New Zealand general election, 1963

New Zealand general election, 1963
New Zealand
30 November 1963

All 80 seats in the New Zealand Parliament
41 seats were needed for a majority
Turnout 1,196,631 (89.6%)
  First party Second party
 
Leader Keith Holyoake Arnold Nordmeyer
Party National Labour
Leader since 1957 1963
Leader's seat Pahiatua Island Bay
Last election 46 seats, 47.6% 34 seats, 43.4%
Seats won 45 35
Seat change Decrease 1 Increase 1
Popular vote 563,875 524,066
Percentage 47.1% 43.7%
Swing Decrease 0.5% Increase 0.6%

Prime Minister before election

Keith Holyoake
National

Elected Prime Minister

Keith Holyoake
National

The 1963 New Zealand general election was a nationwide vote to determine the shape of New Zealand Parliament's 34th term. The results were almost identical to those of the previous election, and the governing National Party remained in office.

Background

The 1960 election had been won by the National Party, beginning New Zealand's second period of National government. Keith Holyoake, who had briefly been Prime Minister at the end of the first period, returned to office. The elderly leader of the Labour Party, Walter Nash, had agreed to step down following his government's defeat, but disliked the prospect of being succeeded by his Minister of Finance, Arnold Nordmeyer. Nash instead backed first Clarence (Gerry) Skinner and then, after Skinner's death, Fred Hackett. In the end, however, Nordmeyer was victorious. Nordmeyer, however, was unpopular with the general public, being remembered with hostility for the tax hikes in his so-called 'Black Budget'. Labour struggled to overcome this negative perception of its leader, and was only partially successful.

The election

The date for the main 1963 elections was 30 November. 1,345,836 people were registered to vote, and turnout was 89.6%. This turnout was around average for the time. The number of seats being contested was 80, a number which had been fixed since 1902.

The following new (or reconstituted) electorates were introduced in 1963: Manurewa, New Lynn, Pakuranga, Porirua, Rangiora, Taupo and Waimarino.[1]

Results

The 1963 election saw the governing National Party retain office by a ten-seat margin. It had previously held office by a twelve-seat margin. National won a total of forty-five seats, while the Labour Party won thirty-five. In the popular vote, National won 47.1% to Labour's 43.7%. The Social Credit Party won 7.9% of the vote, but no seats. Four of their candidates also missed the nomination deadline.

Election results
Party Total votes Percentage Seats won Change
National 563,875 47.1 45 -1
Labour 524,066 43.7 35 +1
Social Credit 95,176 7.9 - ±0
Liberal 10,339 0.9 - ±0
Communist 3,167 0.3 - ±0
Others 1,422 0.1 - ±0
Total 1,196,631 80

Votes summary

Popular Vote
National
 
47.10%
Labour
 
43.70%
Social Credit
 
7.90%
Others
 
1.30%
Parliament seats
National
 
56.25%
Labour
 
43.75%

The table below shows the results of the 1963 general election:

Key

 National    Labour    Social Credit  

Electorate results for the New Zealand general election, 1963[2]
Electorate Incumbent Winner Majority Runner up
General electorates
Ashburton Richard Gerard 3,419 G. Glassey
Auckland Central Norman Douglas
Avon John Mathison
Awarua Gordon Grieve
Bay of Plenty Percy Allen
Buller Bill Rowling
Christchurch Central Robert Macfarlane
Clutha Peter Gordon
Dunedin Central Philip Connolly Brian MacDonell 1,170 G. R. Thorn[3]
Dunedin North Ethel McMillan
Eden John Rae
Egmont William Sheat
Fendalton Harry Lake
Franklin Alfred E. Allen
Gisborne Esme Tombleson 902 R. MacDonald[4]
Grey Lynn Reginald Keeling Ritchie Macdonald
Hamilton Lance Adams-Schneider
Hastings Duncan MacIntyre
Hauraki Arthur Kinsella 2,873 G. L. Broad
Hawkes Bay Cyril Harker Richard Harrison 3,518 J. G. Woolf[5]
Heretaunga Ron Bailey
Hobson Logan Sloane 31 Vernon Cracknell
Hutt Walter Nash
Invercargill Ralph Hanan
Island Bay Arnold Nordmeyer
Karori Jack Marshall
Lyttelton Norman Kirk
Manawatu Blair Tennent
Manukau Leon Götz Colin Moyle
Manurewa (new electorate) Phil Amos Leon Götz
Marlborough Tom Shand
Marsden Donald McKay
Miramar Bill Fox
Mt Albert Warren Freer
Napier Jim Edwards
Nelson Stanley Whitehead
New Lynn (new electorate) Rex Mason
New Plymouth Ernest Aderman
North Shore Dean Eyre Reginald Keeling
Onehunga Hugh Watt
Otago Central John George
Otaki Allan McCready 3,014 G. N. McDonald
Pahiatua Keith Holyoake
Pakuranga (new electorate) Bob Tizard 2,015 R. M. Neville-White
Palmerston North Bill Brown
Petone Michael Moohan
Piako William Goosman Geoffrey Sim
Porirua (new electorate) Henry May
Raglan Douglas Carter
Rangiora (new electorate) Herbert Pickering
Rangitikei Norman Shelton
Remuera Ronald Algie
Riccarton Mick Connelly
Rodney Jack Scott
Roskill Arthur Faulkner
Rotorua Harry Lapwood
Selwyn John McAlpine
St Albans Bert Walker
St Kilda William Fraser
Stratford Thomas Murray David Thomson
Sydenham Mabel Howard 5,399 Derek Quigley
Tamaki Robert Muldoon
Taupo (new electorate) Rona Stevenson 275 A. J. Ingram
Tauranga George Walsh
Timaru Basil Arthur
Waimarino (new electorate) Roy Jack
Waipa Hallyburton Johnstone Leslie Munro
Wairarapa Bertie Cooksley Haddon Donald 501 Jack Williams
Waitaki Allan Dick
Waitakere Rex Mason Martyn Finlay
Waitemata Norman King
Waitomo David Seath
Wallace Brian Talboys
Wanganui George Spooner
Wellington Central Dan Riddiford
Westland Paddy Blanchfield
Māori electorates
Eastern Maori Puti Tipene Watene 2,566 Arnold Reedy[6]
Northern Maori Matiu Rata 2,123 James Henare
Southern Maori Eruera Tirikatene 4,978 Ben Couch
Western Maori Iriaka Matiu Ratana 5,096 Pei Te Hurinui Jones

Notes

  1. Norton 1988, pp. 7,8,9.
  2. Norton 1988, pp. ?.
  3. Norton 1988, p. 212.
  4. Norton 1988, p. 228.
  5. Norton 1988, p. 240.
  6. Gustafson 1986, p. 383.

References