Waka-jumping

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File:EarleWarSpeech.jpg
Waka taua (war canoes) at the Bay of Islands, 1827–28; waka-jump means 'to Template:Linktext'

In New Zealand politics, waka-jumpingTemplate:Efn is a colloquial term for when a member of Parliament (MP) either switches political party between elections (taking their parliamentary seat with them and potentially upsetting electoral proportionality in the New Zealand Parliament) or when a list MP's party membership ceases.[1] The action is also called party hopping.[2]

In 2001, legislation was enacted that required MPs to leave Parliament if they left their party; this law expired after the 2005 election. In 2018 a similar law was passed which requires a defecting MP to give up their seat on the request of their former party leader. Electorate MPs may re-contest their seat in a by-election, whereas list MPs are replaced by the next available person on the party list.

A 2013 Fairfax-Ipsos poll found that 76% of those surveyed oppose MPs staying in Parliament if they leave their party.[3]

Legislation

Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote". The implementation of the mixed-member proportional (MMP) electoral system after a referendum in 1993 led to a series of defections and re-alignments as the former two-party system adjusted to the change. This led to the rise and fall of a number of political parties in New Zealand, including the creation of New Zealand First and ACT. The new political climate tended to favour the establishment of new political parties since in former times, dissidents had often simply become independent MPs.Script error: No such module "Unsubst". In the two previous parliaments before the 2001 act had been passed, 22 MPs defected.[4]

Electoral (Integrity) Amendment Act 2001

The frequency of waka-jumping made New Zealand enact the Electoral (Integrity) Amendment Act 2001, which had been introduced by Labour Party associate justice minister Margaret Wilson in 1999 but had been promoted by Labour's coalition partner Alliance ahead of that year's general election. The act expired at the 2005 election, when the sunset clause came into effect. It required MPs who had entered Parliament via a party list to resign from Parliament if they left that party's parliamentary caucus.[5]

However, parties were still able to find ways around this law. When the Alliance split in 2002 over how to respond to the invasion of Afghanistan, Jim Anderton nominally remained the leader of the Alliance inside Parliament while he campaigned outside Parliament as the leader of the newly-founded Progressive Party.[6] The resulting uncertainty around the Alliance’s position contributed to Prime Minister Helen Clark's decision to call an early general election in 2002.[7] While the law was in force, it was used once to expel a list MP from Parliament (an electorate MP who changed parties could still fight a by-election, as Tariana Turia did[8]).

In December 2003, the ACT Party caucus voted to expel Donna Awatere Huata, an ACT list MP who became an independent after she had been charged with fraud.[9] The expulsion became the subject of litigation, and Awatere Huata was not expelled from Parliament until a Supreme Court decision handed down in November 2004.[10] A proposed bill to replace the act in 2005 failed.[11]

Electoral (Integrity) Amendment Act 2018 and repeal attempt

The Electoral (Integrity) Amendment Act 2018 received Royal Assent on 3 October 2018 and entered into force in New Zealand the next day.[12] The provisions on waka-jumping now appear as section 55A of the Electoral Act 1993.[13] Under those provisions, members of Parliament who choose to leave their party or are expelled from their party are also expelled from Parliament if the leader of the party under which they were elected issues appropriate notice to the Speaker that the MP should be expelled, with the seat becoming vacant.[14][15] Unlike the 2001 act, the 2018 act did not have a sunset clause and so remains in force until it is deliberately repealed. The act was passed as part of the coalition agreement between New Zealand First and the Labour Party and supported through Parliament "begrudgingly" by the Green Party under the terms of its own confidence-and-supply agreement with Labour.[14][16]

A member's bill in the name of National Party MP David Carter with the intent of repealing the Electoral (Integrity) Amendment Act 2018 was introduced into Parliament in July 2020.[17] The Green Party defied other government parties to support the repeal bill, with the first reading in Parliament passing by 64 to 55 votes.[18] Carter's Electoral (Integrity Repeal) Amendment Bill was then referred to the justice select committee.[19] After the 2020 New Zealand general election, the bill's second reading was held on 12 May and 14 June 2021, and the Labour Party used its majority of 65 seats to block its passage.[20]

List of MPs who left their party

Below is a list of members who left their party while in parliament. With the introduction of MMP came list MPs, and the potential for a member to be brought into parliament without being voted upon directly.

Since MMP

Name Original party Switched New party
Jim Anderton Labour bgcolor=Template:Party color| 1989 NewLabour bgcolor=Template:Party color|
NewLabour bgcolor=Template:Party color| 1991 Alliance bgcolor=Template:Party color|
Alliance bgcolor=Template:Party color| 2002 Progressives bgcolor=Template:Party color|
Gilbert Myles National bgcolor=Template:Party color| 1992 Liberal Party bgcolor=Template:Party color|
Liberal Party bgcolor=Template:Party color| 1993 Alliance bgcolor=Template:Party color|
Alliance bgcolor=Template:Party color| 1993 New Zealand First bgcolor=Template:Party color|
Hamish MacIntyre National bgcolor=Template:Party color| 1992 Liberal Party bgcolor=Template:Party color|
Liberal Party bgcolor=Template:Party color| 1993 Alliance bgcolor=Template:Party color|
Winston Peters National bgcolor=Template:Party color| 1993 Independent[1] bgcolor=Template:Party color|
Independent bgcolor=Template:Party color| 1993 New Zealand First bgcolor=Template:Party color|
Ross Meurant National bgcolor=Template:Party color| 1994 Conservatives bgcolor=Template:Party color|
Peter Dunne Labour bgcolor=Template:Party color| 1994 Future New Zealand bgcolor=Template:Party color|
Future New Zealand bgcolor=Template:Party color| 1995 United bgcolor=Template:Party color|
Graeme Lee National bgcolor=Template:Party color| 1995 Christian Democrats bgcolor=Template:Party color|
Trevor Rogers National bgcolor=Template:Party color| 1995 Conservatives[21] bgcolor=Template:Party color|
Clive Matthewson Labour bgcolor=Template:Party color| 1995 United bgcolor=Template:Party color|
Bruce Cliffe National bgcolor=Template:Party color| 1995 United bgcolor=Template:Party color|
Margaret Austin Labour bgcolor=Template:Party color| 1995 United bgcolor=Template:Party color|
Pauline Gardner National bgcolor=Template:Party color| 1995 United bgcolor=Template:Party color|
Peter Hilt National bgcolor=Template:Party color| 1995 United bgcolor=Template:Party color|
John Robertson National bgcolor=Template:Party color| 1995 United bgcolor=Template:Party color|
Peter McCardle National bgcolor=Template:Party color| 1996 New Zealand First bgcolor=Template:Party color|
New Zealand First bgcolor=Template:Party color| 1998 Independent bgcolor=Template:Party color|
Jack Elder Labour bgcolor=Template:Party color| 1996 New Zealand First bgcolor=Template:Party color|
New Zealand First bgcolor=Template:Party color| 1998 Mauri Pacific bgcolor=Template:Party color|
Michael Laws National bgcolor=Template:Party color| 1996 New Zealand First bgcolor=Template:Party color|
Alamein Kopu Alliance bgcolor=Template:Party color| 1997 Independent bgcolor=Template:Party color|
Independent bgcolor=Template:Party color| 1997 Mana Wahine bgcolor=Template:Party color|
Tau Henare New Zealand First bgcolor=Template:Party color| 1998 Mauri Pacific bgcolor=Template:Party color|
Rana Waitai New Zealand First bgcolor=Template:Party color| 1998 Mauri Pacific bgcolor=Template:Party color|
Ann Batten New Zealand First bgcolor=Template:Party color| 1998 Mauri Pacific bgcolor=Template:Party color|
Tuku Morgan New Zealand First bgcolor=Template:Party color| 1998 Mauri Pacific bgcolor=Template:Party color|
Deborah Morris New Zealand First bgcolor=Template:Party color| 1998 Independent bgcolor=Template:Party color|
Tuariki Delamere New Zealand First bgcolor=Template:Party color| 1998 Independent bgcolor=Template:Party color|
Independent bgcolor=Template:Party color| 1999 Te Tawharau bgcolor=Template:Party color|
Frank Grover Alliance bgcolor=Template:Party color| 1999 Christian Heritage bgcolor=Template:Party color|
Jeanette Fitzsimons Alliance bgcolor=Template:Party color| 1999 Green bgcolor=Template:Party color|
Rod Donald Alliance bgcolor=Template:Party color| 1999 Green bgcolor=Template:Party color|
Matt Robson Alliance bgcolor=Template:Party color| 2002 Progressives bgcolor=Template:Party color|
Tariana Turia Labour bgcolor=Template:Party color| 2004 Māori Party[2] bgcolor=Template:Party color|
Taito Phillip Field Labour bgcolor=Template:Party color| 2007 Pacific Party bgcolor=Template:Party color|
Gordon Copeland United Future bgcolor=Template:Party color| 2007 Independent bgcolor=Template:Party color|
Hone Harawira Māori Party bgcolor=Template:Party color| 2011 Mana Party[3] bgcolor=Template:Party color|
Mana Party bgcolor=Template:Party color| 2014 Internet-Mana bgcolor=Template:Party color|
Brendan Horan New Zealand First bgcolor=Template:Party color| 2012 Independent Coalition bgcolor=Template:Party color|
Jami-Lee Ross National bgcolor=Template:Party color| 2018 Independent bgcolor=Template:Party color|
Independent bgcolor=Template:Party color| 2020 Advance New Zealand bgcolor=Template:Party color|
Meka Whaitiri Labour bgcolor=Template:Party color| 2023 Te Pāti Māori[22] bgcolor=Template:Party color|
Elizabeth Kerekere Green bgcolor=Template:Party color| 2023 Independent[23] bgcolor=Template:Party color|
Darleen Tana Green bgcolor=Template:Party color| 2024 Independent[24] bgcolor=Template:Party color|
1.<templatestyles src="Citation/styles.css"/>^ After becoming an independent politician, Peters successfully contested a by-election in his Tauranga electorate.
2.<templatestyles src="Citation/styles.css"/>^ After switching to the Maori Party, Turia had to contest a by-election, in line with the ban on waka-jumping then in force. She won the resulting contest in Te Tai Hauauru.
3.<templatestyles src="Citation/styles.css"/>^ After crossing to the Mana Movement, Harawira successfully contested a by-election in his constituency of Te Tai Tokerau.

Before MMP

MPs elected to parliament before the introduction of mixed-member proportional representation in 1996:[25]

Name Original party Switched New party
Frank Lawry Conservative bgcolor=Template:Party color| 1891 Liberal bgcolor=Template:Party color|
Robert Thompson Conservative bgcolor=Template:Party color| 1893 Liberal bgcolor=Template:Party color|
Liberal bgcolor=Template:Party color| 1896 Independent bgcolor=Template:Party color|
Independent bgcolor=Template:Party color| 1899 Independent Liberal bgcolor=Template:Party color|
Francis Fisher Liberal bgcolor=Template:Party color| 1905 New Liberal bgcolor=Template:Party color|
New Liberal bgcolor=Template:Party color| 1908 Independent bgcolor=Template:Party color|
Independent bgcolor=Template:Party color| 1910 Reform bgcolor=Template:Party color|
William Hughes Field Liberal bgcolor=Template:Party color| 1908 Independent bgcolor=Template:Party color|
Independent bgcolor=Template:Party color| 1909 Reform bgcolor=Template:Party color|
David McLaren Ind. Labour League bgcolor=Template:Party color| 1910 Labour (1910) bgcolor=Template:Party color|
Vigor Brown Liberal bgcolor=Template:Party color| 1920 Reform bgcolor=Template:Party color|
Alfred Hindmarsh Labour (1910) bgcolor=Template:Party color| 1912 United Labour bgcolor=Template:Party color|
United Labour bgcolor=Template:Party color| 1916 Labour bgcolor=Template:Party color|
Bill Veitch Independent Labour bgcolor=Template:Party color| 1912 United Labour bgcolor=Template:Party color|
United Labour bgcolor=Template:Party color| 1916 Independent bgcolor=Template:Party color|
Independent bgcolor=Template:Party color| 1922 Liberal bgcolor=Template:Party color|
Liberal bgcolor=Template:Party color| 1928 United bgcolor=Template:Party color|
John Payne Labour (1910) bgcolor=Template:Party color| 1912 Independent Labour bgcolor=Template:Party color|
Independent Labour bgcolor=Template:Party color| 1916 Independent bgcolor=Template:Party color|
Gordon Coates Independent bgcolor=Template:Party color| 1914 Reform bgcolor=Template:Party color|
Reform bgcolor=Template:Party color| 1936 National bgcolor=Template:Party color|
National bgcolor=Template:Party color| 1942 Independent bgcolor=Template:Party color|
James McCombs Social Democrat bgcolor=Template:Party color| 1916 Labour bgcolor=Template:Party color|
Labour bgcolor=Template:Party color| 1917 Independent Labour bgcolor=Template:Party color|
Independent Labour bgcolor=Template:Party color| 1918 Labour bgcolor=Template:Party color|
Paddy Webb Social Democrat bgcolor=Template:Party color| 1916 Labour bgcolor=Template:Party color|
Andrew Walker United Labour bgcolor=Template:Party color| 1916 Labour bgcolor=Template:Party color|
George Sykes Reform bgcolor=Template:Party color| 1919 Independent bgcolor=Template:Party color|
Independent bgcolor=Template:Party color| 1922 Reform bgcolor=Template:Party color|
Bert Kyle Reform bgcolor=Template:Party color| 1936 National bgcolor=Template:Party color|
National bgcolor=Template:Party color| 1942 Independent bgcolor=Template:Party color|
John A. Lee Labour bgcolor=Template:Party color| 1940 Democratic Labour bgcolor=Template:Party color|
Bill Barnard Labour bgcolor=Template:Party color| 1940 Democratic Labour bgcolor=Template:Party color|
William Sheat National bgcolor=Template:Party color| 1954 Independent bgcolor=Template:Party color|
Independent bgcolor=Template:Party color| 1954 National bgcolor=Template:Party color|

See also

Notes

Template:Notelist

References

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