Tauranga electorate was created for the
1881 election, which determined the composition of the
8th Parliament. Initially, it existed until the
1890 election and during that time, it was represented by four MPs. The 1881 election was hotly contested. Four candidates were nominated:
George Morris, who had previously represented the electorate;
George Vesey Stewart, then the owner of the
Bay of Plenty Times;
William Kelly, who had also previously represented the East Coast electorate; and Henry Thomas Rowe, a surveyor and commission agent. The unofficial results were released the day after the election (Saturday, 10 December) and Morris had a majority of 13 votes over Stewart, with the official declaration to be made on 12 December. This was deferred until 14 December, with Morris ahead by 10 votes. Morris was re-elected in the , but resigned in April 1885, as he had been appointed to the
Legislative Council. The resulting by-election on 22 May was won by
John Sheehan, who died on 12 June 1885. The second by-election on 11 July was won by
Lawrence Grace, who represented the electorate until the end of the term in 1887. The was won by
William Kelly, who represented the electorate until the end of the term in 1890, at which time the electorate was abolished. The electorate was recreated in 1908.
William Herries was the first representative, elected at the ; he had since the represented the electorate. He became a member of the
Reform Party when it formed itself in the following year. Herries represented the electorate until his death on 22 February 1923. The resulting by-election was won by
Charles Macmillan, who also represented the Reform Party. Macmillan won the three subsequent general elections before he was beaten in the by
Labour's
Charles Burnett. At the next election held in , Burnett was beaten by
National's
Frederick Doidge, who held the electorate until his retirement in 1951. Doidge was succeeded by
George Walsh, who won the . Walsh served for seven terms and retired in 1972.
Keith Allen was the next representative, first elected in and an MP until his death shortly before the . Allen's death did not cause a by-election, as it occurred within six months of the next general election. The 1984 election was won by
Winston Peters, who had previously represented the electorate. In 1990 until March 1991, Peters was
Minister of Māori Affairs, but he was sacked from Cabinet by Prime Minister
Jim Bolger in October 1991 after repeatedly criticising his National Party leadership. Peters remained as a National
backbencher, continuing to criticise the party. In late 1992, when the National Party was considering possible candidates for the elections in the following year, it was decided that Peters would not be allowed to seek renomination for the Tauranga electorate. Peters unsuccessfully challenged this decision in the
High Court, and in early 1993, he chose to resign from the party and from Parliament. This prompted a
by-election in Tauranga some months before the scheduled general election. Peters stood as an independent and won with over 90% of the vote, assisted by the major parties not standing candidates against him. Shortly before the
1993 election, Peters established
New Zealand First and retained the Tauranga electorate. He continued to represent Tauranga until he was defeated in the by National's
Bob Clarkson. Clarkson's defeat of Winston Peters was significant, as this resulted in New Zealand First losing its only electorate seat. The party still gained parliamentary representation by polling over the five percent threshold, however. Clarkson retired at the end of the parliamentary term. He was succeeded by National's
Simon Bridges, who won the , with Peters coming a distant second. Bridges was re-elected in .
Members of Parliament Key List MPs Members of Parliament elected from party lists in elections where that person also unsuccessfully contested the Tauranga electorate. Unless otherwise stated, all MPs terms began and ended at general elections. ==Election results==