with New Zealand First after the election should NZ First become kingmaker once again. Bridges stated: "I can't trust New Zealand First", adding that "A vote for NZ First is a vote for Labour and the Greens".[107] Bridges said that he would, however, be open to working with ACT.[108] NZ First leader Winston Peters criticised Bridges' decision, saying that "narrowing your options can be the worst strategic move you will ever make".[107]

Owing to the four-week lockdown in New Zealand from 23 March during the COVID-19 pandemic, National temporarily suspended their campaign on the same day.[109]

On 22 May 2020, following low poll results for National in the week prior, a National parliamentary caucus meeting replaced Simon Bridges and Paula Bennett with Todd Muller and Nikki Kaye as leader and deputy leader respectively. In his first speech as leader, Muller expressed his openness to working with Winston Peters and New Zealand First after the election.[110] In conjunction with a reshuffle of caucus responsibilities on 25 May, Muller announced that the party had replaced Bennett as campaign manager with Gerry Brownlee.[111] On 14 July 2020 Muller himself resigned as National Party leader, citing mental health issues.[112] An emergency party caucus meeting replaced him later that night with Collins, with Gerry Brownlee becoming the new deputy leader.[113]

After new cases of community transmission in Auckland were reported on 11 August, with the alert level being raised to level 3 in Auckland and level 2 elsewhere, National halted their campaigning for the duration of the lockdown.[62]

On 17 July, National announced they would spend $31 billion on transport projects over the coming decade and would abolish the Auckland regional fuel tax.[114] On 11 September, National announced that they would allow electric vehicles in bus lanes, make one third of the Government's light vehicle fleet electric by 2023, and aim to have 80,000 electric vehicles in use by 2023 (four times more than there currently were).[115] On 15 September, they announced a $30 million policy to improve children's dental care.[116] On 29 September, National announced they would double funding for the Serious Fraud Office to $25 million annually and rename it to the Serious Fraud and Anti-corruption Agency.[117]

Labour edit

Megan Woods was chosen as campaign manager.[106] On 29 January 2020, Ardern announced the New Zealand Upgrade Programme, a NZ$12 billion infrastructure improvement package.[118] After new cases of community transmission in Auckland were reported on 11 August, with the alert level being raised to level 3 in Auckland and level 2 elsewhere, Labour halted their campaigning for the duration of the lockdown.[62]

On 7 September, Ardern committed to making Matariki a public holiday from 2022 if Labour was re-elected.[119] On 9 September, Finance spokesperson Grant Robertson announced that Labour would reintroduce the top 39% tax bracket for income above $180,000, applying to 2% of people. He said the new rate would generate around $550 million a year in revenue, needed to pay off the debt incurred by the COVID-19 response plan.[120] On 10 September, Ardern announced Labour would aim to make electricity in New Zealand 100% renewable by 2030, five years before the previous target of 2035. This would be done by banning the building of new coal or gas power plants, boosting the solar sector, and speeding up the consent process for renewable energy projects.[121]

NZ First edit

New Zealand First leader Winston Peters named the provincial growth fund in its current form as his first bottom line for any post-election coalition talks. Peters also outlined the party's immigration policy ahead of the election, saying: "The current immigration track must stop and only New Zealand First, with a stronger hand in 2020, can make this happen", and "a vote for New Zealand First will see the permanent residency qualification raised from two to five years". Peters also said the party wanted to lead a public discussion with voters about a "population policy", including defining acceptable population growth and the time for a migrant to obtain permanent residency.[122][123] At the campaign launch on 19 July 2020, Peters promised a cap of 15,000 highly skilled immigrants and recruiting 1,000 new police officers.[124] After new cases of community transmission in Auckland were reported on 11 August, with the alert level being raised to level 3 in Auckland and level 2 elsewhere, New Zealand First halted their campaigning.[62]

Green edit

On 28 June 2020, the Green Party released a Poverty Action Plan, which included a guaranteed minimum income of $325 a week. Green co-leader Marama Davidson stated that "Our Guaranteed Minimum Income is about fairness. It's about ensuring those who have done well under our current system pay it forward and share that success with people who are struggling."[125][126] This was followed up by the launch of a Clean Energy Plan, to ensure a "just transition away from fossil fuels". The plan included a pledge to establish a Clean Energy Industry Training Plan and to end coal use in New Zealand by 2030.[127][128] The Green Party launched a 52-page "Think Ahead, Act Now" election platform on 25 July 2020. Green co-leader James Shaw described it as "a reference document that will guide our caucus and our ministers as we navigate the everyday choices that our Government will have to make."[129] After new cases of community transmission in Auckland were reported on 11 August, with the alert level being raised to level 3 in Auckland and level 2 elsewhere, the Green Party halted their campaigning for the duration of the lockdown.[62] On 15 September, Shaw announced that the Green Party would propose a bill that makes it mandatory for large companies to make annual disclosures about the impact of climate change on their businesses and declare strategies for mitigating these impacts.[130]

The Green Party campaigned for the electorate vote in the electorates of Auckland Central and Tāmaki Makaurau.[131][132]

ACT edit

ACT launched their party campaign on 12 July 2020. ACT party leader David Seymour criticised the government's COVID-19 response as "clearly, demonstrably unsustainable", and called for the open pursuing of "having the world's smartest border, not as a rhetorical device, but a practical reality." The party also unveiled a new employment insurance scheme, with 0.55% of income tax being paid to a ring-fenced insurance fund. If someone became unemployed, they would be able to claim 55% of their average weekly earnings over the year up to $60,000.[133][134] After new cases of community transmission in Auckland were reported on 11 August, with the alert level being raised to level 3 in Auckland and level 2 elsewhere, ACT cancelled its upcoming campaign events.[62]

Māori edit

The Māori Party launched their campaign on 20 June 2020 at the Hoani Waititi Marae, with a flagship "Whānau First" policy, ensuring that a quarter of government spending over the next two years is spent on projects led by Māori and involving Māori-led businesses. Māori Party co-leader Debbie Ngarewa-Packer was quoted as saying that "Māori must be guaranteed resources for Māori recovery, we cannot go backwards to how we were living pre-COVID – that is not an option for our whānau, too many of whom are struggling just to survive".[135][136] Crushed in the last election due to voters in Māori electorates greatly choosing Labour over the Māori Party, co-leader John Tamihere made it clear they would not re-enter a coalition government with National like they did in previous terms of Parliament.[137] On 19 July 2020, the party released a climate change policy, involving an end to new offshore oil and gas permits, as well as withdrawing existing onshore and offshore permits with the goal of ending the oil and gas industry by 2030. The party would also ban new seabed mining permits and withdraw existing permits, as well as establish a $1 billion Pūngao Auaha for "Māori-owned community energy projects and solar panel and insulation instillations".[138][139] On 14 September, the party announced their major policies, including changing the official name of the country to Aotearoa by 2026, restoring the original Māori names of all towns and cities, requiring primary schools to incorporate Māori language into 25% and later 50% of the curriculum, and requiring all state-funded broadcasters to have a basic fluency level of Māori.[140]

New Conservative edit

The New Conservatives ruled out an alliance with both the Labour-led coalition and Billy Te Kahika Jr's New Zealand Public Party.[141][142] The party received a broadcasting allocation of $62,186 for the 2020 election.[143] The party made headlines during the campaign following repeated vandalism of their advertising in multiple cities,[144][145][146] for posting a meme comparing a New Conservative candidate to Nelson Mandela and Abraham Lincoln,[147] and when a candidate repeatedly and falsely claimed to be an ambassador for the Cancer Society charity.[148]

On 6 October 2020, party leader Leighton Baker mounted a legal challenge at the Auckland High Court to protest the party's exclusion from public broadcaster TVNZ's Minor Party debate scheduled for 8 October. To qualify for inclusion in the debate, parties not represented in Parliament must score at least 3 percent in the 1 News Colmar-Brunton Poll held during the last six months. The hearing was held on 7 October.[149][150] The High Court dismissed the New Conservatives' bid, ruling in favor of TVNZ.[151][152]

On 10 October 2020, it was reported that the New Conservatives' Instagram page had been hacked the previous day with pro-LGBT messages posted on their message feed. In addition, screenshots of the party's logo were shown in rainbow colours. The hack was condemned by party leader Baker and deputy party leader Ikilei, who accused their opponents of intolerance.[153][154] According to NZME journalist Ethan Griffiths, the hacker had temporarily gained access to the New Conservative Instagram account by posing as Deputy Leader Ikilei on Instagram.[153]

Advance NZ edit

Advance NZ launched their campaign on 26 July 2020, merging with the New Zealand Public Party, a party described as "conspiracy theory-driven".[155] The Public Party is to keep their identity and structure, but with the exception of Billy Te Kahika in Te Tai Tokerau, who is running on the Public Party name, all candidates will run as Advance NZ candidates. Jami-Lee Ross, MP for Botany and Te Kahika are to become co-leaders of Advance NZ. Ross stated in regards to the merger that "By forming an alliance of parties, together with other small parties that believe in greater freedom and democracy, we stand a stronger chance of uniting together and crossing the 5 percent threshold in to Parliament," and branded Advance NZ "the new Alliance Party of the 2020s, but a centrist version of that model".[156] At the launch, Te Kahika promised an immediate repeal of the COVID-19 Public Health Response Act 2020.[157] Ross also reportedly told the NZ Herald that the party was in talks with six smaller parties about joining Advance NZ.[158] On 6 August 2020, the party was registered with the Electoral Commission.[159]

Debates edit

Television New Zealand (TVNZ) hosted three television leaders' debates: two between the National and Labour leaders, and one multi-party debate. The first National–Labour debate was moderated by John Campbell, with the multi party debate and second National–Labour debate hosted by Jessica Mutch McKay. A young voters debate was hosted by Jack Tame.[160] Newshub Nation hosted a "power brokers" debate, which included the Māori Party, with the inclusion threshold being having held a seat in Parliament over the past 2 parliamentary terms.[161] This was confirmed on 27 August 2020, when Newshub announced a leaders' debate on 30 September between National and Labour, and a "powerbrokers" debate which included the Greens, ACT and the Māori Party.[162]

TVNZ qualification criteria edit

The inclusion criteria set by TVNZ for its multi-party debate was either having current representation in Parliament or winning 3% in a poll, which sparked controversy as those criteria excluded minor parties such as the Māori Party, The Opportunities Party and the New Conservative Party from the debate. Māori Party co-leader John Tamihere said TVNZ had a responsibility to "reflect Māori perspectives, as laid out in ministerial direction". Race Relations Commissioner Meng Foon endorsed the Māori Party position.[163][161][164] The requirements were modified on 8 September 2020, when TVNZ broadened their criteria to use previous parliamentary representation as a marker, including the Māori Party.[165] The parliamentary criterion was expanded to include "leaders of registered parties where the leader has been an MP, or party has been represented, in either/both of the past two parliaments."[166]

Qualifying parties for the TVNZ multi-party debate
Party Met polling criterion
(≥3% in any Colmar Brunton poll)
Met parliamentary criterion
(Having seats in either of
the last two Parliaments)
Attending
debate
Labour Yes
(48% in September 2020 poll)
Yes No
National Yes
(35% in September 2020 poll)
Yes No
ACT Yes
(8% in September 2020 poll)
Yes Yes
Green Yes
(6% in September 2020 poll)
Yes Yes
NZ First Yes
(3.3% in February 2020 poll)
Yes Yes
Māori Party No
(0.9% in September 2020 poll)
Yes Yes
Advance NZ No
(0.8% in September 2020 poll)
Yes Yes
New Conservative No
(1.6% in September 2020 poll)
No No
Opportunities No
(1.1% in September 2020 poll)
No No
Legalise Cannabis No
(0.2% in September 2020 poll)
No No
Outdoors No
(0.2% in September 2020 poll)
No No
Sustainable NZ No
(0.1% in September 2020 poll)
No No
ONE No
(0.2% in July 2020 poll)
No No
Social Credit No
(0.1% in June 2020 poll)
No No
Vision NZ No
(0.1% in May 2020 poll)
No No
Heartland No No No
TEA No No No

Table of major debates edit

Opinion polls edit

Various organisations commissioned opinion polling for the general election. Two main polling organisations regularly sampled the electorates' opinions: Reid Research (on behalf of MediaWorks New Zealand) and Colmar Brunton (on behalf of Television New Zealand). Roy Morgan Research released a series of polls in June 2020, covering the first five months of the year, and subsequently released monthly polls. These were their first opinion polls in New Zealand since November 2017.

 
Graphical summary of polls conducted for the 2020 New Zealand general election. Results as of the end of 17 October (election day) are indicated with diamonds.

Seat projections edit

The use of mixed-member proportional representation allows ready conversion of a party's support into a party vote percentage and therefore a number of seats in Parliament. Projections assume the new electorate of Takanini will be won by either Labour or National[175] and that Botany will be returned to National,[176][177] but otherwise assume no material change to the electorate seats held by each party. Parties that do not hold an electorate seat and poll below 5% are assumed to win zero seats.

When determining the scenarios for the overall result, the minimum parties necessary to form majority governments are listed (provided parties have indicated openness to working together). Actual governments formed may include other parties beyond the minimum required for a majority; this happened after the 2014 election, when National only needed one seat from another party to reach a 61-seat majority, but instead chose to form a 64-seat government with Māori, ACT and United Future.[178]

Source Seats in Parliament[i] Likely
government
formation(s)
NAT LAB NZF GRN ACT MRI Total
Roy Morgan[179]
Sep 2020 poll
38 61 0 12 9 0 120 Labour (61)
1 News–Colmar Brunton[180]
10–14 Oct 2020 poll
40 59 0 11 10 0 120 Labour–Green (70)
Newshub–Reid Research[181]
8–15 Oct 2020 poll
41 61 0 8 10 0 120 Labour (61)
2020 result 33 65 0 10 10 2 120 Labour (65)
  1. ^ Forecasted seats are calculated using the Electoral Commission's MMP seat allocation calculator, based on polling results.

Voting edit

EasyVote packs were sent to voters starting on 28 September 2020. These packs contain the voter's personalised EasyVote card, which is used by polling booth staff to help identify and locate the voter on the electoral roll. It also included flyers on the voting process and two referendums. On 5 October 2020, The Spinoff reported that four EasyVote packs in Northland allegedly contained a flyer from Votesafe, a third-party promoter opposing the End of Life Choice Act. Votesafe confirmed its flyers were printed at the same facility as the Electoral Commission's flyers, and both Votesafe and the Electoral Commission were investigating.[182][183]

Advance voting began on 3 October at 450 polling locations, increasing to 2,600 locations on election day, 17 October. The Electoral Commission estimated that 60% of votes would occur during the advance voting period, up from 47% in 2017.[184] On 12 October, the number of advance votes cast passed the 1,240,740 advance votes cast overall at the 2017 election.[185] Overall, 1,976,996 advance votes were cast, 66.7% of all votes cast.[186] The polling booth at North City Shopping Centre in Porirua was the busiest advance polling booth with 13,371 votes cast, while the polling booth at the Selwyn District Council headquarters in Rolleston was the busiest election-day polling booth with 1,601 votes cast.[187]

Voters on the Māori roll faced issues with receiving Māori electorate ballots due to high demand during advance voting, leading to some people having to cast special votes instead.[188]

On 5 October, an error was discovered on Port Waikato electorate ballot papers, where there was no circle to tick next to Vision NZ on the party vote ballot. The Electoral Commission subsequently reprinted the ballot papers. Provided the voter's intention is clear, a tick or other mark placed outside the circle will still be counted as a valid vote.[189][190]

The Electoral Commission referred two people to Police after they claimed to have voted multiple times, one on 5 October and another on 14 October.[191][192]

In September 2023, the Electoral Commission released a report which found that 16% of Asian New Zealanders had a "poor" or "very poor" understanding of the New Zealand voting process during the 2020 election, compared to 9% of non-Asians. The report also found that Asians were less confident that the New Zealand elections would be free from influence but were more likely to be motivated to "make a change" when voting. Asian New Zealanders were also less engaged with the EasyVote information package, television advertisements and informational pamphlets but were more likely to notice election advertising on signs and bus shelters. Asian voters were less familiar with voting instructions, candidates, and parties on ballot papers. Despite these negative findings, the report also found that Asian satisfaction with the voting process had improved since the 2017 election.[193]

Results edit

 
Results of the 2020 general election. From left to right: general electorate winners, Māori electorate winners, and numbers of List MPs.
 
Map of party votes in each electorate. Labour won the most party votes in 71 of the 72 electorates, losing only Epsom.

Preliminary results were gradually released after polling booths close at 19:00 (NZDT) on 17 October.[56] The preliminary count only includes advance ordinary and election day ordinary votes; it does not include any special votes, which have a deadline ten days later (27 October).[50] Special votes include votes from those who enrolled after the deadline of 13 September, those who voted outside their electorate (including all overseas votes), voters in hospital or prison, and those voters enrolled on the unpublished roll.[194] Official results, including all recounted ordinary votes and special votes, were released by the Electoral Commission on 6 November 2020.[56]

On the official results, the Labour Party won 65 seats, a majority of four–the party's biggest victory in 50 years.[195] The Labour Party's 50.0%[196] vote share in this election is the third highest throughout its 104-year history, only surpassed by its election victories in 1938 (55.8%)[197] and 1946 (51.3%).[197] It is the first time under the current mixed-member proportional representation (MMP) electoral system that a party has won a majority of parliamentary seats.[198] The National Party obtained 25.6%[199] of the popular vote and 33 seats[200] in Parliament, which represented its worst result since 2002 (where it obtained 20.9%[201] of the popular vote), its second worst historical result and one of the worst ever election defeats in its party's history[202] since the party's founding in 1936.[203] National's leader Collins conceded the election just after 10pm on election night, but said in her concession speech that "[National] will be back".[204][205]

The results of the "COVID-19 election"[206] led to the flipping of many traditionally "blue" National-voting provincial seats, with often more than comfortable margins. Examples were Wairarapa,[207] East Coast,[208] Ōtaki,[209] and Rangitata,[210] the latter having never previously voted for Labour.[211] In another devastating blow to National's heartlands, every city except Auckland (including the Hibiscus Coast), Tauranga, Rotorua and Invercargill gave their seats entirely to Labour.[b] Victims of National seat losses were National deputy leader Gerry Brownlee, who had held Ilam for its entire existence; Chris Bishop, considered a rising star,[212] who unexpectedly flipped Hutt South for National in 2017; and Father of the House Nick Smith, member for Nelson since 1990. Three electorates flipped to Labour following the inclusion of special votes: Northland, Whangārei and Maungakiekie.[213] Labour also flipped Hamilton West, the country's bellwether; in 15 of the 17 general elections since the electorate's formation in 1969, the candidate winning the electorate vote in Hamilton West has been from the party that would form the government, the two exceptions being 1993 and 2017.[214]

In a surprise victory, list MP Chlöe Swarbrick won the Auckland Central electoral seat vacated by National's retiring Nikki Kaye, with a margin of 1,068 votes over Labour's Helen White, thus winning for the Green Party an electorate seat for the first time since 1999.[215][216] Swarbrick's victory was notable as she garnered 3,923[216] more votes within the same electorate than her own Green Party, a prime example of voters being engaged in split-ticket voting; however, it was highly unusual as numerous voters who supported a major party also voted for an electorate MP from a minor party.[217] The Māori Party also returned to Parliament due to the election of Rawiri Waititi in the seat of Waiariki, a seat which the party had lost three years prior.[218] This makes Tāmati Coffey the only Labour electorate MP to lose their electorate, however due to his list placing, Coffey returned to parliament through the list.[219]

The 2020 general election saw the election of New Zealand's first African MP (Ibrahim Omer), first Sri Lankan-born MP (Vanushi Walters) and first Latin American MP (Ricardo Menéndez March).[220] Six new LGBT+ MPs were elected (Menéndez March, Glen Bennett, Ayesha Verrall, Shanan Halbert, Elizabeth Kerekere, Tangi Utikere), making the New Zealand House of Representatives the national parliament with the highest percentage of LGBT+ members in the world.[221][222]

Parties and candidates have three working days after the release of the official results to apply for a judicial recount. These recounts take place under the auspices of a District Court judge (the Chief District Court Judge in case of a nationwide recount).[223][224] National MP Matt King announced he would seek a recount in the Northland electorate, after he lost the electorate to Labour's Willow-Jean Prime by 163 votes,[225] but later changed his mind and conceded.[226]

Detailed results edit

Summary of the 17 October 2020 election for the House of Representatives[227]
 
Party Party vote Electorate vote sum Total
seats
+/-
Votes % Change
(pp)
Seats Votes % Change
(pp)
Seats
Labour 1,443,545 50.01  13.12 19 1,357,501 48.07  10.19 46 65  19
National 738,275 25.58  18.87 10 963,845 34.13  9.92 23 33  23
Green 226,757 7.86  1.59 9 162,245 5.74  1.17 1 10  2
ACT 219,031 7.59  7.08 9 97,697 3.46  2.45 1 10  9
NZ First 75,020 2.60  4.60 0 30,209 1.07  4.38 0 0  9
Opportunities (TOP) 43,449 1.51  0.94 0 25,181 0.89  0.14 0 0  
New Conservative 42,613 1.48  1.24 0 49,598 1.76  1.52 0 0  
Māori Party 33,630 1.17  0.01 1 60,837 2.15  0.04 1 2  2
Advance NZ 28,429 0.98 new 0 25,054 0.89 new 0 0 new
Legalise Cannabis 13,329 0.46  0.15 0 8,044 0.28  0.12 0 0  
ONE 8,121 0.28 new 0 6,830 0.24 new 0 0 new
Vision NZ 4,237 0.15 new 0 2,139 0.08 new 0 0 new
Outdoors 3,256 0.11  0.05 0 7,982 0.28  0.23 0 0  
TEA 2,414 0.08 new 0 2,764 0.10 new 0 0 new
Sustainable NZ 1,880 0.07 new 0 2,421 0.09 new 0 0 new
Social Credit 1,520 0.05  0.02 0 2,699 0.11  0.09 0 0  
Heartland 914 0.03 new 0 8,462 0.30 new 0 0 new
Unregistered parties 3,391 0.12  0.08 0 0  
Independent 7,299 0.26  0.24 0 0  
Valid votes 2,886,420 98.88  0.34 2,824,198 96.75  0.58
Informal votes 21,372 0.73  0.32 57,138 1.96  0.80
Disallowed votes 11,281 0.39  0.66 37,737 2.66  1.37
Below electoral threshold 225,182 7.71
Total 2,919,073 100 48 2,919,073 100 72 120
Eligible voters and turnout 3,549,580 82.24  2.49 3,549,580 82.24  2.49
Electorate vote
Labour
48.07%
National
34.13%
Green
5.74%
ACT
3.46%
Māori
2.15%
New Conservative
1.76%
NZ First
1.07%
Others
3.62%
Party vote
Labour
50.01%
National
25.58%
Green
7.86%
ACT
7.59%
NZ First
2.60%
Opportunities
1.51%
New Conservative
1.48%
Māori
1.17%
Others
2.22%
Parliament seats
Labour
54.17%
National
27.50%
Green
8.33%
ACT
8.33%
Māori
1.67%

Electorate results edit

 
Party affiliation of winning electorate candidates.

The table below shows the results of the 2020 general election:

Key
Electorate results of the 2020 New Zealand general election[228][229]
Electorate Incumbent Winner Majority Runner up Third place
Auckland Central Nikki Kaye Chlöe Swarbrick 1,068 Helen White Emma Mellow
Banks Peninsula New electorate Tracey McLellan 13,156 Catherine Chu Eugenie Sage
Bay of Plenty Todd Muller 3,415 Angie Warren-Clark Bruce Carley
Botany Jami-Lee Ross Christopher Luxon 3,999 Naisi Chen Damien Smith
Christchurch Central Duncan Webb 14,098 Dale Stephens Chrys Horn
Christchurch East Poto Williams 17,336 Lincoln Platt Nikki Berry
Coromandel Scott Simpson 3,505 Nathaniel Blomfield Pamela Grealey
Dunedin New electorate David Clark 15,521 Michael Woodhouse Jack Brazil
East Coast Anne Tolley Kiri Allan 6,331 Tania Tapsell Meredith Akuhata-Brown
East Coast Bays Erica Stanford 8,764 Monina Hernandez Dan Jones
Epsom David Seymour 9,224 Camilla Belich Paul Goldsmith
Hamilton East David Bennett Jamie Strange 2,973 David Bennett Rimu Bhooi
Hamilton West Tim Macindoe Gaurav Sharma 6,267 Tim Macindoe Roger Weldon
Hutt South Chris Bishop Ginny Andersen 3,777 Chris Bishop Richard McIntosh
Ilam Gerry Brownlee Sarah Pallett 3,463 Gerry Brownlee David Bennett
Invercargill Sarah Dowie Penny Simmonds 224 Liz Craig Rochelle Francis
Kaikōura Stuart Smith 2,295 Matt Flight Richard McCubbin
Kaipara ki Mahurangi New electorate Chris Penk 4,435 Marja Lubeck Beth Houlbrooke
Kelston Carmel Sepuloni 15,660 Bala Beeram Jessamine Fraser
Mana Kris Faafoi Barbara Edmonds 16,224 Jo Hayes Jan Logie
Māngere William Sio 19,396 Agnes Loheni Peter Brian Sykes
Manurewa Louisa Wall Arena Williams 17,179 Nuwi Samarakone John Hall
Maungakiekie Denise Lee Priyanca Radhakrishnan 635 Denise Lee Ricardo Menéndez March
Mount Albert Jacinda Ardern 21,246 Melissa Lee Luke Wijohn
Mount Roskill Michael Wood 13,853 Parmjeet Parmar Golriz Ghahraman
Napier Stuart Nash 5,856 Katie Nimon James Crow
Nelson Nick Smith Rachel Boyack 4,525 Nick Smith Aaron Stallard
New Lynn Deborah Russell 13,134 Lisa Whyte Steve Abel
New Plymouth Jonathan Young Glen Bennett 2,555 Jonathan Young Murray Chong
North Shore Maggie Barry Simon Watts 3,734 Romy Udanga Liz Rawlings
Northcote Dan Bidois Shanan Halbert 2,534 Dan Bidois Natasha Fairley
Northland Matt King Willow-Jean Prime 163 Matt King Shane Jones
Ōhāriu Greg O'Connor 11,961 Brett Hudson Jessica Hammond
Ōtaki Nathan Guy Terisa Ngobi 2,988 Tim Costley Bernard Long
Pakuranga Simeon Brown 10,050 Nerissa Henry Lawrence Xu-Nan
Palmerston North Iain Lees-Galloway Tangi Utikere 12,508 William Wood Teanau Tuiono
Panmure-Ōtāhuhu New electorate Jenny Salesa 18,626 Kanwaljit Singh Bakshi Mark Simiona
Papakura Judith Collins 5,583 Anahila Kanongata'a-Suisuiki Sue Cowie
Port Waikato New electorate Andrew Bayly 4,313 Baljit Kaur Mark Ball
Rangitata Vacant[c] Jo Luxton 4,408 Megan Hands Hamish Hutton
Rangitīkei Ian McKelvie 2,961 Soraya Peke-Mason Ali Hale Tilley
Remutaka Chris Hipkins 20,497 Mark Crofskey Chris Norton
Rongotai Paul Eagle 19,207 Teall Crossen David Patterson
Rotorua Todd McClay 825 Claire Mahon Kaya Sparke
Selwyn Amy Adams Nicola Grigg 4,968 Reuben Davidson Stuart Armstrong
Southland New electorate Joseph Mooney 5,645 Jon Mitchell David Kennedy
Taieri New electorate Ingrid Leary 12,398 Liam Kernaghan Scott Willis
Takanini New electorate Neru Leavasa 7,724 Rima Nakhle Mike McCormick
Tāmaki Simon O'Connor 8,068 Shirin Brown Sylvia Boys
Taranaki-King Country Barbara Kuriger 3,134 Angela Roberts Brent Miles
Taupō Louise Upston 5,119 Ala' Al-Bustanji Danna Glendining
Tauranga Simon Bridges 1,856 Jan Tinetti Josh Cole
Te Atatū Phil Twyford 10,508 Alfred Ngaro Scott Hindman
Tukituki Lawrence Yule Anna Lorck 1,590 Lawrence Yule Chris Perley
Upper Harbour Paula Bennett Vanushi Walters 2,392 Jake Bezzant Ryan Nicholls
Waikato Tim van de Molen 5,216 Kerrin Leoni James McDowall
Waimakariri Matt Doocey 1,507 Dan Rosewarne Leighton Baker
Wairarapa Alastair Scott Kieran McAnulty 6,545 Mike Butterick Ron Mark
Waitaki Jacqui Dean 3,281 Liam Wairepo Sampsa Kiuru
Wellington Central Grant Robertson 18,878 Nicola Willis James Shaw
West Coast-Tasman Damien O'Connor 6,208 Maureen Pugh Steve Richards
Whanganui Harete Hipango Steph Lewis 8,191 Harete Hipango Alan Clay
Whangaparāoa New electorate Mark Mitchell 7,823 Lorayne Ferguson Paul Grace
Whangārei Shane Reti Emily Henderson 431 Shane Reti David Seymour[d]
Wigram Megan Woods 14,770 Hamish Campbell Richard Wesley
Māori electorates
Hauraki-Waikato Nanaia Mahuta 9,660 Donna Pokere-Phillips Philip Lambert
Ikaroa-Rāwhiti Meka Whaitiri 6,045 Heather Te Au-Skipworth Elizabeth Kerekere
Tāmaki Makaurau Peeni Henare 927 John Tamihere Marama Davidson
Te Tai Hauāuru Adrian Rurawhe 1,053 Debbie Ngarewa-Packer Noeline Apiata
Te Tai Tokerau Kelvin Davis 8,164 Mariameno Kapa-Kingi Maki Herbert
Te Tai Tonga Rino Tirikatene 6,855 Tākuta Ferris Ariana Paretutanganui-Tamati
Waiariki Tāmati Coffey Rawiri Waititi 836 Tāmati Coffey Hannah Tamaki

In above table, majority denotes the winning candidate's lead over the second place candidate.

List results edit

The following list candidates were elected:

Labour National Green ACT Māori

Andrew Little (07)
David Parker (09)
Trevor Mallard (11)
Kris Faafoi (15)
Ayesha Verrall (17)
Willie Jackson (19)
Louisa Wall (27)
Camilla Belich (30)
Jan Tinetti (32)
Marja Lubeck (34)
Angie Warren-Clark (35)
Tāmati Coffey (37)
Naisi Chen (38)
Liz Craig (41)
Ibrahim Omer (42)
Anahila Kanongata'a-Suisuiki (44)
Rachel Brooking (46)
Helen White (48)
Angela Roberts (50)

Gerry Brownlee (02)
Paul Goldsmith (03)
Shane Reti (05)
Chris Bishop (07)
David Bennett (11)
Michael Woodhouse (12)
Nicola Willis (13)
Melissa Lee (16)
Nick Smith (18)
Maureen Pugh (19)

Marama Davidson (01)
James Shaw (02)
Julie Anne Genter (04)
Jan Logie (05)
Eugenie Sage (06)
Golriz Ghahraman (07)
Teanau Tuiono (08)
Elizabeth Kerekere (09)
Ricardo Menéndez March (10)

Brooke van Velden (02)
Nicole McKee (03)
Chris Baillie (04)
Simon Court (05)
James McDowall (06)
Karen Chhour (07)
Mark Cameron (08)
Toni Severin (09)
Damien Smith (10)

Debbie Ngarewa-Packer (01)

MPs who lost their seats edit

Name Party Electorate/List Term in office
Jami-Lee Ross Advance NZ Botany 2011–2020
Tim Macindoe National Hamilton East 2008–2020
Denise Lee National Maungakiekie 2017–2020
Jonathan Young National New Plymouth 2008–2020
Dan Bidois National Northcote 2018–2020
Matt King National Northland 2017–2020
Harete Hipango National Whanganui 2017–2020
2021–present
Jonathan Young National New Plymouth 2008–2020
Kanwaljit Singh Bakshi National List 2008–2020
Paulo Garcia National List 2019–2020
Parmjeet Parmar National List 2014–2020
Agnes Loheni National List 2019–2020
Alfred Ngaro National List 2011–2020
Brett Hudson National List 2014–2020
Jo Hayes National List 2014–2020
Winston Peters NZ First List 1979–1981
1984–2008
2011–2020
Fletcher Tabuteau NZ First List 2014–2020
Tracey Martin NZ First List 2011–2020
Shane Jones NZ First List 2005–2014
2017–2020
Ron Mark NZ First List 1996–2008
2014–2020
Darroch Ball NZ First List 2014–2020
Mark Patterson NZ First List 2017–2020
Jenny Marcroft NZ First List 2017–2020
 
Depiction of the government formation. While Labour formed a majority government, they chose to invite the Greens to participate in an idiosyncratic "cooperation agreement", which gave the latter two ministers outside cabinet.

Government formation edit

On 31 October, Ardern announced that despite the Labour Party having won enough seats to continue the Sixth Labour Government on their own, they had invited the Greens to participate in a "cooperation agreement", seeking their input on matters such as the environment, climate change and child wellbeing, and that the Greens had accepted the offer. Under the deal (which is not a coalition agreement), the two co-leaders of the Greens will receive ministerial portfolios outside the cabinet. James Shaw will continue in his previous role as Minister for Climate Change, as well as associate environment minister (biodiversity). Marama Davidson will be appointed to the new position of Minister for the Prevention of Family and Sexual Violence, and will also take on the role of associate minister of housing (homelessness).[230] The Green Party also agreed to abstain on motions of confidence and supply during the term.[231]

Post-election events edit

Leadership changes edit

Following the election, Gerry Brownlee stepped down as deputy leader of the National Party. On 10 November 2020, Shane Reti was elected unopposed as his replacement. Leader Judith Collins was also unopposed to retain her position.[232]

On 3 November, Geoff Simmons stepped down as leader of The Opportunities Party. Shai Navot, former deputy leader, took over from Simmons.[233]

On 19 November, the board of the New Conservative Party removed the party's leader, Leighton Baker, and replaced him with his deputy, Elliot Ikilei. The party's third-ranked list candidate at the election, Victoria O'Brien, became deputy leader.[234] O'Brien however resigned after less than a week in the role, on 25 November, amid apparent division in the party over Baker's removal and his subsequent role within its organisation.[235] Ikilei announced his resignation on New Year's Eve.[236][non-primary source needed]

Local by-elections edit

A number of local by-elections are required due to the resignation of an incumbent local body politician following their election to Parliament:

Calls for vote recount edit

On 11 November, the Māori Party co-leader John Tamihere requested a vote recount in the Māori electorates of Tāmaki Makaurau and Te Tai Hauāuru, alleging there had been voter discrimination against Māori during the 2020 election. Tamihere claimed that the recount was intended to expose discriminatory laws such as the five-yearly Māori Electoral Option (which limited the ability of Māori to switch between the general and Māori rolls for a period five years), longer wait times for Māori voters at election booths, and some Māori not being allowed to vote on the Māori roll.[240] The altered official results for the two electorates following the recounts were released on 20 November. Tamihere's margin of defeat in Tāmaki Makaurau decreased from 956 to 927, while Debbie Ngarewa-Packer's margin of defeat in Te Tai Hauāuru increased from 1,035 to 1,053.[241][242]

Election donations edit

Māori Party edit

On 12 April 2021, the Electoral Commission referred the Māori Party to the Police for failing to disclose about NZ$320,000 worth of donations within the required timeframe. These donations came from former party co-leader John Tamihere (NZ$158,223.72), the Urban Māori Authority (NZ$48,879.85), and the Aotearoa Te Kahu Limited Partnership (NZ$120,000). Party President Che Wilson attributed the late disclosure to the fact that the party was staffed by volunteers and rookies who were unfamiliar with electoral finance laws.[243] In late April, the Police referred the investigation into the Māori Party's undeclared donations to the Serious Fraud Office.[244] By late September 2022, the Serious Fraud Office had closed the investigation and declined to prosecute the individuals and parties involved.[245]

In late September 2022, Charities Services general manager Natasha Weight confirmed that the agency was investigating two charities headed by Tamihere, the Te Whānau Waipareira Trust and the National Urban Māori Authority, for financing his 2020 election campaign. Existing charities legislation bans charities from donating or endorsing political parties and candidates. Political parties and candidates are not allowed to use charities' resources. According to the Charities Register, Te Whānau o Waipareira Trust Group had provided NZ$385,307 in interest free loans to support Tamihere's 2020 election campaign while the National Urban Māori Authority had paid Tamihere NZ$82,695 to support his 2020 election campaign and Māori Party aspirations. In response, Tamihere accused the Charities Services of racism and confirmed that he and the Māori Party would challenge the Charities Service if the agency ruled against them.[246][247][248]

National Party edit

In late April 2021, the Electoral Commission issued the National Party with a warning for failing to declare a NZ$35,000 donation from real estate mogul Garth Barfoot but declined to refer the matter to the police.[249]

Advance New Zealand edit

Several Advance New Zealand candidates also faced fines for not filing campaign donations and expense returns. In late May 2021, Rangitīkei candidate Ricky Cribb pleaded guilty to two charges of violating the Electoral Act 1993 and was fined $300 plus court costs.[250] Mana candidate Edward James Ngatai Ponder pleaded guilty to violating the Electoral Act 1993 in mid June 2021 for failing to file an election expenses return to show that would have shown he had no expenses.[251] In early July, Advance NZ Invercargill candidate Kurt Rohloff had his Electoral Act charge for failing to declare election and donation returns dismissed after completing a diversion.[252]

Early July also saw another Invercargill candidate, independent Basil Walker, be charged with failing to file his return on time.[253] Walker was offered a discharge without conviction if he completed 40 hours of community service, but he failed to do so, which he attributed to his workload. In September he agreed to plead guilty to the charge, received a conviction, and was fined $500.[254]

In September 2021, former Public Party leader and Advance NZ co-leader Billy Te Kahika was charged with filing a false electoral donation and obtaining $15,000 by deception.[255] Name suppression lapsed and he was identified in October 2021. Te Kahika has contested the charges and opted for a jury trial.[256][257]

See also edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ a b In late October, after preliminary election results suggested that the only Māori Party seat in parliament would be the Waiariki electorate, held by Rawiri Waititi, the party confirmed Rawiri as its new co-leader, replacing John Tamihere.[1]
  2. ^ Some outer suburbs of Palmerston North and Christchurch fall into surrounding rural electorates that were won by National.
  3. ^ Was Andrew Falloon until his immediate resignation on 21 July 2020.
  4. ^ The David Seymour who contested the electorate of Whangārei for ACT is a different person from ACT party leader, David Seymour, who re-contested and won his Auckland seat of Epsom.

References edit

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  53. ^ Young, Audrey (28 January 2020). "Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern reveals September 19 election

2020, zealand, general, election, held, saturday, october, 2020, determine, composition, 53rd, zealand, parliament, voters, elected, members, house, representatives, from, single, member, electorates, from, closed, party, lists, referendums, personal, cannabis. The 2020 New Zealand general election was held on Saturday 17 October 2020 to determine the composition of the 53rd New Zealand Parliament 2 3 Voters elected 120 members to the House of Representatives 72 from single member electorates and 48 from closed party lists Two referendums one on the personal use of cannabis and one on euthanasia were also held on the same day 4 5 Official results of the election and referendums were released on 6 November 6 2020 New Zealand general election 2017 17 October 2020 2023 outgoing memberselected members All 120 seats in the House of Representatives61 seats needed for a majorityOpinion pollsTurnout2 919 073 82 24 2 49 pp First party Second party Third party Leader Jacinda Ardern Judith Collins James Shaw Marama Davidson Party Labour National Green Leader since 1 August 2017 14 July 2020 30 May 20158 April 2018 Leader s seat Mount Albert Papakura List Last election 46 seats36 89 56 seats44 45 8 seats6 27 Seats before 46 56 8 Seats won 65 33 10 Seat change 19 23 2 Electorate vote 1 357 50148 07 10 19 pp 963 84534 13 9 92 pp 162 2455 74 1 17 pp Party vote 1 443 54550 01 13 12 pp 738 27525 58 18 87 pp 226 7577 86 1 59 pp Fourth party Fifth party Sixth party Leader David Seymour John Tamihere Debbie Ngarewa Packer Winston Peters Party ACT Maori Party NZ First Leader since 4 October 2014 15 April 2020 18 July 1993 Leader s seat Epsom Ran in Tamaki Makaurau lost a List List lost Last election 1 seat0 50 0 seats1 18 9 seats7 20 Seats before 1 0 9 Seats won 10 2 0 Seat change 9 2 9 Electorate vote 97 6973 46 2 45 pp 60 8372 15 0 04 pp 30 2091 07 4 38 pp Party vote 219 0317 59 7 08 pp 33 630 1 17 0 01 pp 75 0202 60 4 60 ppResults by electorate shaded by winning marginResults by electorate shaded by party vote sharePrime Minister before election Jacinda Ardern Labour Subsequent Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern Labour The governing Labour Party led by incumbent Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern won the election in a landslide victory against the National Party led by Judith Collins 7 Labour won 65 seats enough for a majority government It is the first time that a party has won enough seats to govern alone since the mixed member proportional representation MMP system was introduced in 1996 8 Labour also achieved the highest percentage of the party vote 50 0 since MMP was introduced winning the plurality of party vote in 71 of the 72 electorates Epsom being the sole exception This is also the best nationwide result in the popular vote for a main party since 1951 the most seats any party has won since 1990 and the first time Labour has won an absolute majority of the vote since 1946 9 10 Ardern subsequently became the most successful New Zealand politician of the MMP era overtaking John Key by number of seats won under a single premiership Conversely this election was the second worst result for the National Party which performed poorer only in the 2002 general election 11 In terms of the difference between National s and Labour s vote share this was the worst result in the party s history With the election being highly centred around the government s praised response to the COVID 19 pandemic it led to the unprecedented flipping of traditionally National voting seats to Labour often with very comfortable margins 12 Examples included the rural seats of Wairarapa East Coast Ōtaki and Rangitata the latter having never previously voted for Labour 13 14 In another blow to National s heartlands every city except Auckland and Tauranga gave their seats entirely to Labour In a surprise victory the left wing environmentalist Green Party s Chloe Swarbrick won the Auckland Central seat vacated by National s retiring Nikki Kaye with a margin of 1 068 votes over Labour s Helen White 15 The right wing libertarian ACT Party and the Greens both increased their number of seats due to the collapse of National s support base The Maori Party representing the cause of indigenous rights re entered Parliament with two seats after Rawiri Waititi won the Waiariki electorate Populist nationalist party New Zealand First led by Deputy Prime Minister Winston Peters in coalition with Labour suffered its worst ever result losing all its seats 16 17 Ardern moved the Labour Party further to the centre during its campaign promising to cut spending during the remainder of COVID 19 recession and controversially cancelling the government s promise to make the standard three years of tertiary education tuition free 18 19 20 Doing so alienated some left wing Labour supporters giving the Green Party a boost in seat numbers and their victory in Auckland Central 21 While results of opinion polls early in the year were neck and neck between the two major parties Ardern and the Labour Government were praised for their response to the COVID 19 pandemic in New Zealand Following the Level 4 lockdown in March 2020 polls began to suggest that Labour could either attain a majority government or could govern with confidence and supply from the Greens 22 In contrast the leadership of the National Party changed twice in less than three months unable to improve its poor polling results after collapsing in April 2020 23 Heading a campaign widely perceived as centrist or centre leaning 24 25 Labour gained support from a large demographic of moderate swing voters many of whom had previously voted for National under John Key Approximately 16 of Labour s voters had voted for National in the previous election 26 27 Contents 1 Background 2 Electoral system 2 1 Electorate boundaries 3 Schedule 3 1 Impact of the COVID 19 pandemic 4 Parties and candidates 4 1 MPs not standing for re election 4 2 MPs standing for re election as list only MPs 5 Campaigning 5 1 Expense limits and broadcasting allocations 5 2 Party campaigns 5 2 1 National 5 2 2 Labour 5 2 3 NZ First 5 2 4 Green 5 2 5 ACT 5 2 6 Maori 5 2 7 New Conservative 5 2 8 Advance NZ 5 3 Debates 5 3 1 TVNZ qualification criteria 5 3 2 Table of major debates 6 Opinion polls 6 1 Seat projections 7 Voting 8 Results 8 1 Detailed results 8 2 Electorate results 8 3 List results 8 4 MPs who lost their seats 8 5 Government formation 9 Post election events 9 1 Leadership changes 9 2 Local by elections 9 3 Calls for vote recount 9 4 Election donations 9 4 1 Maori Party 9 4 2 National Party 9 4 3 Advance New Zealand 10 See also 11 Footnotes 12 References 13 External linksBackground edit nbsp Parliamentary makeup prior to the 2020 election Government Labour 46 NZ First 9 Green 8 Opposition National 55 ACT 1 Independent 1 Further information Results of the 2017 New Zealand general election and 52nd New Zealand Parliament The final results of the 23 September 2017 election gave National 56 seats while Labour and the Greens combined had 54 seats New Zealand First won 9 seats and held the balance of power it was in a position to give either National or Labour the 61 seats needed to form a government On 19 October 2017 Winston Peters leader of New Zealand First announced that he would form a coalition government with Labour 28 On the same day James Shaw leader of the Green Party announced that his party would give confidence and supply to a Labour NZ First government 29 Thus Labour regained power after nine years in opposition ending the Fifth National Government which had been in power for three terms 2008 2017 The 2017 election also marked the first time under MMP in New Zealand that a party led a government without commanding the plurality of the party vote 30 On 22 May 2020 a leadership election occurred following two poor polling results for the National Party in which Todd Muller replaced Simon Bridges as leader and Leader of the Opposition and Nikki Kaye replaced Paula Bennett as deputy leader of the party 31 Muller himself then resigned on 14 July 2020 citing health reasons leading to another leadership election later that day in which Collins was voted into the National leadership position 32 Electoral system editMain article Electoral system of New Zealand New Zealand uses a mixed member proportional MMP voting system to elect the House of Representatives Each voter gets two votes one for a political party the party vote and one for a local candidate the electorate vote Political parties that meet the threshold 5 of the party vote or one electorate seat receive seats in the House in proportion to the percentage of the party vote they receive 72 of the 120 seats are filled by the MPs elected from the electorates with the winner in each electorate determined by the first past the post method i e most votes wins The remaining 48 seats are filled by candidates from each party s closed party list 30 If a party wins more electorates than seats it is entitled to under the party vote an overhang results in this case the House will add extra seats to cover the overhang 33 A political party or parties with the support of the majority of members in the House form the Government Prior to this election from the introduction of MMP in 1996 no single party had won enough votes to win an outright majority of seats when no party has commanded a majority parties have had to negotiate with other parties to form a coalition government or a minority government 34 Electorate boundaries edit nbsp The 2014 electoral boundaries showing electorates out of tolerance following the 2018 census and Maori electoral option Orange electorates were more than 5 above quota and therefore had to drop population Blue electorates were more than 5 below quota and therefore had to add population Electorate boundaries for the next election are required to be redrawn after each New Zealand census 35 The most recent census was held in 2018 By law the number of South Island general electorates is fixed at 16 36 37 with the number of North Island general electorates and Maori electorates increasing or decreasing in proportion to the population Each electorate must have the same population with a tolerance of plus or minus five percent 37 For the 2014 and 2017 elections there were 48 North Island general electorates and 7 Maori electorates which along with the 16 South Island electorates gives a nationwide total of 71 electorates 38 On 23 September 2019 Statistics New Zealand announced that population growth necessitated one additional North Island general electorate 39 bringing the total number of North Island general electorates to 49 and the overall number of electorates to 72 reducing the number of list seats available by one 40 Statistics New Zealand also announced that 11 North Island three South Island and two Maori electorates were above 5 tolerance while five South Island electorates and one Maori electorate were below 5 tolerance 41 The Representation Commission undertook a review of electoral boundaries This review was commenced in October 2019 and was completed in April 2020 42 The boundaries will apply in the 2020 general election and the subsequent general election In total 36 electorates remained unchanged 35 electorates were modified and one new electorate created The most significant boundary changes occurred in the Auckland Waikato central Canterbury and Otago regions with smaller changes in the Northland and Tasman regions 43 The new electorate was created in South Auckland and named Takanini Taking area from the Hunua Manurewa and Papakura electorates Takanini is predicted to be a National tilting to marginal electorate 44 Takanini s creation cascaded existing electorates north through Auckland and south through Waikato Significant changes to the north include Manukau East taking Sylvia Park and Panmure from Maungakiekie with the electorate renamed Panmure Ōtahuhu New Lynn taking the Waitakere Ranges from Helensville Helensville taking Wellsford Warkworth and the Kowhai Coast from Rodney and Northland with the electorate renamed Kaipara ki Mahurangi and Rodney taking Dairy Flat from Helensville and being renamed Whangaparaoa To the south Papakura took the entire Hunua electorate east of State Highway 1 in exchange for Hunua taking the northern part of the Waikato electorate as far south as and including Te Kauwhata Hunua subsequently returned to its pre 2008 name Port Waikato Waikato took Te Aroha and the remainder of the Matamata Piako District area from Coromandel allowing Coromandel to take Ōmokoroa from Bay of Plenty 45 In the South Island Selwyn lost the Rakaia area to Rangitata Mcleans Island and Christchurch Airport to Ilam and Hornby South to Wigram Ilam gained Avonhead from Wigram allowing Wigram to take Aidanfield from Port Hills which in turn allowed Port Hills to take the entire Banks Peninsula from Selwyn Port Hills subsequently returned to its pre 2008 name of Banks Peninsula Clutha Southland lost the Tuatapere Te Waewae area to Invercargill and Balclutha Milton and the lower Clutha Valley to Dunedin South while gaining Alexandra Clyde and the Clutha Valley upstream of Beaumont from Waitaki Waitaki in turn took the Palmerston area from Dunedin North allowing Dunedin North to take the Otago Peninsula from Dunedin South The Otago Southland boundary changes saw three electorates change names Clutha Southland to Southland Dunedin North to Dunedin and Dunedin South to Taieri In the Tasman region the town of Brightwater moved from Nelson to West Coast Tasman to bring the latter electorate within quota 45 Two electorates had name changes to correct their spelling Rimutaka was renamed Remutaka in line with its namesake the Remutaka Range which was renamed in 2017 as part of a Treaty of Waitangi settlement The Whangarei electorate was renamed by adding a macron to the second a 45 Schedule edit nbsp Governor General Dame Patsy Reddy right issues the writ for the election before the chief electoral officer Alicia Wright left on 13 September 2020 Unless an early election is called or the election date is set to circumvent holding a by election a general election is held every three years 46 The previous election was held on 23 September 2017 The governor general Patsy Reddy must issue writs for an election within seven days of the expiration or dissolution of the current parliament Under section 17 of the Constitution Act 1986 parliament expires three years from the day fixed for the return of the writs issued for the last preceding general election of members of the House of Representatives and no longer The writs for the 2017 election were returned on 12 October 2017 47 as a result the 52nd Parliament would have to dissolve no later than 12 October 2020 Consequently the last day for issuance of the writs of election is 19 October 2020 Since the passage of the Electoral Amendment Act 2020 48 which came into force on 11 March 2020 the writs must be returned within 60 days of their issuance save for any judicial recount death of a candidate or emergency adjournment 49 which would be 18 December 2020 Because polling day must be on a Saturday 49 and ten days is required for counting of special votes 50 the last possible date for this general election is 21 November 2020 51 52 On 28 January 2020 Ardern announced that the election would be held on 19 September 51 with the 52nd Parliament holding its last sitting day on 6 August and dissolving on 12 August 53 On 17 August 2020 Ardern delayed the election to 17 October 2 with the dissolution of Parliament delayed until 6 September 54 The writ date for the election which was originally set for 16 August 55 was subsequently delayed until 13 September 56 Political parties would have had to be registered by this day to contest the party vote 57 The timetable for the general election was as follows 56 58 28 January 2020 Tuesday Prime Minister Ardern announces the general election will be held on 19 September 6 July 2020 Monday Electoral Commission begins enrolment update campaign 18 July 2020 Saturday Election hoardings may be erected subject to local council rules 17 August 2020 Monday Prime Minister Ardern changes the election date to 17 October due to the COVID 19 pandemic 18 August 2020 Tuesday The regulated election advertising period begins 6 September 2020 Sunday The 52nd Parliament is dissolved 13 September 2020 Sunday Writ day Governor General issues formal direction to the Electoral Commission to hold the election Last day to ordinarily enrol to vote late enrolments must cast special votes Official campaigning begins radio and television advertising begins 17 September 2020 Thursday Deadline 12 00 for registered parties to lodge bulk nominations of candidates and party lists 18 September 2020 Friday Deadline 12 00 for individual candidates to lodge nominations 30 September 2020 Wednesday Overseas voting begins 3 October 2020 Saturday Advance voting begins 16 October 2020 Friday Advance and overseas voting ends Last day to enrol to vote except in person at polling places The regulated election advertising period ends all election advertising must be taken down by 23 59 17 October 2020 Saturday Election day polling places open 09 00 to 19 00 People may enrol in person at polling places Preliminary election results released progressively after 19 00 30 October 2020 Friday Preliminary referendum results released 6 November 2020 Friday Official election and referendum results declared 20 November 2020 Friday Writ for election returned official declaration of elected members subject to judicial recounts 25 November 2020 Wednesday The 53rd Parliament meets for the first time Impact of the COVID 19 pandemic edit See also COVID 19 pandemic in New Zealand The original date of 19 September was announced before the COVID 19 pandemic had reached New Zealand In April 2020 the National Party doubted that the public would be ready for an election in September and New Zealand First leader Winston Peters called for the election to be delayed to 21 November 59 60 In May 2020 Ardern said she did not intend to change the date of the election and Chief Electoral Officer Alicia Wright said that the Electoral Commission was working to the dates originally set by the Prime Minister 61 After new cases of community transmission in Auckland were reported on 11 August 2020 with the COVID 19 alert level being raised to level 3 in the Auckland region and level 2 elsewhere there were growing calls to delay the dissolution of Parliament and the election 62 The following day Collins called for the election to be delayed until at least after November with the aim of allowing parties more time to campaign 63 and all major political parties suspended their campaigns 64 Delaying the dissolution of parliament beyond 12 October 2020 and therefore the election date beyond 28 November 2020 would require a legislative amendment As the length of the parliamentary term is entrenched such an amendment would require a 75 supermajority to pass 65 On 12 August 2020 Prime Minister Ardern delayed the dissolution of Parliament until 17 August and was seeking advice from the Electoral Commission regarding the election timeline On 17 August Ardern announced that the general election would be pushed back to 17 October while the dissolution of Parliament would be delayed until 6 September 2 54 The Chief Electoral Officer has powers under the Electoral Act to delay polling at some or all polling places for up to three days due to unforeseen circumstances This can be extended for up to seven days at a time following consultation with the Prime Minister and the Leader of the Opposition 66 Parties and candidates editFurther information Candidates in the 2020 New Zealand general election by electorate and Party lists in the 2020 New Zealand general election Political parties registered with the Electoral Commission can contest the general election as a party To register parties must have at least 500 financial members an auditor and an appropriate party name 67 A registered party may submit a party list to contest the party vote and can have a party campaign expenses limit in addition to limits on individual candidates campaigns Unregistered parties and independents can contest the electorate vote only 68 Seventeen of the eighteen registered parties submitted a list and contested the general election The Mana Party did not submit a party list or apply for a broadcasting allocation and has endorsed and offered its resources to the Maori Party 69 Party Leader s Founded Ideology 2017 result 2017 seats National Judith Collins 1936 Liberal conservatism 44 45 56 Labour Jacinda Ardern 1916 Social democracy 36 89 46 NZ First Winston Peters 1993 Nationalism populism 7 20 9 Green James Shaw Marama Davidson 1990 Green politics social democracy 6 27 8 ACT David Seymour 1994 Classical liberalism right libertarianism 0 50 1 Opportunities TOP Geoff Simmons 2016 Radical centrism environmentalism 2 44 0 Maori Party John Tamihere a Debbie Ngarewa Packer 2004 Maori rights 1 18 0 Legalise Cannabis Maki Herbert Michael Appleby 1996 Cannabis legalisation 0 31 0 New Conservative Leighton Baker 2011 Conservatism right wing populism 0 24 0 Outdoors Sue Grey Alan Simmons 2015 Environmentalism conspiracism 0 06 0 Social Credit Chris Leitch 1953 Social credit economic democracy 0 03 0 Advance NZ Jami Lee Ross Billy Te Kahika 2020 Conspiracism 0 i Heartland Mark Ball 2020 Agrarianism 0 ONE Edward Shanly Stephanie Harawira 2020 Christian fundamentalism 0 Sustainable NZ Vernon Tava 2019 Environmentalism centrism 0 TEA John Hong Susanna Kruger 2020 Anti racism fiscal conservatism 0 Vision NZ Hannah Tamaki 2019 Christian nationalism 0 Jami Lee Ross the leader of Advance was an incumbent member of parliament having been elected as a National MP in 2017 before leaving the party However officially he was an independent MP and not affiliated with a party 70 MPs not standing for re election edit Name Party Electorate List Term in office Date announced Notes David Carter National List 1994 2020 17 October 2018 71 Ruth Dyson Labour Port Hills 1993 2020 3 March 2019 72 Alastair Scott National Wairarapa 2014 2020 25 June 2019 73 Nathan Guy National Ōtaki 2005 2020 30 July 2019 74 Clare Curran Labour Dunedin South 2008 2020 27 August 2019 75 Maggie Barry National North Shore 2011 2020 5 November 2019 76 Gareth Hughes Green List 2010 2020 17 November 2019 77 Sarah Dowie National Invercargill 2014 2020 11 February 2020 78 Initially re selected as Invercargill candidate Nicky Wagner National List 2005 2020 Clayton Mitchell NZ First List 2014 2020 5 June 2020 79 Anne Tolley National East Coast 1999 20022005 2020 27 June 2020 80 Initially announced on 20 December 2019 as list only with intention of becoming Speaker of the House 81 Paula Bennett National Upper Harbour 2005 2020 29 June 2020 82 Initially announced on 14 August 2019 as list only 83 Hamish Walker National Clutha Southland 2017 2020 8 July 2020 Was re selected as candidate for the Southland electorate but resigned after leaking private information of COVID 19 patients 84 Jian Yang National List 2011 2020 10 July 2020 85 Nikki Kaye National Auckland Central 2008 2020 16 July 2020 86 Was re selected as candidate for the Auckland Central electorate but resigned following the resignation of Todd Muller to whom she was deputy Amy Adams National Selwyn 2008 2020 Announced intention to retire from politics at upcoming election on 25 June 2019 87 and a new National candidate was subsequently selected for Selwyn 88 After a leadership change in the National Party she reversed her decision and announced she would stand again as a list only candidate 89 Adams announced her retirement again shortly after Todd Muller resigned as the party leader Raymond Huo Labour List 2008 20142017 2020 21 July 2020 Initially re selected as a list only candidate rank 26 but later announced he would not contest the election 90 Iain Lees Galloway Labour Palmerston North 2008 2020 22 July 2020 Initially re selected as candidate for Palmerston North and ranked 13 on the Labour Party list but later announced he would not contest the election after being removed as a Minister for having a consensual but inappropriate relationship with a former staff member 91 MPs standing for re election as list only MPs edit Some incumbents who had previously stood in an electorate but may have been returned as list representatives stood as list only candidates in the 2020 election Name Party Electorate List Term in office Date announced Notes Kris Faafoi Labour Mana 2010 present 8 February 2020 92 Paulo Garcia National List 2019 2020 11 February 2020 93 Stood in the New Lynn electorate at the 2017 election Julie Anne Genter Green List 2011 present 25 May 2020 94 Stood in the Mount Albert electorate at the 2017 election Louisa Wall Labour Manurewa 20082011 present 29 May 2020 Faced two challengers at the 30 May reselection as the Labour candidate in Manurewa but withdrew to stand as a list only candidate 95 Jami Lee Ross Independent Advance NZ Botany 2011 2020 15 September 2020 Previously a National MP Ross left that party in 2018 and began sitting as an independent He announced he would contest Botany for the Advance New Zealand party but later decided to only seek a list position 96 Campaigning editExpense limits and broadcasting allocations edit nbsp Election hoardings lining the Dunedin Northern Motorway August 2020 During the regulated period prior to election day parties and candidates have limits on how much they may spend on election campaigning The limits are updated every year to reflect inflation It is illegal in New Zealand to campaign on election day itself or within 10 metres of an advance polling booth 97 For the 2020 general election the regulated period ran from 18 August to 16 October 2020 Every registered party contending the party vote was permitted to spend 1 199 000 plus 28 200 per electorate candidate on campaigning during the regulated period excluding radio and television campaigning broadcasting funding is allocated separately For example a registered party with candidates in all 72 electorates was permitted to spend 3 229 400 on campaigning for the party vote Electorate candidates were permitted to spend 28 200 each on campaigning for the electorate vote 98 Registered parties are allocated a separate broadcasting budget for radio and television campaigning Only money from the broadcasting allocation can be used to purchase airtime production costs can come from the general election expenses budget The Electoral Commission determines how much broadcasting funding each party gets set out by part 6 of the Broadcasting Act 1989 The allocation is based a number of factors including the number of seats in the current Parliament results of the previous general election and any by elections since and support in opinion polls 99 A joint statement was released on 9 June 2020 by the Social Credit Party Maori Party New Conservative Party New Zealand Outdoors Party and Aotearoa Legalise Cannabis Party in which they condemn the broadcasting allocations and call for reform 100 An initial broadcasting statement was released from the Electoral Commission on 29 May 2020 including parties that have not yet registered but intend to 101 The broadcasting allocation was revised on 11 September 2020 redistributing funds from parties that failed to register in time for the election 102 For comparison the cost of a 30 second slot on TVNZ in October 2020 ranged from 250 in overnight slots up to 22 000 for slots during the 1 News at 6pm bulletin 103 104 Party Broadcastingallocation NZD National 1 335 255 Labour 1 249 111 Green 323 046 NZ First 323 046 ACT 150 755 Maori Party 150 755 Opportunities 150 755 Advance NZ 64 609 Legalise Cannabis 64 609 New Conservative 64 609 ONE 53 840 Outdoors 53 840 Social Credit 53 840 Sustainable NZ 53 840 Vision NZ 53 840 Third party promoters such as trade unions and lobby groups can campaign during the regulated period The maximum expense limit for the election is 338 000 for those promoters registered with the Electoral Commission and 13 600 for unregistered promoters 98 As of 29 September 2020 update the following third party promoters were registered for the general election i e excluding those solely registered for one or both of the referendums 105 ActionStation Brook Valley Community Group Cannabis Answers New Zealand Council of Trade Unions Council of Licensed Firearms Owners New Zealand Educational Institute Every Kiwi Vote Counts Family First New Zealand First Union Forest and Bird Hobson s Pledge JustSpeak Post Primary Teachers Association New Zealand Public Service Association Right to Life New Zealand SAFE New Zealand Taxpayers Union Victoria University of Wellington Students Association Voice for Life Party campaigns edit After the announcement of 19 September as election date parties started their campaigns 106 Party campaigns throughout 2020 were heavily impacted by COVID 19 with parties unable to host events during alert levels 3 and 4 National edit The National Party initially chose Paula Bennett as its campaign manager All previous elections since 2005 had seen National with Steven Joyce as campaign manager 106 On 2 February 2020 Simon Bridges announced that National would not want to form a coalition with New Zealand First after the election should NZ First become kingmaker once again Bridges stated I can t trust New Zealand First adding that A vote for NZ First is a vote for Labour and the Greens 107 Bridges said that he would however be open to working with ACT 108 NZ First leader Winston Peters criticised Bridges decision saying that narrowing your options can be the worst strategic move you will ever make 107 Owing to the four week lockdown in New Zealand from 23 March during the COVID 19 pandemic National temporarily suspended their campaign on the same day 109 On 22 May 2020 following low poll results for National in the week prior a National parliamentary caucus meeting replaced Simon Bridges and Paula Bennett with Todd Muller and Nikki Kaye as leader and deputy leader respectively In his first speech as leader Muller expressed his openness to working with Winston Peters and New Zealand First after the election 110 In conjunction with a reshuffle of caucus responsibilities on 25 May Muller announced that the party had replaced Bennett as campaign manager with Gerry Brownlee 111 On 14 July 2020 Muller himself resigned as National Party leader citing mental health issues 112 An emergency party caucus meeting replaced him later that night with Collins with Gerry Brownlee becoming the new deputy leader 113 After new cases of community transmission in Auckland were reported on 11 August with the alert level being raised to level 3 in Auckland and level 2 elsewhere National halted their campaigning for the duration of the lockdown 62 On 17 July National announced they would spend 31 billion on transport projects over the coming decade and would abolish the Auckland regional fuel tax 114 On 11 September National announced that they would allow electric vehicles in bus lanes make one third of the Government s light vehicle fleet electric by 2023 and aim to have 80 000 electric vehicles in use by 2023 four times more than there currently were 115 On 15 September they announced a 30 million policy to improve children s dental care 116 On 29 September National announced they would double funding for the Serious Fraud Office to 25 million annually and rename it to the Serious Fraud and Anti corruption Agency 117 Labour edit Megan Woods was chosen as campaign manager 106 On 29 January 2020 Ardern announced the New Zealand Upgrade Programme a NZ 12 billion infrastructure improvement package 118 After new cases of community transmission in Auckland were reported on 11 August with the alert level being raised to level 3 in Auckland and level 2 elsewhere Labour halted their campaigning for the duration of the lockdown 62 On 7 September Ardern committed to making Matariki a public holiday from 2022 if Labour was re elected 119 On 9 September Finance spokesperson Grant Robertson announced that Labour would reintroduce the top 39 tax bracket for income above 180 000 applying to 2 of people He said the new rate would generate around 550 million a year in revenue needed to pay off the debt incurred by the COVID 19 response plan 120 On 10 September Ardern announced Labour would aim to make electricity in New Zealand 100 renewable by 2030 five years before the previous target of 2035 This would be done by banning the building of new coal or gas power plants boosting the solar sector and speeding up the consent process for renewable energy projects 121 NZ First edit New Zealand First leader Winston Peters named the provincial growth fund in its current form as his first bottom line for any post election coalition talks Peters also outlined the party s immigration policy ahead of the election saying The current immigration track must stop and only New Zealand First with a stronger hand in 2020 can make this happen and a vote for New Zealand First will see the permanent residency qualification raised from two to five years Peters also said the party wanted to lead a public discussion with voters about a population policy including defining acceptable population growth and the time for a migrant to obtain permanent residency 122 123 At the campaign launch on 19 July 2020 Peters promised a cap of 15 000 highly skilled immigrants and recruiting 1 000 new police officers 124 After new cases of community transmission in Auckland were reported on 11 August with the alert level being raised to level 3 in Auckland and level 2 elsewhere New Zealand First halted their campaigning 62 Green edit On 28 June 2020 the Green Party released a Poverty Action Plan which included a guaranteed minimum income of 325 a week Green co leader Marama Davidson stated that Our Guaranteed Minimum Income is about fairness It s about ensuring those who have done well under our current system pay it forward and share that success with people who are struggling 125 126 This was followed up by the launch of a Clean Energy Plan to ensure a just transition away from fossil fuels The plan included a pledge to establish a Clean Energy Industry Training Plan and to end coal use in New Zealand by 2030 127 128 The Green Party launched a 52 page Think Ahead Act Now election platform on 25 July 2020 Green co leader James Shaw described it as a reference document that will guide our caucus and our ministers as we navigate the everyday choices that our Government will have to make 129 After new cases of community transmission in Auckland were reported on 11 August with the alert level being raised to level 3 in Auckland and level 2 elsewhere the Green Party halted their campaigning for the duration of the lockdown 62 On 15 September Shaw announced that the Green Party would propose a bill that makes it mandatory for large companies to make annual disclosures about the impact of climate change on their businesses and declare strategies for mitigating these impacts 130 The Green Party campaigned for the electorate vote in the electorates of Auckland Central and Tamaki Makaurau 131 132 ACT edit ACT launched their party campaign on 12 July 2020 ACT party leader David Seymour criticised the government s COVID 19 response as clearly demonstrably unsustainable and called for the open pursuing of having the world s smartest border not as a rhetorical device but a practical reality The party also unveiled a new employment insurance scheme with 0 55 of income tax being paid to a ring fenced insurance fund If someone became unemployed they would be able to claim 55 of their average weekly earnings over the year up to 60 000 133 134 After new cases of community transmission in Auckland were reported on 11 August with the alert level being raised to level 3 in Auckland and level 2 elsewhere ACT cancelled its upcoming campaign events 62 Maori edit The Maori Party launched their campaign on 20 June 2020 at the Hoani Waititi Marae with a flagship Whanau First policy ensuring that a quarter of government spending over the next two years is spent on projects led by Maori and involving Maori led businesses Maori Party co leader Debbie Ngarewa Packer was quoted as saying that Maori must be guaranteed resources for Maori recovery we cannot go backwards to how we were living pre COVID that is not an option for our whanau too many of whom are struggling just to survive 135 136 Crushed in the last election due to voters in Maori electorates greatly choosing Labour over the Maori Party co leader John Tamihere made it clear they would not re enter a coalition government with National like they did in previous terms of Parliament 137 On 19 July 2020 the party released a climate change policy involving an end to new offshore oil and gas permits as well as withdrawing existing onshore and offshore permits with the goal of ending the oil and gas industry by 2030 The party would also ban new seabed mining permits and withdraw existing permits as well as establish a 1 billion Pungao Auaha for Maori owned community energy projects and solar panel and insulation instillations 138 139 On 14 September the party announced their major policies including changing the official name of the country to Aotearoa by 2026 restoring the original Maori names of all towns and cities requiring primary schools to incorporate Maori language into 25 and later 50 of the curriculum and requiring all state funded broadcasters to have a basic fluency level of Maori 140 New Conservative edit The New Conservatives ruled out an alliance with both the Labour led coalition and Billy Te Kahika Jr s New Zealand Public Party 141 142 The party received a broadcasting allocation of 62 186 for the 2020 election 143 The party made headlines during the campaign following repeated vandalism of their advertising in multiple cities 144 145 146 for posting a meme comparing a New Conservative candidate to Nelson Mandela and Abraham Lincoln 147 and when a candidate repeatedly and falsely claimed to be an ambassador for the Cancer Society charity 148 On 6 October 2020 party leader Leighton Baker mounted a legal challenge at the Auckland High Court to protest the party s exclusion from public broadcaster TVNZ s Minor Party debate scheduled for 8 October To qualify for inclusion in the debate parties not represented in Parliament must score at least 3 percent in the 1 News Colmar Brunton Poll held during the last six months The hearing was held on 7 October 149 150 The High Court dismissed the New Conservatives bid ruling in favor of TVNZ 151 152 On 10 October 2020 it was reported that the New Conservatives Instagram page had been hacked the previous day with pro LGBT messages posted on their message feed In addition screenshots of the party s logo were shown in rainbow colours The hack was condemned by party leader Baker and deputy party leader Ikilei who accused their opponents of intolerance 153 154 According to NZME journalist Ethan Griffiths the hacker had temporarily gained access to the New Conservative Instagram account by posing as Deputy Leader Ikilei on Instagram 153 Advance NZ edit Advance NZ launched their campaign on 26 July 2020 merging with the New Zealand Public Party a party described as conspiracy theory driven 155 The Public Party is to keep their identity and structure but with the exception of Billy Te Kahika in Te Tai Tokerau who is running on the Public Party name all candidates will run as Advance NZ candidates Jami Lee Ross MP for Botany and Te Kahika are to become co leaders of Advance NZ Ross stated in regards to the merger that By forming an alliance of parties together with other small parties that believe in greater freedom and democracy we stand a stronger chance of uniting together and crossing the 5 percent threshold in to Parliament and branded Advance NZ the new Alliance Party of the 2020s but a centrist version of that model 156 At the launch Te Kahika promised an immediate repeal of the COVID 19 Public Health Response Act 2020 157 Ross also reportedly told the NZ Herald that the party was in talks with six smaller parties about joining Advance NZ 158 On 6 August 2020 the party was registered with the Electoral Commission 159 Debates edit Television New Zealand TVNZ hosted three television leaders debates two between the National and Labour leaders and one multi party debate The first National Labour debate was moderated by John Campbell with the multi party debate and second National Labour debate hosted by Jessica Mutch McKay A young voters debate was hosted by Jack Tame 160 Newshub Nation hosted a power brokers debate which included the Maori Party with the inclusion threshold being having held a seat in Parliament over the past 2 parliamentary terms 161 This was confirmed on 27 August 2020 when Newshub announced a leaders debate on 30 September between National and Labour and a powerbrokers debate which included the Greens ACT and the Maori Party 162 TVNZ qualification criteria edit The inclusion criteria set by TVNZ for its multi party debate was either having current representation in Parliament or winning 3 in a poll which sparked controversy as those criteria excluded minor parties such as the Maori Party The Opportunities Party and the New Conservative Party from the debate Maori Party co leader John Tamihere said TVNZ had a responsibility to reflect Maori perspectives as laid out in ministerial direction Race Relations Commissioner Meng Foon endorsed the Maori Party position 163 161 164 The requirements were modified on 8 September 2020 when TVNZ broadened their criteria to use previous parliamentary representation as a marker including the Maori Party 165 The parliamentary criterion was expanded to include leaders of registered parties where the leader has been an MP or party has been represented in either both of the past two parliaments 166 Qualifying parties for the TVNZ multi party debate Party Met polling criterion 3 in any Colmar Brunton poll Met parliamentary criterion Having seats in either ofthe last two Parliaments Attendingdebate Labour Yes 48 in September 2020 poll Yes No National Yes 35 in September 2020 poll Yes No ACT Yes 8 in September 2020 poll Yes Yes Green Yes 6 in September 2020 poll Yes Yes NZ First Yes 3 3 in February 2020 poll Yes Yes Maori Party No 0 9 in September 2020 poll Yes Yes Advance NZ No 0 8 in September 2020 poll Yes Yes New Conservative No 1 6 in September 2020 poll No No Opportunities No 1 1 in September 2020 poll No No Legalise Cannabis No 0 2 in September 2020 poll No No Outdoors No 0 2 in September 2020 poll No No Sustainable NZ No 0 1 in September 2020 poll No No ONE No 0 2 in July 2020 poll No No Social Credit No 0 1 in June 2020 poll No No Vision NZ No 0 1 in May 2020 poll No No Heartland No No No TEA No No No Table of major debates edit Date Time NZT Organiser s Subject Participants National Labour NZ First Green ACT Advance NZ Maori TOP Vision NZ 6 August 17 30 19 30 CID 167 Foreign affairs Present Bridges Present Parker Present Tabuteau Present Shaw Present Seymour Not invited Not invited Not invited Not invited 18 September 11 45 13 15 WasteMINZ 168 Waste and environment Present Simpson Present Parker Absent Present Sage Present Court Not invited Absent Present Christie Not invited 22 September 169 19 00 20 30 TVNZ 160 Leaders debate Present Collins Present Ardern Not invited Not invited Not invited Not invited Not invited Not invited Not invited 22 September 19 00 20 30 ASB Newshub 170 Finance Present Goldsmith Present Robertson Present Tabuteau Present Shaw Present Seymour Not invited Not invited Not invited Not invited 24 September 171 18 00 21 00 171 Te Taumata Toi a Iwi 171 Arts and culture Present Young Present Sepuloni Absent Present Swarbrick Absent Not invited Not invited Not invited Not invited 28 September 169 TVNZ University of Auckland 160 Young voters Present Brown Present Allan Present Griffith Present Swarbrick Present van Velden Not invited Not invited Not invited Not invited 30 September From 19 30 Newshub 162 Leaders debate Present Collins Present Ardern Not invited Not invited Not invited Not invited Not invited Not invited Not invited 3 October filmed 1 October From 09 30 Newshub Nation 162 172 Minor parties Not invited Not invited Present Peters Present Davidson Present Seymour Not invited Present Tamihere Not invited Not invited 6 October From 19 00 Maori Television 173 Multi party debate in the Maori language Absent Present Henare Present Jones Present Tuiono Absent Not invited Present Waititi Not invited Present Wilcox 6 October 169 From 19 00 Stuff 169 Leaders debate Present Collins Present Ardern Not invited Not invited Not invited Not invited Not invited Not invited Not invited 8 October 169 From 19 00 TVNZ 160 174 Multi party debate Absent Absent Present Peters Present Shaw Present Seymour Present Ross Present Tamihere Not invited Not invited 15 October 169 From 19 00 TVNZ 160 Leaders debate Present Collins Present Ardern Not invited Not invited Not invited Not invited Not invited Not invited Not invitedOpinion polls editMain article Opinion polling for the 2020 New Zealand general election Various organisations commissioned opinion polling for the general election Two main polling organisations regularly sampled the electorates opinions Reid Research on behalf of MediaWorks New Zealand and Colmar Brunton on behalf of Television New Zealand Roy Morgan Research released a series of polls in June 2020 covering the first five months of the year and subsequently released monthly polls These were their first opinion polls in New Zealand since November 2017 nbsp Graphical summary of polls conducted for the 2020 New Zealand general election Results as of the end of 17 October election day are indicated with diamonds Seat projections edit The use of mixed member proportional representation allows ready conversion of a party s support into a party vote percentage and therefore a number of seats in Parliament Projections assume the new electorate of Takanini will be won by either Labour or National 175 and that Botany will be returned to National 176 177 but otherwise assume no material change to the electorate seats held by each party Parties that do not hold an electorate seat and poll below 5 are assumed to win zero seats When determining the scenarios for the overall result the minimum parties necessary to form majority governments are listed provided parties have indicated openness to working together Actual governments formed may include other parties beyond the minimum required for a majority this happened after the 2014 election when National only needed one seat from another party to reach a 61 seat majority but instead chose to form a 64 seat government with Maori ACT and United Future 178 Source Seats in Parliament i Likelygovernmentformation s NAT LAB NZF GRN ACT MRI Total Roy Morgan 179 Sep 2020 poll 38 61 0 12 9 0 120 Labour 61 1 News Colmar Brunton 180 10 14 Oct 2020 poll 40 59 0 11 10 0 120 Labour Green 70 Newshub Reid Research 181 8 15 Oct 2020 poll 41 61 0 8 10 0 120 Labour 61 2020 result 33 65 0 10 10 2 120 Labour 65 Forecasted seats are calculated using the Electoral Commission s MMP seat allocation calculator based on polling results Voting editEasyVote packs were sent to voters starting on 28 September 2020 These packs contain the voter s personalised EasyVote card which is used by polling booth staff to help identify and locate the voter on the electoral roll It also included flyers on the voting process and two referendums On 5 October 2020 The Spinoff reported that four EasyVote packs in Northland allegedly contained a flyer from Votesafe a third party promoter opposing the End of Life Choice Act Votesafe confirmed its flyers were printed at the same facility as the Electoral Commission s flyers and both Votesafe and the Electoral Commission were investigating 182 183 Advance voting began on 3 October at 450 polling locations increasing to 2 600 locations on election day 17 October The Electoral Commission estimated that 60 of votes would occur during the advance voting period up from 47 in 2017 184 On 12 October the number of advance votes cast passed the 1 240 740 advance votes cast overall at the 2017 election 185 Overall 1 976 996 advance votes were cast 66 7 of all votes cast 186 The polling booth at North City Shopping Centre in Porirua was the busiest advance polling booth with 13 371 votes cast while the polling booth at the Selwyn District Council headquarters in Rolleston was the busiest election day polling booth with 1 601 votes cast 187 Voters on the Maori roll faced issues with receiving Maori electorate ballots due to high demand during advance voting leading to some people having to cast special votes instead 188 On 5 October an error was discovered on Port Waikato electorate ballot papers where there was no circle to tick next to Vision NZ on the party vote ballot The Electoral Commission subsequently reprinted the ballot papers Provided the voter s intention is clear a tick or other mark placed outside the circle will still be counted as a valid vote 189 190 The Electoral Commission referred two people to Police after they claimed to have voted multiple times one on 5 October and another on 14 October 191 192 In September 2023 the Electoral Commission released a report which found that 16 of Asian New Zealanders had a poor or very poor understanding of the New Zealand voting process during the 2020 election compared to 9 of non Asians The report also found that Asians were less confident that the New Zealand elections would be free from influence but were more likely to be motivated to make a change when voting Asian New Zealanders were also less engaged with the EasyVote information package television advertisements and informational pamphlets but were more likely to notice election advertising on signs and bus shelters Asian voters were less familiar with voting instructions candidates and parties on ballot papers Despite these negative findings the report also found that Asian satisfaction with the voting process had improved since the 2017 election 193 Results editMain article Results of the 2020 New Zealand general election nbsp Results of the 2020 general election From left to right general electorate winners Maori electorate winners and numbers of List MPs nbsp Map of party votes in each electorate Labour won the most party votes in 71 of the 72 electorates losing only Epsom Preliminary results were gradually released after polling booths close at 19 00 NZDT on 17 October 56 The preliminary count only includes advance ordinary and election day ordinary votes it does not include any special votes which have a deadline ten days later 27 October 50 Special votes include votes from those who enrolled after the deadline of 13 September those who voted outside their electorate including all overseas votes voters in hospital or prison and those voters enrolled on the unpublished roll 194 Official results including all recounted ordinary votes and special votes were released by the Electoral Commission on 6 November 2020 56 On the official results the Labour Party won 65 seats a majority of four the party s biggest victory in 50 years 195 The Labour Party s 50 0 196 vote share in this election is the third highest throughout its 104 year history only surpassed by its election victories in 1938 55 8 197 and 1946 51 3 197 It is the first time under the current mixed member proportional representation MMP electoral system that a party has won a majority of parliamentary seats 198 The National Party obtained 25 6 199 of the popular vote and 33 seats 200 in Parliament which represented its worst result since 2002 where it obtained 20 9 201 of the popular vote its second worst historical result and one of the worst ever election defeats in its party s history 202 since the party s founding in 1936 203 National s leader Collins conceded the election just after 10pm on election night but said in her concession speech that National will be back 204 205 The results of the COVID 19 election 206 led to the flipping of many traditionally blue National voting provincial seats with often more than comfortable margins Examples were Wairarapa 207 East Coast 208 Ōtaki 209 and Rangitata 210 the latter having never previously voted for Labour 211 In another devastating blow to National s heartlands every city except Auckland including the Hibiscus Coast Tauranga Rotorua and Invercargill gave their seats entirely to Labour b Victims of National seat losses were National deputy leader Gerry Brownlee who had held Ilam for its entire existence Chris Bishop considered a rising star 212 who unexpectedly flipped Hutt South for National in 2017 and Father of the House Nick Smith member for Nelson since 1990 Three electorates flipped to Labour following the inclusion of special votes Northland Whangarei and Maungakiekie 213 Labour also flipped Hamilton West the country s bellwether in 15 of the 17 general elections since the electorate s formation in 1969 the candidate winning the electorate vote in Hamilton West has been from the party that would form the government the two exceptions being 1993 and 2017 214 In a surprise victory list MP Chloe Swarbrick won the Auckland Central electoral seat vacated by National s retiring Nikki Kaye with a margin of 1 068 votes over Labour s Helen White thus winning for the Green Party an electorate seat for the first time since 1999 215 216 Swarbrick s victory was notable as she garnered 3 923 216 more votes within the same electorate than her own Green Party a prime example of voters being engaged in split ticket voting however it was highly unusual as numerous voters who supported a major party also voted for an electorate MP from a minor party 217 The Maori Party also returned to Parliament due to the election of Rawiri Waititi in the seat of Waiariki a seat which the party had lost three years prior 218 This makes Tamati Coffey the only Labour electorate MP to lose their electorate however due to his list placing Coffey returned to parliament through the list 219 The 2020 general election saw the election of New Zealand s first African MP Ibrahim Omer first Sri Lankan born MP Vanushi Walters and first Latin American MP Ricardo Menendez March 220 Six new LGBT MPs were elected Menendez March Glen Bennett Ayesha Verrall Shanan Halbert Elizabeth Kerekere Tangi Utikere making the New Zealand House of Representatives the national parliament with the highest percentage of LGBT members in the world 221 222 Parties and candidates have three working days after the release of the official results to apply for a judicial recount These recounts take place under the auspices of a District Court judge the Chief District Court Judge in case of a nationwide recount 223 224 National MP Matt King announced he would seek a recount in the Northland electorate after he lost the electorate to Labour s Willow Jean Prime by 163 votes 225 but later changed his mind and conceded 226 Detailed results edit Summary of the 17 October 2020 election for the House of Representatives 227 nbsp Party Party vote Electorate vote sum Totalseats Votes Change pp Seats Votes Change pp Seats Labour 1 443 545 50 01 nbsp 13 12 19 1 357 501 48 07 nbsp 10 19 46 65 nbsp 19 National 738 275 25 58 nbsp 18 87 10 963 845 34 13 nbsp 9 92 23 33 nbsp 23 Green 226 757 7 86 nbsp 1 59 9 162 245 5 74 nbsp 1 17 1 10 nbsp 2 ACT 219 031 7 59 nbsp 7 08 9 97 697 3 46 nbsp 2 45 1 10 nbsp 9 NZ First 75 020 2 60 nbsp 4 60 0 30 209 1 07 nbsp 4 38 0 0 nbsp 9 Opportunities TOP 43 449 1 51 nbsp 0 94 0 25 181 0 89 nbsp 0 14 0 0 nbsp New Conservative 42 613 1 48 nbsp 1 24 0 49 598 1 76 nbsp 1 52 0 0 nbsp Maori Party 33 630 1 17 nbsp 0 01 1 60 837 2 15 nbsp 0 04 1 2 nbsp 2 Advance NZ 28 429 0 98 new 0 25 054 0 89 new 0 0 new Legalise Cannabis 13 329 0 46 nbsp 0 15 0 8 044 0 28 nbsp 0 12 0 0 nbsp ONE 8 121 0 28 new 0 6 830 0 24 new 0 0 new Vision NZ 4 237 0 15 new 0 2 139 0 08 new 0 0 new Outdoors 3 256 0 11 nbsp 0 05 0 7 982 0 28 nbsp 0 23 0 0 nbsp TEA 2 414 0 08 new 0 2 764 0 10 new 0 0 new Sustainable NZ 1 880 0 07 new 0 2 421 0 09 new 0 0 new Social Credit 1 520 0 05 nbsp 0 02 0 2 699 0 11 nbsp 0 09 0 0 nbsp Heartland 914 0 03 new 0 8 462 0 30 new 0 0 new Unregistered parties 3 391 0 12 nbsp 0 08 0 0 nbsp Independent 7 299 0 26 nbsp 0 24 0 0 nbsp Valid votes 2 886 420 98 88 nbsp 0 34 2 824 198 96 75 nbsp 0 58 Informal votes 21 372 0 73 nbsp 0 32 57 138 1 96 nbsp 0 80 Disallowed votes 11 281 0 39 nbsp 0 66 37 737 2 66 nbsp 1 37 Below electoral threshold 225 182 7 71 Total 2 919 073 100 48 2 919 073 100 72 120 Eligible voters and turnout 3 549 580 82 24 nbsp 2 49 3 549 580 82 24 nbsp 2 49 Electorate vote Labour 48 07 National 34 13 Green 5 74 ACT 3 46 Maori 2 15 New Conservative 1 76 NZ First 1 07 Others 3 62 Party vote Labour 50 01 National 25 58 Green 7 86 ACT 7 59 NZ First 2 60 Opportunities 1 51 New Conservative 1 48 Maori 1 17 Others 2 22 Parliament seats Labour 54 17 National 27 50 Green 8 33 ACT 8 33 Maori 1 67 Electorate results edit nbsp Party affiliation of winning electorate candidates See also Candidates in the 2020 New Zealand general election by electorate The table below shows the results of the 2020 general election Key National Labour ACT Green NZ First New Conservative Opportunities Maori Party Heartland Advance NZ Legalise Cannabis Vision NZ Independent Electorate results of the 2020 New Zealand general election 228 229 Electorate Incumbent Winner Majority Runner up Third place Auckland Central Nikki Kaye Chloe Swarbrick 1 068 Helen White Emma Mellow Banks Peninsula New electorate Tracey McLellan 13 156 Catherine Chu Eugenie Sage Bay of Plenty Todd Muller 3 415 Angie Warren Clark Bruce Carley Botany Jami Lee Ross Christopher Luxon 3 999 Naisi Chen Damien Smith Christchurch Central Duncan Webb 14 098 Dale Stephens Chrys Horn Christchurch East Poto Williams 17 336 Lincoln Platt Nikki Berry Coromandel Scott Simpson 3 505 Nathaniel Blomfield Pamela Grealey Dunedin New electorate David Clark 15 521 Michael Woodhouse Jack Brazil East Coast Anne Tolley Kiri Allan 6 331 Tania Tapsell Meredith Akuhata Brown East Coast Bays Erica Stanford 8 764 Monina Hernandez Dan Jones Epsom David Seymour 9 224 Camilla Belich Paul Goldsmith Hamilton East David Bennett Jamie Strange 2 973 David Bennett Rimu Bhooi Hamilton West Tim Macindoe Gaurav Sharma 6 267 Tim Macindoe Roger Weldon Hutt South Chris Bishop Ginny Andersen 3 777 Chris Bishop Richard McIntosh Ilam Gerry Brownlee Sarah Pallett 3 463 Gerry Brownlee David Bennett Invercargill Sarah Dowie Penny Simmonds 224 Liz Craig Rochelle Francis Kaikōura Stuart Smith 2 295 Matt Flight Richard McCubbin Kaipara ki Mahurangi New electorate Chris Penk 4 435 Marja Lubeck Beth Houlbrooke Kelston Carmel Sepuloni 15 660 Bala Beeram Jessamine Fraser Mana Kris Faafoi Barbara Edmonds 16 224 Jo Hayes Jan Logie Mangere William Sio 19 396 Agnes Loheni Peter Brian Sykes Manurewa Louisa Wall Arena Williams 17 179 Nuwi Samarakone John Hall Maungakiekie Denise Lee Priyanca Radhakrishnan 635 Denise Lee Ricardo Menendez March Mount Albert Jacinda Ardern 21 246 Melissa Lee Luke Wijohn Mount Roskill Michael Wood 13 853 Parmjeet Parmar Golriz Ghahraman Napier Stuart Nash 5 856 Katie Nimon James Crow Nelson Nick Smith Rachel Boyack 4 525 Nick Smith Aaron Stallard New Lynn Deborah Russell 13 134 Lisa Whyte Steve Abel New Plymouth Jonathan Young Glen Bennett 2 555 Jonathan Young Murray Chong North Shore Maggie Barry Simon Watts 3 734 Romy Udanga Liz Rawlings Northcote Dan Bidois Shanan Halbert 2 534 Dan Bidois Natasha Fairley Northland Matt King Willow Jean Prime 163 Matt King Shane Jones Ōhariu Greg O Connor 11 961 Brett Hudson Jessica Hammond Ōtaki Nathan Guy Terisa Ngobi 2 988 Tim Costley Bernard Long Pakuranga Simeon Brown 10 050 Nerissa Henry Lawrence Xu Nan Palmerston North Iain Lees Galloway Tangi Utikere 12 508 William Wood Teanau Tuiono Panmure Ōtahuhu New electorate Jenny Salesa 18 626 Kanwaljit Singh Bakshi Mark Simiona Papakura Judith Collins 5 583 Anahila Kanongata a Suisuiki Sue Cowie Port Waikato New electorate Andrew Bayly 4 313 Baljit Kaur Mark Ball Rangitata Vacant c Jo Luxton 4 408 Megan Hands Hamish Hutton Rangitikei Ian McKelvie 2 961 Soraya Peke Mason Ali Hale Tilley Remutaka Chris Hipkins 20 497 Mark Crofskey Chris Norton Rongotai Paul Eagle 19 207 Teall Crossen David Patterson Rotorua Todd McClay 825 Claire Mahon Kaya Sparke Selwyn Amy Adams Nicola Grigg 4 968 Reuben Davidson Stuart Armstrong Southland New electorate Joseph Mooney 5 645 Jon Mitchell David Kennedy Taieri New electorate Ingrid Leary 12 398 Liam Kernaghan Scott Willis Takanini New electorate Neru Leavasa 7 724 Rima Nakhle Mike McCormick Tamaki Simon O Connor 8 068 Shirin Brown Sylvia Boys Taranaki King Country Barbara Kuriger 3 134 Angela Roberts Brent Miles Taupō Louise Upston 5 119 Ala Al Bustanji Danna Glendining Tauranga Simon Bridges 1 856 Jan Tinetti Josh Cole Te Atatu Phil Twyford 10 508 Alfred Ngaro Scott Hindman Tukituki Lawrence Yule Anna Lorck 1 590 Lawrence Yule Chris Perley Upper Harbour Paula Bennett Vanushi Walters 2 392 Jake Bezzant Ryan Nicholls Waikato Tim van de Molen 5 216 Kerrin Leoni James McDowall Waimakariri Matt Doocey 1 507 Dan Rosewarne Leighton Baker Wairarapa Alastair Scott Kieran McAnulty 6 545 Mike Butterick Ron Mark Waitaki Jacqui Dean 3 281 Liam Wairepo Sampsa Kiuru Wellington Central Grant Robertson 18 878 Nicola Willis James Shaw West Coast Tasman Damien O Connor 6 208 Maureen Pugh Steve Richards Whanganui Harete Hipango Steph Lewis 8 191 Harete Hipango Alan Clay Whangaparaoa New electorate Mark Mitchell 7 823 Lorayne Ferguson Paul Grace Whangarei Shane Reti Emily Henderson 431 Shane Reti David Seymour d Wigram Megan Woods 14 770 Hamish Campbell Richard Wesley Maori electorates Hauraki Waikato Nanaia Mahuta 9 660 Donna Pokere Phillips Philip Lambert Ikaroa Rawhiti Meka Whaitiri 6 045 Heather Te Au Skipworth Elizabeth Kerekere Tamaki Makaurau Peeni Henare 927 John Tamihere Marama Davidson Te Tai Hauauru Adrian Rurawhe 1 053 Debbie Ngarewa Packer Noeline Apiata Te Tai Tokerau Kelvin Davis 8 164 Mariameno Kapa Kingi Maki Herbert Te Tai Tonga Rino Tirikatene 6 855 Takuta Ferris Ariana Paretutanganui Tamati Waiariki Tamati Coffey Rawiri Waititi 836 Tamati Coffey Hannah Tamaki In above table majority denotes the winning candidate s lead over the second place candidate nbsp Chloe Swarbrick Auckland Central nbsp Tracey McLellan Banks Peninsula nbsp Todd Muller Bay of Plenty nbsp Christopher Luxon Botany nbsp Duncan Webb Christchurch Central nbsp Poto Williams Christchurch East nbsp Scott Simpson Coromandel nbsp David Clark Dunedin nbsp Kiri Allan East Coast nbsp David Seymour Epsom nbsp Jamie Strange Hamilton East nbsp Gaurav Sharma Hamilton West nbsp Ginny Andersen Hutt South nbsp Sarah Pallett Ilam nbsp Penny Simmonds Invercargill nbsp Chris Penk Kaipara ki Mahurangi nbsp Carmel Sepuloni Kelston nbsp Barbara Edmonds Mana nbsp William Sio Mangere nbsp Arena Williams Manurewa nbsp Priyanca Radhakrishnan Maungakiekie nbsp Jacinda Ardern Mount Albert nbsp Michael Wood Mount Roskill nbsp Stuart Nash Napier nbsp Rachel Boyack Nelson nbsp Deborah Russell New Lynn nbsp Glen Bennett New Plymouth nbsp Simon Watts North Shore nbsp Shanan Halbert Northcote nbsp Willow Jean Prime Northland nbsp Greg O Connor Ōhariu nbsp Terisa Ngobi Ōtaki nbsp Tangi Utikere Palmerston North nbsp Jenny Salesa Panmure Ōtahuhu nbsp Judith Collins Papakura nbsp Andrew Bayly Port Waikato nbsp Jo Luxton Rangitata nbsp Chris Hipkins Remutaka nbsp Paul Eagle Rongotai nbsp Todd McClay Rotorua nbsp Nicola Grigg Selwyn nbsp Ingrid Leary Taieri nbsp Neru Leavasa Takanini nbsp Barbara Kuriger Taranaki King Country nbsp Louise Upston Taupō nbsp Simon Bridges Tauranga nbsp Phil Twyford Te Atatu nbsp Anna Lorck Tukituki nbsp Vanushi Walters Upper Harbour nbsp Tim van de Molen Waikato nbsp Kieran McAnulty Wairarapa nbsp Grant Robertson Wellington Central nbsp Damien O Connor West Coast Tasman nbsp Steph Lewis Whanganui nbsp Mark Mitchell Whangaparaoa nbsp Emily Henderson Whangarei nbsp Megan Woods Wigram nbsp Nanaia Mahuta Hauraki Waikato nbsp Meka Whaitiri Ikaroa Rawhiti nbsp Peeni Henare Tamaki Makaurau nbsp Adrian Rurawhe Te Tai Hauauru nbsp Kelvin Davis Te Tai Tokerau nbsp Rino Tirikatene Te Tai Tonga List results edit Further information Party lists in the 2020 New Zealand general election The following list candidates were elected Labour National Green ACT Maori Andrew Little 07 David Parker 09 Trevor Mallard 11 Kris Faafoi 15 Ayesha Verrall 17 Willie Jackson 19 Louisa Wall 27 Camilla Belich 30 Jan Tinetti 32 Marja Lubeck 34 Angie Warren Clark 35 Tamati Coffey 37 Naisi Chen 38 Liz Craig 41 Ibrahim Omer 42 Anahila Kanongata a Suisuiki 44 Rachel Brooking 46 Helen White 48 Angela Roberts 50 Gerry Brownlee 02 Paul Goldsmith 03 Shane Reti 05 Chris Bishop 07 David Bennett 11 Michael Woodhouse 12 Nicola Willis 13 Melissa Lee 16 Nick Smith 18 Maureen Pugh 19 Marama Davidson 01 James Shaw 02 Julie Anne Genter 04 Jan Logie 05 Eugenie Sage 06 Golriz Ghahraman 07 Teanau Tuiono 08 Elizabeth Kerekere 09 Ricardo Menendez March 10 Brooke van Velden 02 Nicole McKee 03 Chris Baillie 04 Simon Court 05 James McDowall 06 Karen Chhour 07 Mark Cameron 08 Toni Severin 09 Damien Smith 10 Debbie Ngarewa Packer 01 nbsp Andrew Little Labour nbsp David Parker Labour nbsp Trevor Mallard Labour nbsp Kris Faafoi Labour nbsp Ayesha Verrall Labour nbsp Willie Jackson Labour nbsp Louisa Wall Labour nbsp Camilla Belich Labour nbsp Jan Tinetti Labour nbsp Marja Lubeck Labour nbsp Angie Warren Clark Labour nbsp Tamati Coffey Labour nbsp Naisi Chen Labour nbsp Liz Craig Labour nbsp Ibrahim Omer Labour nbsp Anahila Kanongata a Suisuiki Labour nbsp Rachel Brooking Labour nbsp Helen White Labour nbsp Angela Roberts Labour nbsp Gerry Brownlee National nbsp Shane Reti National nbsp Chris Bishop National nbsp Michael Woodhouse National nbsp Nicola Willis National nbsp Melissa Lee National nbsp Nick Smith National nbsp Maureen Pugh National nbsp Marama Davidson Green nbsp James Shaw Green nbsp Julie Anne Genter Green nbsp Jan Logie Green nbsp Eugenie Sage Green nbsp Golriz Ghahraman Green nbsp Teanau Tuiono Green nbsp Elizabeth Kerekere Green nbsp Ricardo Menendez March Green MPs who lost their seats edit Name Party Electorate List Term in office Jami Lee Ross Advance NZ Botany 2011 2020 Tim Macindoe National Hamilton East 2008 2020 Denise Lee National Maungakiekie 2017 2020 Jonathan Young National New Plymouth 2008 2020 Dan Bidois National Northcote 2018 2020 Matt King National Northland 2017 2020 Harete Hipango National Whanganui 2017 20202021 present Jonathan Young National New Plymouth 2008 2020 Kanwaljit Singh Bakshi National List 2008 2020 Paulo Garcia National List 2019 2020 Parmjeet Parmar National List 2014 2020 Agnes Loheni National List 2019 2020 Alfred Ngaro National List 2011 2020 Brett Hudson National List 2014 2020 Jo Hayes National List 2014 2020 Winston Peters NZ First List 1979 1981 1984 2008 2011 2020 Fletcher Tabuteau NZ First List 2014 2020 Tracey Martin NZ First List 2011 2020 Shane Jones NZ First List 2005 20142017 2020 Ron Mark NZ First List 1996 20082014 2020 Darroch Ball NZ First List 2014 2020 Mark Patterson NZ First List 2017 2020 Jenny Marcroft NZ First List 2017 2020 nbsp Depiction of the government formation While Labour formed a majority government they chose to invite the Greens to participate in an idiosyncratic cooperation agreement which gave the latter two ministers outside cabinet Government formation edit On 31 October Ardern announced that despite the Labour Party having won enough seats to continue the Sixth Labour Government on their own they had invited the Greens to participate in a cooperation agreement seeking their input on matters such as the environment climate change and child wellbeing and that the Greens had accepted the offer Under the deal which is not a coalition agreement the two co leaders of the Greens will receive ministerial portfolios outside the cabinet James Shaw will continue in his previous role as Minister for Climate Change as well as associate environment minister biodiversity Marama Davidson will be appointed to the new position of Minister for the Prevention of Family and Sexual Violence and will also take on the role of associate minister of housing homelessness 230 The Green Party also agreed to abstain on motions of confidence and supply during the term 231 Post election events editLeadership changes edit Following the election Gerry Brownlee stepped down as deputy leader of the National Party On 10 November 2020 Shane Reti was elected unopposed as his replacement Leader Judith Collins was also unopposed to retain her position 232 On 3 November Geoff Simmons stepped down as leader of The Opportunities Party Shai Navot former deputy leader took over from Simmons 233 On 19 November the board of the New Conservative Party removed the party s leader Leighton Baker and replaced him with his deputy Elliot Ikilei The party s third ranked list candidate at the election Victoria O Brien became deputy leader 234 O Brien however resigned after less than a week in the role on 25 November amid apparent division in the party over Baker s removal and his subsequent role within its organisation 235 Ikilei announced his resignation on New Year s Eve 236 non primary source needed Local by elections edit A number of local by elections are required due to the resignation of an incumbent local body politician following their election to Parliament Palmerston North City Council by election Deputy Mayor of Palmerston North Tangi Utikere resigned his seat on the council after he was elected MP for Palmerston North necessitating a by election to fill the councillor vacancy The election took place on 17 February 2021 with Orphee Mickalad being elected councillor 237 Mangere Ōtahuhu Local Board by election Local board member Neru Leavasa resigned his seat after he was elected MP for Takanini 238 necessitating a by election to fill the vacancy The by election saw Communities and Residents candidate Malcolm Turner make allegations of voter interference against Labour candidate Papaliitele Lafulafu Peo 239 Peo was declared the winner on 19 February 2021 238 Calls for vote recount edit On 11 November the Maori Party co leader John Tamihere requested a vote recount in the Maori electorates of Tamaki Makaurau and Te Tai Hauauru alleging there had been voter discrimination against Maori during the 2020 election Tamihere claimed that the recount was intended to expose discriminatory laws such as the five yearly Maori Electoral Option which limited the ability of Maori to switch between the general and Maori rolls for a period five years longer wait times for Maori voters at election booths and some Maori not being allowed to vote on the Maori roll 240 The altered official results for the two electorates following the recounts were released on 20 November Tamihere s margin of defeat in Tamaki Makaurau decreased from 956 to 927 while Debbie Ngarewa Packer s margin of defeat in Te Tai Hauauru increased from 1 035 to 1 053 241 242 Election donations edit Maori Party edit On 12 April 2021 the Electoral Commission referred the Maori Party to the Police for failing to disclose about NZ 320 000 worth of donations within the required timeframe These donations came from former party co leader John Tamihere NZ 158 223 72 the Urban Maori Authority NZ 48 879 85 and the Aotearoa Te Kahu Limited Partnership NZ 120 000 Party President Che Wilson attributed the late disclosure to the fact that the party was staffed by volunteers and rookies who were unfamiliar with electoral finance laws 243 In late April the Police referred the investigation into the Maori Party s undeclared donations to the Serious Fraud Office 244 By late September 2022 the Serious Fraud Office had closed the investigation and declined to prosecute the individuals and parties involved 245 In late September 2022 Charities Services general manager Natasha Weight confirmed that the agency was investigating two charities headed by Tamihere the Te Whanau Waipareira Trust and the National Urban Maori Authority for financing his 2020 election campaign Existing charities legislation bans charities from donating or endorsing political parties and candidates Political parties and candidates are not allowed to use charities resources According to the Charities Register Te Whanau o Waipareira Trust Group had provided NZ 385 307 in interest free loans to support Tamihere s 2020 election campaign while the National Urban Maori Authority had paid Tamihere NZ 82 695 to support his 2020 election campaign and Maori Party aspirations In response Tamihere accused the Charities Services of racism and confirmed that he and the Maori Party would challenge the Charities Service if the agency ruled against them 246 247 248 National Party edit In late April 2021 the Electoral Commission issued the National Party with a warning for failing to declare a NZ 35 000 donation from real estate mogul Garth Barfoot but declined to refer the matter to the police 249 Advance New Zealand edit Several Advance New Zealand candidates also faced fines for not filing campaign donations and expense returns In late May 2021 Rangitikei candidate Ricky Cribb pleaded guilty to two charges of violating the Electoral Act 1993 and was fined 300 plus court costs 250 Mana candidate Edward James Ngatai Ponder pleaded guilty to violating the Electoral Act 1993 in mid June 2021 for failing to file an election expenses return to show that would have shown he had no expenses 251 In early July Advance NZ Invercargill candidate Kurt Rohloff had his Electoral Act charge for failing to declare election and donation returns dismissed after completing a diversion 252 Early July also saw another Invercargill candidate independent Basil Walker be charged with failing to file his return on time 253 Walker was offered a discharge without conviction if he completed 40 hours of community service but he failed to do so which he attributed to his workload In September he agreed to plead guilty to the charge received a conviction and was fined 500 254 In September 2021 former Public Party leader and Advance NZ co leader Billy Te Kahika was charged with filing a false electoral donation and obtaining 15 000 by deception 255 Name suppression lapsed and he was identified in October 2021 Te Kahika has contested the charges and opted for a jury trial 256 257 See also editElections in New ZealandFootnotes edit a b In late October after preliminary election results suggested that the only Maori Party seat in parliament would be the Waiariki electorate held by Rawiri Waititi the party confirmed Rawiri as its new co leader replacing John Tamihere 1 Some outer suburbs of Palmerston North and Christchurch fall into surrounding rural electorates that were won by National Was Andrew Falloon until his immediate resignation on 21 July 2020 The David Seymour who contested the electorate of Whangarei for ACT is a different person from ACT party leader David Seymour who re contested and won his Auckland seat of Epsom References edit Maori Party s Rawiri Waititi replaces John Tamihere as co leader RNZ 29 October 2020 Archived from the original on 1 November 2020 Retrieved 7 November 2020 a b c Deguara Brittney 17 August 2020 Live Jacinda Ardern delays election to October 17 amid coronavirus outbreak Stuff Archived from the original on 17 August 2020 Retrieved 17 August 2020 Election 2020 Parliament dissolves setting stage for election campaign Stuff 6 September 2020 Archived from the original on 7 September 2020 Retrieved 6 September 2020 Euthanasia bill to go to 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title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Media release 2017 General Election writ returned Parliament nz New Zealand Parliament 12 October 2017 Archived from the original on 13 September 2020 Retrieved 9 September 2020 NZ First Policy NZ Election 2020 Archived from the original on 17 October 2020 Retrieved 18 October 2020 Charlotte Graham McClay 17 October 2020 Kingmaker no more Winston Peters consigned to NZ political history TheGuardian com Archived from the original on 17 October 2020 Students disappointed Labour Party dropped fees free plan RNZ 16 September 2020 Retrieved 17 July 2022 Cooke Henry 8 August 2020 Election 2020 Labour launches an extremely centrist campaign Stuff Retrieved 17 July 2022 Cooke Mandy Te Matthew Tso Laura Wiltshire and Henry 15 September 2020 University students may reconsider futures after Labour breaks fees free promise Stuff Retrieved 17 July 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 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