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词条 2004 Te Tai Hauauru by-election
释义

  1. Results

  2. References

{{short description|New Zealand by-election}}{{Infobox election
| election_name = 2004 Te Tai Hauauru by-election
| country = New Zealand
| flag_year = 2004
| type = presidential
| ongoing = no
| previous_election = 2002 New Zealand general election
| previous_year = 2002 general
| next_election = 2005 New Zealand general election
| next_year = 2005 general
| election_date = {{Start date|2004|06|15|df=y}}
| turnout = 7,861
| image1 =
| candidate1 = Tariana Turia
| party1 = Māori Party
| popular_vote1 = 7,256
| percentage1 = 92.74%
| image2 =
| candidate2 = Dun Mihaka
| party2 = Aotearoa Legalise Cannabis Party
| popular_vote2 = 197
| percentage2 = 2.52%
| image3 =
| candidate3 = Tahu Nepia
| party3 = Independent politician
| popular_vote3 = 183
| percentage3 = 2.24%
| title = Member
| before_election = Tariana Turia
| after_election = Tariana Turia
| before_party = New Zealand Labour Party
| after_party = Māori Party
}}

The Te Tai Hauauru by-election was a by-election in the New Zealand electorate of Te Tai Hauāuru, one of the Māori seats. The date set for the by-election was 10 July 2004. It saw the re-election of Tariana Turia, a former MP for the Labour Party and now co-leader of the Māori Party.

Turia had quit both Parliament and the Labour Party in protest over the government's position in the foreshore and seabed controversy. She contested the by-election as a member of the new Māori Party, which she played a leading role in establishing. None of the major parties contested the by-election, and Turia was always the overwhelming favourite to win. Perhaps due to the apparent inevitability of a win for Turia, only around 32% of Te Tai Hauauru voters cast ballots.

Nominations for the by-election closed on 15 June 2004. Candidates were:

  • Tariana Turia (Māori Party)
  • Peter Wakeman, a Labour Party member who stood as an independent.
  • Dun Mihaka (Aotearoa Legalise Cannabis Party), a veteran Māori activist best known for baring his buttocks to the Queen on her 1983 Royal Tour of New Zealand.
  • Tahu Nepia, who stood as an independent, but represented the Ratana movement, with the intent of establishing an Independent Ratana Party to contest the next general election.
  • Rusty Kane, an independent who campaigned on the platform that Māori seats should be abolished.
  • David Bolton, independent.

If no candidates had been put forward to oppose Turia, she would have been declared the winner without a vote - this initially appeared possible, and given the cost of a by-election (estimated at almost NZ$500,000), many hoped that a vote could be avoided.

The holding of a by-election was criticised by a number other parties. The Labour Party, of which Turia was originally a member (and which has traditionally dominated the Māori seats) has called the by-election "a waste of time and money", and a "sideshow" although the by-election was required by Labour-supported waka-jumping law in force at the time.[1] Labour nominated Errol Mason to contest the seat at the subsequent 2005 election, losing to Turia.

Results

{{Te Tai Hauāuru by-election, 2004}}

References

1. ^{{cite web |title=Who controls the past now, controls the future |url=https://www.pundit.co.nz/content/who-controls-the-past-now-controls-the-future |author=Professor Andrew Geddis |accessdate=11 January 2017}}
{{1996–present New Zealand by-elections}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Te Tai Hauauru By-Election, 2004}}

4 : 2004 elections in New Zealand|By-elections in New Zealand|Māori politics|June 2004 events

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