Brian Tamaki stated in May 2023 that he believed the party could get 20% of the vote in
that year's general election. As of September 2023, 1News
Verian polls indicated that total support for Freedoms NZ and its component parties to sat between 0% and 0.8%. On 10 August, a Taxpayers' Union-Curia poll listed Vision NZ on 1.1% and Outdoors and Freedom on 0.5%, for a total vote share of 1.6%. While Freedoms New Zealand campaigned for the party vote, component parties ran their own electorate candidates. These included Sue Grey standing for Outdoors & Freedom in
West Coast-Tasman, and Vision NZ's Karl Mokaraka in
Panmure-Ōtāhuhu.
Disruptions of other parties' events In August Mokaraka and a group of supporters chased Labour leader
Chris Hipkins with horns and loudspeakers to spoil a campaign visit to the
Ōtara Markets. Eight days later Mokaraka disrupted a press conference by climbing a fence to heckle National leader
Christopher Luxon and transport spokesman
Simeon Brown in Pakuranga. The press conference was abandoned. Hipkins said that "Brian Tamaki and his mob are very determined to disrupt the election campaign...Ultimately, that's anti-democratic...I don’t think a party that thought it had any shot at getting into parliament would be doing that." Tamaki described Mokaraka's actions as "brilliant" and suggested that a vision from God had shown him more such disruption during the coming campaign. On 2 September, Chris Hipkins' speech at the Labour Party's official campaign launch in
Auckland was interrupted three times by Freedoms NZ protestors. They were removed by security and at least one was arrested. Another group of Freedoms NZ protesters appeared outside a
New Zealand First rally in Nelson a week later, prompting leader
Winston Peters to say, "About eight months ago they wanted me to join them". Karl Mokaraka disguised himself to enter the
ACT Party campaign launch a fortnight later. During leader
David Seymour's speech, Mokoraka stood on his third-row seat to interrupt the event. He called himself "the man on the fence" – a reference to the National Party press conference he'd spoiled a few weeks earlier – and yelled for several minutes. Later, two other hecklers were removed, one of whom cried out, "Party vote Freedoms".
28 September protest On September 28
the Freedoms & Rights Coalition brought thousands of protesters to Parliament again. The crowd was led by Brian Tamaki, who called for a "ballot box revolution", and also addressed by both Hannah Tamaki and Sue Grey. The protest was reported to have "fizzled out" after about two hours.
Results In the
2023 New Zealand general election, Freedoms New Zealand received 0.33% of the party vote (9,586 votes) and did not win any electorate seats, meaning it did not enter parliament. Brian Tamaki did not contest an electorate, Sue Grey came seventh of nine in
West Coast-Tasman, Hannah Tamaki came last of five in
Tāmaki Makaurau, and Donna Pokere-Phillips came last of three in
Hauraki-Waikato. ==Deregistration==