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1963 Northern Maori by-election

The Northern Maori by-election of 1963 was a by-election for the electorate of Northern Maori on 16 March 1963 during the 33rd New Zealand Parliament. The by-election resulted from the death of the previous member Tāpihana Paikea on 7 January 1963. It was held the same day as the Otahuhu by-election.

The by-election was won by Matiu Rata, also of the Labour Party. The by-election was contested by nine candidates, including James Hēnare who had stood for the National Party several times previously.

Background and candidates

Labour<br /> There were multiple nominations for the Labour Party candidacy:

Rata was selected at a members hui. Pou and Toka both decided to stand as an independent Labour candidates after missing out on the official Labour candidacy.

National<br /> There were two candidates for the National Party nomination:

  • George Russell Harrison, National's Northern Maori candidate at the
  • James Hēnare, National's Northern Maori candidate at the , and s

Hēnare, a farmer from Motatau in the Bay of Islands, was selected as National's candidate at a meeting at Otiria marae.

Social Credit<br /> William Clarke, a dairy farmer from Kaitaia was selected by the Social Credit Party. He had stood in the seat for Social Credit at the previous election.

Others

  • Hohaia Tokowha Mokaraka, a Māori carving expert from Mount Eden stood as an independent candidate.
  • Hemi Kuit Peita, was nominated by the Kauhanganui movement.

Results

The following table gives the election results:

The by-election was the closest National has come to winning a Maori seat since 1943, although National's Auckland division did not appreciate the opportunity with a Hēnare descendant and support from Ngāti Whātua, and gave little money and backing to their candidate; for which they were later criticised by the "more astute" South Auckland and Wellington Division leaders. Hēnare still got the largest swing to National in a by-election in the party's history, with Labour having only a 447-vote majority compared with 3,372 at the previous general election. And over the next 20 years, National's vote in the four Maori seats shrunk to about ten percent, similar to the Social Credit vote.

Notes

References