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The
politics of New Zealand takes place in a framework of a
Parliamentary system Representative democracy monarchy. The basic system is closely patterned on that of the Westminster System, although a number of significant modifications have been made. The
head of state is
Elizabeth II of New Zealand, but actual
Governments of New Zealand is conducted by a
Prime Minister of New Zealand and New Zealand Cabinet drawn from an elected
New Zealand Parliament.
New Zealand was the first country in the world in which all the highest offices were occupied by women, between March 2005 and August 2006: the Sovereign
Elizabeth II of New Zealand Monarchy in New Zealand,
Governor-General of New Zealand Dame Silvia Cartwright , Prime Minister
Helen Clark,
Speaker of the New Zealand House of Representatives of the
New Zealand House of Representatives Margaret Wilson and Chief Justice of New Zealand Dame Sian Elias.
Constitution
New Zealand has no formal, written
constitution; the constitutional framework consists of a mixture of various documents (including certain acts of the United Kingdom and New Zealand Parliaments), the
Treaty of Waitangi and
constitutional convention (political custom)s. Most constitutional provisions became consolidated into the Constitution Act 1986 (NZ). There have, at times, been proposals for a formal constitution, but there have not yet been any serious moves to adopt one.
Monarchy
New Zealand's
head of state is the Monarchy in New Zealand, currently Elizabeth II of New Zealand. The New Zealand monarchy has been distinct from the British monarchy since the New Zealand Royal Titles Act of 1953, and all Elizabeth II's official business in New Zealand is conducted in the name of the Queen of New Zealand, not the Queen of the United Kingdom. In practice, the functions of the monarchy are conducted by a Governor General, appointed by the monarch on the advice of the Prime Minister. Under Letters Patent regulating the office of Governor General, which are granted by the Queen on the advice of the Prime Minister, when there is a vacancy in the office of Governor General, several of the duties of the said office are exercised by a caretaker, known as the Administrator of the Government. As of 2007, the Governor General is Anand Satyanand.
Executive
, MP, Prime Minister of New Zealand and leader of the Labour Party.
The Governor-General has the power to appoint and dismiss Prime Ministers and to dissolve Parliament. The Governor-General also chairs the
Executive Council of New Zealand, which is a formal committee consisting of all ministers of the Crown. Members of the Executive Council are required to be Members of Parliament, and most are also in New Zealand Cabinet. Cabinet is the most senior policy-making body and is led by the Prime Minister of New Zealand, who is also, by convention, the Parliamentary leader of the governing party or coalition.
The
New Zealand Cabinet is responsible to New Zealand Parliament. All Cabinet Ministers must be Members of Parliament (MPs) and are collectively responsible to it.
]|
Elizabeth II of New Zealand||6 February
1952|[Anand Satyanand [2006|[Helen Clark|[5 December 1999, leader of the [New Zealand Labour Party. She has served two full terms as Prime Minister and has begun her third. On 17 October
2005 she announced that she had come to a complex arrangement that guaranteed the support of enough parties for her Labour-led coalition to govern. The formal coalition consists of the Labour Party and Jim Anderton, the New Zealand Progressive Party's only MP. In addition to the parties in formal coalition, New Zealand First and United Future provide confidence and supply in return for their leaders being ministers outside cabinet. A further arrangement has been made with the
Green Party of Aotearoa New Zealand, which has given a commitment not to vote against the government on
Motion of confidence. This commitment assures the government of a majority of seven MPs on confidence.
The Leader of the Opposition (New Zealand) is New Zealand National Party leader
John Key, who replaced Don Brash (formerly Governor of the
Reserve Bank of New Zealand) in November 2006. The
ACT New Zealand alongside the
Māori Party, are both also in opposition. The Greens, New Zealand First and United Future all vote against the government on some legislation.
Legislature
,
New Zealand Parliament Buildings.New Zealand's main legislative body is a
unicameral New Zealand Parliament known as the
New Zealand House of Representatives. Since 1996, New Zealand has used the mixed member proportional (MMP)
voting system, under which each MP is either
New Zealand elections by voters in a single-member constituency via first past the post or appointed from party lists. Normally, the parliament is 120 members large, however this can sometimes differ due to
Overhang seat and Underhang seat. Several
Māori seats are currently
reserved political positions for members elected on a separate
Māori roll. However, Māori may choose to vote in and to run for the non-reserved seats, and several have entered Parliament in this way. Parliaments have a maximum term of three years, although an election can be called earlier. In New Zealand,
suffrage is extended to everyone over the age of 18 years, women having gained the vote in 1893.
Judiciary
The highest court in New Zealand is the Supreme Court of New Zealand, which was established in 2004 following the passage of the
Supreme Court Act in 2003. The Act abolished the option to appeal Court of Appeal rulings to the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council in London. The current Chief Justice is
Sian Elias. New Zealand's judiciary also includes the
High Court of New Zealand, which deals with serious criminal offences and civil matters, and the New Zealand Court of Appeal, as well as subordinate courts. Some Judges may sit on more than one.
New Zealand law has three principal sources: English common law, certain statutes of the United Kingdom Parliament enacted before 1947 (notably the
Bill of Rights 1689), and statutes of the New Zealand Parliament. In interpreting common law, the courts have endeavoured to preserve uniformity with common law as interpreted in the United Kingdom and related jurisdictions. The maintenance of the
Judicial Committee of the Privy Council in London as the final court of appeal and judges' practice of following British decisions, even though, technically, they are not bound by them, both bolstered this uniformity. However, in October 2003, the House of Representatives passed legislation to end this right of appeal from 2004, and to establish the
Supreme Court of New Zealand in Wellington, which began hearings in July 2004.
Local government and administrative divisions
New Zealand is a
unitary state rather than a federation — regions are created by the authority of the central government, rather than the central government being created by the authority of the regions. Local government in New Zealand has only the powers conferred upon it by Parliament. These powers have traditionally been distinctly fewer than in some other countries. For example, police and education are run by central government, while the provision of low-cost housing is optional for local councils. Many of them used to control gas and electricity supply, but nearly all of that was privatised or centralised in the 1990s.
New Zealand is divided into sixteen Regions of New Zealand. These form the highest level of local government. New Zealand is also divided into 73Territorial Authorities of New Zealand. Some of these are called Cities, while most are Districts. Most territorial authorities are wholly within one region, but there are a few that cross regional boundaries. There are also four instances in which regional and territorial authorities are combined into a single
unitary authority, and the isolated
Chatham Islands have a body with its own special legislation, making it very like a unitary authority.
In each territorial authority there are commonly several community boards or area boards (see below). These form the lowest and weakest arm of local government.
Each of the regions and territorial authorities is governed by a council, which is directly elected by the residents of that region, district or city. Each council may use a system chosen by the outgoing council (after public consultation), either the Bloc voting (viz. first-past-the-post in multi-member constituencies) or
single transferable vote.
Regions
Regions of New Zealand all use a constituency system for elections, and the elected members elect one of their number to be chairperson. They set their own levels of
rates (tax), though the mechanism for collecting it usually involves channelling through the territorial authority collection system. Regional council duties include:
- Natural environmental management, particularly air and water quality and catchment control
- regional aspects of civil defence
- transport planning and contracting of subsidised public passenger transport.
Cities and districts
The seventy-four Territorial Authorities of New Zealand consist of sixteen List of cities in New Zealand; fifty-seven Territorial Authorities of New Zealand in more rural areas; and one council for the Chatham Islands. Each generally has a ward system of election, but an additional councillor is the mayor, who is elected at large and chairs the council. They too set their own levels of Rates (tax).
The territorial authorities may delegate powers to local community boards. These boards, instituted at the behest of either local citizens or territorial authorities, advocate community views but cannot levy taxes, appoint staff, or own property.
District health boards
New Zealand's health sector was restructured several times during the 20th century. The most recent restructuring occurred in 2001, with new legislation creating twenty-one District Health Boards (New Zealand) (DHBs). These boards are responsible for the oversight of health and disability services within their communities. Seven members of each District Health Board are directly elected by residents of their area using the
Single Transferable Vote system. In addition, the Minister of Health may appoint up to four members. The last District Health Board elections took place in 2004.
Elections and party politics
New Zealand has a strong party system in place. The first political party was founded in 1891, and its main rival was founded in 1909 — from that point until a Electoral reform in New Zealand of Electoral system of New Zealand in 1996, New Zealand had a
two-party system in place. Today, New Zealand has a genuinely
multi-party system, with eight parties currently represented in Parliament. Neither of the two largest parties have been able to govern without support from other groups since 1996, meaning that coalition government is required.
The two largest, and oldest, parties are the
New Zealand Labour Party (centre-left
Progressivism) and the
New Zealand National Party (centre-right Conservatism). Other parties currently represented in Parliament are New Zealand First (populist, nationalist),
ACT New Zealand (free market), the
Green Party of Aotearoa New Zealand (left-wing, environmentalist),
United Future New Zealand (
family values), the
New Zealand Progressive Party (leftist), and the
Māori Party (ethnic).
Modern political history
The conservative New Zealand National Party and the left-leaning New Zealand Labour Party have dominated New Zealand political life since a Labour government came to power in 1935. During fourteen years in office (1935-1949), the Labour Party implemented a broad array of social and economic legislation, including comprehensive social security, a large scale
public works programme, a forty-hour working week, a minimum basic wage, and compulsory
Trade unionism. The National Party won control of the government in 1949 and adopted many welfare measures instituted by the Labour Party. Except for two brief periods of Labour governments in 1957-1960 and 1972-1975, National held power until 1984.
After regaining control in 1984, the Labour government instituted a series of radical market-oriented reforms in response to New Zealand's mounting external debt. It also enacted anti-nuclear legislation that effectively brought about New Zealand's suspension from the ANZUS Military alliance with the United States and Australia, and instituted a number of other more left-wing reforms, such as allowing the Waitangi Tribunal to hear claims of breaches of the Treaty of Waitangi to be made back to 1840, reinstituting compulsory unionism and creating new government agencies to implement a social and environmental reform agenda (women's affairs, youth affairs, Pacific Island affairs, consumer affairs, Minister for the Environment).
In October 1990, the National Party again formed a government, for the first of three three-year terms. In 1996, New Zealand inaugurated the Electoral reform in New Zealand, Mixed Member Proportional (MMP) to Electoral system of New Zealand. The system was expected (among numerous other goals) to increase representation of smaller parties in Parliament and appears to have done so in the MMP elections to date. Since 1996, neither National nor Labour has had an absolute majority in Parliament, and for all but two of those years a minority government has ruled.
After nine years in office, the National Party lost the
New Zealand general election 1999. Labour under
Helen Clark out-polled National by 39% to 30% and formed a coalition, minority government with the left-wing
Alliance (New Zealand political party). The government often relied on support from the
Green Party of Aotearoa New Zealand to pass legislation.
The Labour Party retained power in the
27 July 2002 New Zealand general election 2002, forming a coalition with Jim Anderton's new party, the New Zealand Progressive Party, and reaching an agreement for support with the United Future New Zealand party. Helen Clark remained Prime Minister.
Following the
New Zealand general election, 2005 on 17 September
2005, negotiations between parties culminated in
Helen Clark announcing a third consecutive term of Labour-led government. The Labour Party again formed a coalition with Jim Anderton's
New Zealand Progressive Party, with confidence and supply from
Winston Peters' New Zealand First and Peter Dunne's United Future New Zealand. Jim Anderton retains his Cabinet position; Winston Peters becomes Minister of Foreign Affairs, Minister of Racing and Associate Minister for Senior Citizens; Peter Dunne becomes Minister of Revenue and Associate Minister of Health. Neither Peters nor Dunne will be in Cabinet, however.
See also
Politics of New Zealand - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Australia, New Zealand and Pacific Politics Resources on the Internet
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NewsNow: New Zealand Politics
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New Zealand Politics - Your Political View
Discuss New Zealand politics. ... Welcome to the New Zealand Politics - Your Political View. Welcome to New Zealand’s very own politics related community!
Politics of Governance: Australia and New Zealand :: University of ...
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New Zealand Politics
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Adding an Asian Strand: Neoliberalism and the Politics of Culture in ...
Adding an Asian Strand: Neoliberalism and the Politics of Culture in New Zealand, 1984-97. Laffey, Mark (1999) 'Adding an Asian Strand: Neoliberalism and the Politics of Culture in ...
Scoop: New Zealand Politics
Scoop Provides up to the minute New Zealand News. Press Releases, Analysis, Opinion Pieces, all published the instant they are available