19th New Zealand Parliament

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19th Parliament of New Zealand
18th Parliament 20th Parliament
Overview
Legislative bodyNew Zealand Parliament
Term24 June 1915 – 5 November 1919
Election1914 New Zealand general election
GovernmentReform Government
House of Representatives
Members80
Speaker of the HouseFrederic Lang
Prime MinisterWilliam Massey
Leader of the OppositionJoseph Ward
Legislative Council
Members37 (at start)
39 (at end)
Speaker of the CouncilSir Walter Carncross from 1 November 1918
––Charles Johnson from 7 July until 13 June 1918†
––Charles Bowen until 4 July 1915
Leader of the CouncilSir Francis Bell
Sovereign
MonarchHM George V
Governor-General
as Governor until 28 June 1917
HE Rt. Hon. The Earl of Liverpool

The 19th New Zealand Parliament was a term of the New Zealand Parliament. It opened on 24 June 1915, following the 1914 election. It was dissolved on 27 November 1919 in preparation for 1919 election.

Sessions

The 19th Parliament opened on 24 June 1915, following the 1914 general election. It sat for six sessions (with two sessions in 1918), and was dissolved on 27 November 1919.[1]

Session Opened Ended Prorogued
first 24 June 1915 12 October 1915 15 October 1915
second 9 May 1916 8 August 1916 9 August 1916
third 28 June 1917 1 November 1917 2 November 1917
fourth 9 April 1918 15 April 1918 17 April 1918
fifth 24 October 1918 9 December 1918 12 December 1918
sixth 28 August 1919 5 November 1919 7 November 1919

Historical context

The 19th Parliament was the second term of the Reform Party government, which had been elected in the 1911 election. William Massey, the leader of the Reform Party, remained Prime Minister.[2] The Liberal Party, led by former Prime Minister Joseph Ward, was technically the main opposition party, although for the majority of the term, the Liberals were part of a war-time coalition with Reform. Two small left-wing parties, the Social Democratic Party and the loosely grouped remnants of the United Labour Party, also held seats, and there was one left-wing independent (John Payne). During the 19th Parliament, the Social Democrats and most of the United Labour Party merged to form the modern Labour Party.

Party standings

There were 616,043 electors on the European roll, with 521,525 (84.66%) voting, including 5,618 informal votes.[3] Turnout including Maori voters was 540,075. The following table shows votes at and party strengths immediately after the 1914 election:[citation needed]

1914–1916

Party Leader(s) Seats at start
bgcolor=Template:Reform Party (New Zealand)/meta/color| Reform Party William Massey 40
bgcolor=Template:New Zealand Liberal Party/meta/color| Liberal Party Joseph Ward 34
bgcolor=Template:United Labour Party (New Zealand)/meta/color| United Labour Party Alfred Hindmarsh 3
bgcolor=Template:Social Democratic Party (New Zealand)/meta/color| Social Democrat Party James McCombs 2
bgcolor=Template:Independent politician/meta/color| Independents 1

1916–1919

Party Leader(s) Seats at end
bgcolor=Template:Reform Party (New Zealand)/meta/color| Reform Party William Massey 39
bgcolor=Template:New Zealand Liberal Party/meta/color| Liberal Party Joseph Ward 34
bgcolor=Template:New Zealand Labour Party/meta/color| Labour Party Alfred Hindmarsh, then Harry Holland 5
bgcolor=Template:Independent politician/meta/color| Independents 2

Members

Initial MPs

76 general and 4 Māori electorates existed for the 19th Parliament. Template:1914 New Zealand general election

By-elections during the 19th Parliament

There were a number of changes during the term of the 19th Parliament.

Electorate and by-election Date Incumbent Cause Winner
Dunedin Central 1915 3 February Charles Statham Resignation Charles Statham
Bay of Islands 1915 8 June Vernon Reed Election declared void[4] William Stewart
Taumarunui 1915 15 June William Jennings Election declared void[5] William Jennings
Pahiatua 1916 17 August James Escott Death Harold Smith
Hawke's Bay 1917 8 March Robert McNab Death John Findlay
Bay of Islands 1917 17 March William Stewart Resignation Vernon Reed
Grey 1917 24 November Paddy Webb Resignation Paddy Webb
Wellington North 1918 12 February Alexander Herdman Resignation John Luke
Southern Maori 1918 21 February Taare Parata Death Hopere Uru
Grey 1918 29 May Paddy Webb Imprisonment Harry Holland
Wellington Central 1918 3 October Robert Fletcher Death Peter Fraser
Taranaki 1918 10 October Henry Okey Death Sydney Smith
Palmerston 1918 19 December David Buick Death Jimmy Nash
Wellington South 1918 19 December Alfred Hindmarsh Death Bob Semple

Summary of changes

Party changes

  • Thomas Rhodes, the Liberal Party MP for Thames, changed affiliation to the Reform Party in 1915.
  • The Social Democratic Party and the loose United Labour Party grouping merged to form the modern Labour Party on 7 July 1916. One ULP member, Bill Veitch, rejected the merger, and carried on as an independent.

Deaths

Resignations

Expulsions

Notes

  1. ^ Wilson 1985, pp. 138, 141.
  2. ^ Wilson 1985, p. 58.
  3. ^ Wilson 1985, p. 286.
  4. ^ "Election void, Vernon Reed disqualified for a year". Colonist. Vol. LVII, no. 13773. 10 May 1915. p. 4. Retrieved 14 August 2011.
  5. ^ "Mr Jennings Unseated for Taumarunui". Ashburton Guardian. Vol. XXXV, no. 9140. 14 May 1915. p. 4. Retrieved 14 August 2011.

References