Dunedin (New Zealand electorate)

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Dunedin
Single-member constituency
for the
Otago
Area703.85 km2 (271.76 sq mi)
Current constituency
Created2020
Current MPRachel Brooking
PartyLabour

Dunedin is an electorate to the New Zealand House of Representatives. It was created for the 2020 election.

History

In the 2019–20 electoral boundary review, all five electorates in the Otago and Southland regions had to be adjusted as they exceeded the 5% population quota. Some electorates were over and some were under the quota, but taken together they were almost exactly on quota. Both Dunedin North and Dunedin South were significantly below quota and had to gain population. Otago Peninsula was moved from Dunedin South to Dunedin North; this area has a population of about 8,000 people. A large area from the northern part of the Dunedin North electorate (including Palmerston, Macraes, and Herbert) went to the Waitaki electorate, a loss of 2,500 people.[1] Adding the southern Dunedin area of Otago Peninsula made it necessary for both Dunedin North and Dunedin South to be recreated under new names, with the former Dunedin North plus Otago Peninsula now called the Dunedin electorate. The former Dunedin South electorate extended into the south Otago area and the Taieri electorate was recreated.[2][3]

Members of Parliament

  Labour   National

Election Winner
2020 election David Clark
2023 election Rachel Brooking

List MPs

Members of Parliament elected from party lists in elections where that person also unsuccessfully contested the Dunedin electorate. Unless otherwise stated, all MPs terms began and ended at general elections.

Election Winner
2020 election Michael Woodhouse

Election results

2023 election

2023 general election: Dunedin[4]
Notes:

Blue background denotes the winner of the electorate vote.
Pink background denotes a candidate elected from their party list.
Yellow background denotes an electorate win by a list member, or other incumbent.
A Green tickY or Red XN denotes status of any incumbent, win or lose respectively.

Party Candidate Votes % ±% Party votes % ±%
Labour Rachel Brooking 17,111 40.61 13,160 30.86 -24.30
National Michael Woodhouse 9,131 21.67 +3.81 9,652 22.63 +8.56
Green Francisco Hernandez 8,031 19.06 11,449 26.85 +9.11
Opportunities Ben Peters 1,891 4.48 -0.94 1,810 4.24 +1.44
ACT Tim Newman 1,696 4.02 2,460 5.76 +0.50
NZ First Keegan Langeveld 1,304 3.09 2,396 5.61 +3.49
Independent Jim O'Malley 1,272 3.01
Legalise Cannabis Adrian McDermott 564 1.33 159 0.37 +0.13
New Zealand Loyal Steve Lawton 540 1.28 402 0.94
New Conservative
Cyndee Elder 160 0.37 94 0.22 -0.68
Independent Pamela Taylor 60 0.14
Te Pāti Māori   613 1.43 +1.11
NewZeal   114 0.26 +0.13
Animal Justice   57 0.13
Freedoms NZ   44 0.10
Women's Rights
  35 0.08
DemocracyNZ   25 0.05
Leighton Baker Party
  19 0.04
New Nation   18 0.04
Informal votes 368 129
Total valid votes 42,128 42,636
Turnout 42,636
Labour hold Majority 7,980 18.94

2020 election

2020 general election: Dunedin[5]
Notes:

Blue background denotes the winner of the electorate vote.
Pink background denotes a candidate elected from their party list.
Yellow background denotes an electorate win by a list member, or other incumbent.
A Green tickY or Red XN denotes status of any incumbent, win or lose respectively.

Party Candidate Votes % ±% Party votes % ±%
Labour David Clark 24,140 52.79 25,377 55.16
National Michael Woodhouse 8,169 17.86 6,477 14.07
Green Jack Brazil 6,916 15.12 8,165 17.74
Opportunities Ben Peters 2,480 5.42 1,291 2.80
ACT Callum Steele-MacIntosh 1,308 2.86 2,423 5.26
NZ First Robert Griffith 817 1.78 978 2.12
New Conservative
Solomon King 506 1.10 415 0.90
Social Credit Zariah Anjaiya-King 195 0.42 57 0.12
Advance NZ   213 0.46
Māori Party
  151 0.32
Legalise Cannabis   112 0.24
ONE
  61 0.13
Sustainable NZ   42 0.09
Outdoors
  35 0.07
Vision NZ   9 0.01
TEA
  8 0.01
Heartland   0 0.00
Informal votes 742 189
Total valid votes 45,723 46,003
Turnout 46,003
Labour win new seat Majority 15,521 33.94

References

  1. ^ Houlahan, Mike (21 November 2019). "'Huge implications' in boundary changes". Otago Daily Times. Retrieved 27 April 2020.
  2. . Retrieved 27 April 2020.
  3. ^ Houlahan, Mike (17 April 2020). "New electorate boundaries, names revealed". Otago Daily Times. Retrieved 27 April 2020.
  4. ^ "Dunedin – Official Result". Electoral Commission. Retrieved 17 November 2023.
  5. ^ "Dunedin - Official Result". Electoral Commission. 6 November 2020. Retrieved 8 November 2020.