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24th New Zealand Parliament

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24th Parliament of New Zealand
23rd Parliament 25th Parliament
Overview
Legislative bodyNew Zealand Parliament
Term23 February 1932 – 26 October 1935
Election1931 New Zealand general election
GovernmentUnited–Reform Coalition Government
House of Representatives
Members80
Speaker of the HouseCharles Statham
Prime MinisterGeorge Forbes
Leader of the OppositionMichael Joseph Savage from 12 October 1933
––Harry Holland until 8 October 1933
Legislative Council
Members35 (at start)
28 (at end)
Speaker of the CouncilSir Walter Carncross
Leader of the CouncilRobert Masters
Sovereign
MonarchHM George V
Governor-GeneralHE Rt. Hon. The Viscount Galway from 12 April 1935
––HE Rt. Hon. THe Lord Bledisloe until 15 March 1935
Sessions
1st23 February 1932 – 28 October 1932
2nd1 November 1932 – 10 March 1933
3rd21 September 1933 – 22 December 1933
4th28 June 1934 – 5 April 1935
5th29 August 1935 – 26 October 1935

The 24th New Zealand Parliament was a term of the New Zealand Parliament. It opened on 23 February 1932, following the 1931 election. It was dissolved on 1 November 1935 in preparation for the 1935 election. The 24th Parliament was extended by one year because the 1935 election was held later than anticipated due to the ongoing depression, similarly the 1919, and the 1943 elections were held two years late, having been postponed during World War I and World War II respectively.

The Prime Minister during the 24th Parliament was George Forbes, leader of the United Party. Many commentators at the time, however, alleged that Gordon Coates, leader of the larger Reform Party, had the greater influence.

The 24th Parliament consisted of eighty representatives, each elected from separate geographical electorates.

Ministries

The 24th Parliament was led by a coalition of the Reform Party and the United Party;[1] Reform had twenty-eight seats, United had nineteen, and there were four pro-coalition independents. The primary opposition was from the Labour Party, which had twenty-four seats. The small Country Party had one seat, and there were four non-aligned independents. The distribution of seats between three large parties (also a feature of the previous parliament) was relatively unusual, as New Zealand tended towards a two-party system at the time.

The coalition government had been formed on 22 September 1931 during the term of the previous Parliament. During the difficult times of the Great Depression, Forbes had wanted to form a grand coalition with the Labour Party and the Reform Party. Labour refused, but Reform went into a coalition government with United from September 1931.[2][3]

Party standings

Start of Parliament

Party Leader(s) Seats at start
bgcolor=Template:Reform Party (New Zealand)/meta/color| Reform Party Gordon Coates 28
bgcolor=Template:New Zealand Labour Party/meta/color| Labour Party Harry Holland 24
bgcolor=Template:United Party (New Zealand)/meta/color| United Party George Forbes 19
bgcolor=Template:Country Party (New Zealand)/meta/color| Country Party Harold Rushworth 1
bgcolor=Template:Independent politician/meta/color| Independents 8

End of Parliament

Party Leader(s) Seats at end
bgcolor=Template:Reform Party (New Zealand)/meta/color| Reform Party Gordon Coates 29
bgcolor=Template:New Zealand Labour Party/meta/color| Labour Party Michael Joseph Savage 24
bgcolor=Template:United Party (New Zealand)/meta/color| United Party George Forbes 16
bgcolor=Template:New Zealand Democrat Party (1934)/meta/color| Democrat Party Thomas Hislop (outside parliament) 2
bgcolor=Template:Country Party (New Zealand)/meta/color| Country Party Harold Rushworth 1
bgcolor=Template:Ratana/meta/color| Ratana Eruera Tirikatene 1
bgcolor=Template:Independent politician/meta/color| Independents 7

Electoral boundaries

Members

Initial MPs

Template:1931 New Zealand general election

By-elections during 24th Parliament

There were a number of changes during the term of the 24th Parliament.

Electorate and by-election Date Incumbent Cause Winner
Southern Maori 1932 3 August[4] Tuiti Makitanara Death Eruera Tirikatene
Motueka 1932 1 December[5] George Black Death Keith Holyoake
Lyttelton 1933 13 September[6] James McCombs Death Elizabeth McCombs
Buller 1933 22 November[7] Harry Holland Death Paddy Webb
Lyttelton 1935 24 July[6] Elizabeth McCombs Death Terry McCombs

Summary of changes

Notes

  1. ^ Scholefield 1950, pp. 48–49.
  2. ^ Gardner, W. J. "Forbes, George William - Biography". Dictionary of New Zealand Biography. Ministry for Culture and Heritage. Retrieved 11 December 2011.
  3. ^ Scholefield 1950, p. 48.
  4. ^ Scholefield 1950, p. 144.
  5. ^ Scholefield 1950, p. 114.
  6. ^ a b Scholefield 1950, p. 121.
  7. ^ Scholefield 1950, p. 146.

References