The electorate existed from 1938 to 1996. The first representative was
Bill Endean, who served from for one term to 1943. Endean was controversial within the National Party and in the party's 50-year history written by
Barry Gustafson, it is remarked that in 1938, there was "some resistance to the National MP" in the Remuera electorate. His nomination for the planned 1941 general election only occurred after
Sidney Holland had stepped in. The 1941 election was postponed due to the war, though, and Endean failed to get selected by the National Party for the ;
Ronald Algie was chosen instead. Endean was overseas at the time of the selection, but even if he had been present, Gustafson believes that the "elderly, dull Endean would have been no match for the clever and witty Algie". Endean was the first sitting National MP who failed to get re-selected. On election night a shock upset in the electorate was predicted on election night. Labour candidate
Judith Tizard was initially predicted as the winner, but ultimately came 406 votes short after all votes were counted. Labour had never come remotely close to winning the seat before, even in high-tide elections. Labour's temporary surge amongst traditional National stalwarts caused Prime Minister
David Lange to question the direction his government was taking under
Rogernomics. In a 1996 interview he recalled, "That election night was a great revelation for me. That was an apprehension on my part that we had actually abandoned our constituency. And it set me to think what on earth have we done that we come within 400 votes of winning the true-blue seat of Remuera. And that struck me as being a dangerous flirtation, and an act of treachery to the people we were born to represent." With the introduction of
mixed-member proportional (MMP) representation in 1996, Remuera was included in the new electorate of
Epsom.
Members of Parliament Key ==Election results==