United New Zealand
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United New Zealand was a centrist political party in New Zealand. It eventually merged with another party to form the modern United Future New Zealand group.
United was founded in the middle of 1995, one of a number of new parties hoping to capitalize on the upcoming switch to the MMP electoral system. It was intended to be a centrist party, encompassing moderate voters from both the centre-left and the centre-right. The party was established by four MPs from the National Party, two MPs from the Labour Party, and former Labour MP Peter Dunne, who had already established his own party, Future New Zealand (not to be confused with the party of the same name which United later merged with). The party was led by Clive Matthewson, a former Labour MP.
The MPs who established United were:
- Margaret Austin (Labour)
- Bruce Cliffe (National)
- Peter Dunne (Future New Zealand, originally Labour)
- Clive Matthewson (Labour)
- Pauline Gardiner (National)
- Peter Hilt (National)
- John Robertson (National)
The party, while initially attracting interest, performed poorly in the 1996 election. The party's policies were centrist and liberal in nature but to many appeared too bland to attract media profile. In addition, Matthewson, while charismatic, was seen by many as an intellectual light-weight. When United entered into a coalition with the governing National Party in 1996, securing a Cabinet post for Peter Dunne, many commentators claimed that the party had abandoned its centrist stance. United claimed that a deal with National would allow United to moderate National's more extreme right-wing tendencies and that such arrangements would become common practice under the new MMP system.
In the 1996 election, United performed poorly. Peter Dunne was the only United MP to retain his seat, with all others being ejected from Parliament. Clive Matthewson, whose seat had been abolished in the change to MMP, placed fourth in his new electorate. As the party's only surviving MP, Peter Dunne became leader of United.
In the 1999 election, United's share of the vote declined even further,with swinging voters shifting to Labour to oust the Shipley government. However, Peter Dunne managed to retain his electorate seat thereby preserving United's parliamentary representation. Later, however, United decided to merge with a pro-family, evangelical Christian-based party Future New Zealand (not to be confused with Peter Dunne's party before United was formed). Future New Zealand, the former Christian Democrats, was not represented in parliament. The merged party adopted the name United Future New Zealand, and has since established a caucus that has extended from seven (47th New Zealand Parliament, 2002-2005) to three (48th New Zealand Parliament, 2005-2007) down to two members (48th New Zealand Parliament, May 2007 - ) with the departure of Gordon Copeland MP. Of these two caucuses, Dunne has remained the only constituency MP, while his caucus formed from United Future's MMP party list, and consists of Mps who are progressive on social justice issues but conservative on some moral issues.
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