Parliamentary parties In addition to the registered parties listed above, some groups participated in the election without submitting party lists. Many of these were unregistered parties, lacking the necessary membership numbers for submitting a party list. There were, however, three registered ones that did not, for whatever reason, submit a party list. In total, 14 parties nominated electorate candidates only. By number of votes received, the most significant parties to do this were
Te Tawharau (registered),
Mana Wahine Te Ira Tangata (registered), the
Equal Rights Party (unregistered), the
Piri Wiri Tua Movement (unregistered), and the
Asia Pacific United Party (registered). None of these parties were successful. There were also 36 independent candidates, also unsuccessful. The
Mauri Pacific Party, established by a group of defectors from New Zealand First, failed to place even second in the electorates they held. Te Tawharau, which held a seat in parliament thanks to another New Zealand First defector, failed to retain its seat.
Votes summary Electorate results Of the 67 electorates in the 1999 election, a majority (41) were won by the opposition Labour Party. Included in Labour's total are the Maori seats, which it managed to regain after losing them to New Zealand First in the previous election. The governing National Party won 22 electorate seats, slightly less than a third of the total. Four minor parties managed to win electorate seats. This proved important for some – neither New Zealand First nor United would have entered parliament if not for
Winston Peters and
Peter Dunne retaining their seats.
Jim Anderton also retained his seat. The Greens won their first electorate seat when
Jeanette Fitzsimons took Coromandel, although since the Greens crossed the 5% threshold, this was of less importance than originally thought. The Greens were not to repeat an electorate win until the 2020 election, with Chloë Swarbrick's plurality in Auckland Central. The table below shows the results of the 1999 general election:
Key |colspan=10 style="background-color:#FFDEAD" |
General electorates |colspan=10 style="background-color:#FFDEAD" |
Māori electorates List results MPs returned via party lists, and unsuccessful candidates, were as follows: ;Notes: • These party list members later entered parliament in the term as other list MPs elected resigned from parliament. • These party list members later resigned during the parliamentary term.
Summary of seat changes •
Electoral redistributions: • A minor reconfiguration of electorates and their boundaries occurred between the 1996 and 1999 elections. Six seats were abolished and eight were created, giving a net gain of two electorates. • The seats of
Mahia,
New Lynn,
Owairaka,
Waipareira,
Te Tai Rawhiti (Maori) and
Te Puku O Te Whenua (Maori) ceased to exist. • The seats of
East Coast,
Mt Albert,
Mt Roskill,
Te Atatu,
Titirangi,
Hauraki (Maori),
Ikaroa-Rawhiti (Maori) and
Waiariki (Maori) came into being. •
Seats captured: • By Labour:
Banks Peninsula,
Hamilton West,
Maungakiekie,
Northcote,
Rotorua and
Wairarapa were captured from National.
Te Tai Hauauru and
Te Tai Tokerau were captured from Mauri Pacific.
Wellington Central was captured from ACT.
Te Tai Tonga was captured from New Zealand First. • By the Greens:
Coromandel was captured from National. •
Seats transferred from departing MPs to new MPs: •
Epsom,
Kaikoura,
Karapiro,
Port Waikato,
Rangitikei,
Waitakere and
Whangarei, all held by departing National MPs, were won by new National candidates. Two of the departing MPs remained in Parliament as list MPs, and another won a different electorate seat. • The seats of
Mana,
Dunedin South and
Waimakariri, all held by departing Labour MPs, were won by new Labour candidates. One of the departing MPs remained in Parliament as a list MP. •
Labour list seats: Lost 3 (was 11, fell to 8) • Became electorate MPs: 7 • Re-elected: 5 • Newly elected: 3 (including a former electorate MP) •
National list seats: Gained 3 (was 14, rose to 17) • Retired: 4 • Re-elected: 6 • Not re-elected: 3 • Newly elected: 11 (including 9 former electorate MPs) •
Alliance list seats: Lost 2 (was 11, fell to 9) • Re-elected: 9 • (Became Green MPs: 2) •
ACT list seats: Gained 2 (was 7, rose to 9) • Retired: 2 • Re-elected: 5 • Newly elected: 4 (including a former electorate MP) •
Green list seats: Gained 6 (was 0, rose to 6) • (Former Alliance list MPs: 2) • Became electorate MP: 1 • Re-elected: 1 • Newly elected: 5 •
New Zealand First list seats: Lost 3 (was 7, fell to 4) • Re-elected: 4 • Not re-elected: 3 •
Christian Heritage list seats: Lost 1 (was 1, fell to 0) • Not re-elected: 1 •
Mauri Pacific list seats: Lost 2 (was 2, fell to 0) • Not re-elected: 2 •
Mana Wahine list seats: Lost 1 (was 1, fell to 0) • Not re-elected: 1 ==Post-election events==