The electorate had previously existed from
1969 to 1978, when it was held by
Mick Connelly for Labour. Wigram was one of the original sixty-five
Mixed Member Proportional (MMP) electorates created ahead of the
1996 election, when the number of South Island seats was reduced to sixteen. The formerly safe
Labour seat of
Sydenham lies at Wigram's core, and Labour's strong showing in the party vote in both
2002 and
2005, where the party won nearly half of all party votes cast, indicates that Wigram's political inclinations are left-leaning in nature. Its most well-known MP Jim Anderton was himself the Labour MP for Sydenham between
1984 and 1989, before he split from the party over its political directions and formed the
NewLabour Party, which later merged into the
Alliance; the Alliance disintegrated in 2002, but Anderton, by then the leader of the
Progressive Party, held off all challengers to easily hold the seat. In the , the seat reverted to Labour candidate
Megan Woods after his retirement, but the
National Party comfortably won the party vote. Woods won re-election in the with a more than a doubled majority.
Members of Parliament Unless otherwise stated, all MPs terms began and started at general elections.
Key ==Election results==