The Charter of 1840 Prior to the act, the basic document setting out the governance of New Zealand since the signing of the
Treaty of Waitangi was the Charter of 1840, which specified: • The three principal islands of New Zealand were to be known as
New Ulster,
New Munster, and
New Leinster. • The Governor was to summon an
Executive Council to advise and assist him. This council comprised the Colonial Secretary, the Attorney-General, and the Treasurer. • A Legislative Council of seven people – the Governor, the members of the Executive Council, and three nominated justices of the peace – was to make laws and ordinances "for the
peace, order, and good government" of the colony. The Executive and Legislative Councils met infrequently during the governorships of
William Hobson and his successors,
Willoughby Shortland (as Administrator),
Robert FitzRoy and
Sir George Grey. Throughout the Crown colony period each governor held, in the name of the Crown, complete control over the executive and legislative functions of government.
Settler demands for representative government There was a growing agitation from the settlers for representative government. This was particularly the case in Wellington which, as a
New Zealand Company settlement, briefly had its own independent governing council, until Governor Hobson sent his Colonial Secretary,
Willoughby Shortland, and some soldiers to Port Nicholson to end any challenge to British sovereignty (the colonists had set up a "colonial council", which Hobson described as a "republic", in March 1840 headed by
William Wakefield). The people of Auckland, then the
capital, were less interested. Eventually, pressure led to the enactment in 1846 in London of an intricate constitution. ==Effect==