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{{Short description|none}}
{{Infobox Election
| election_name = New Zealand general election, 1943
{{Use New Zealand English|date=April 2024}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2022}}
{{Infobox election
| election_name = 1943 New Zealand general election
| country = New Zealand
| country = New Zealand
| flag_year = 1943
| flag_year = 1943
| type = parliamentary
| type = parliamentary
| >
| >
| previous_election = New Zealand general election, 1938
| previous_election = 1938 New Zealand general election
| previous_year = 1938
| previous_year = 1938
| previous_members = 26th New Zealand Parliament
| previous_members = 26th New Zealand Parliament
| next_election = New Zealand general election, 1946
| next_election = 1946 New Zealand general election
| next_year = 1946
| next_year = 1946
| next_members = 28th New Zealand Parliament
| next_members = 28th New Zealand Parliament
| seats_for_election = All 80 seats in the [[New Zealand Parliament]] <br> 41 seats were needed for a majority
| seats_for_election = All 80 seats in the [[New Zealand Parliament]] <br /> 41 seats were needed for a majority
| election_date = 24 (Māori) & 25&nbsp;September (general) 1943
| election_date = 24 (Māori) & 25&nbsp;September (general) 1943
| elected_mps = [[27th New Zealand Parliament|elected members]]
| elected_mps = [[27th New Zealand Parliament|elected members]]
Line 17: Line 20:


<!-- Labour -->
<!-- Labour -->
| image1 =[[File:Peter Fraser.jpg|140px]]
| image1 = [[File:Peter Fraser.jpg|200x200px]]
| leader1 = [[Peter Fraser]]
| leader1 = [[Peter Fraser]]
| leader_since1 = [[New Zealand Labour Party leadership election, 1940|4 April 1940]]
| leader_since1 = [[1940 New Zealand Labour Party leadership election|4 April 1940]]
| party1 = New Zealand Labour Party
| party1 = New Zealand Labour Party
| leaders_seat1 = {{NZ electorate link|Wellington Central}}
| leaders_seat1 = {{NZ electorate link|Wellington Central}}
| last_election1 = 53 seats, 55.8%
| last_election1 = 53 seats, 55.8%
| seats1 = 45
| seats1 = '''45'''
| seat_change1 = {{decrease}} 8
| seat_change1 = {{decrease}} 8
| popular_vote1 =
| popular_vote1 = '''447,919'''
| percentage1 = 47.6%
| percentage1 = '''47.6%'''
| swing1 = {{decrease}} 8.2%
| swing1 = {{decrease}} 8.2%


<!-- National -->
<!-- National -->
| image2 = [[File:Sidney George Holland (1953).jpg|146px]]
| image2 = [[File:Sidney George Holland (1951).jpg|200x200px]]
| leader2 = [[Sidney Holland]]
| leader2 = [[Sidney Holland]]
| leader_since2 = [[New Zealand National Party leadership election, 1940|26 November 1940]]
| leader_since2 = [[1940 New Zealand National Party leadership election|26 November 1940]]
| party2 = New Zealand National Party
| party2 = New Zealand National Party
| leaders_seat2 = [[Christchurch North (New Zealand electorate)|Christchurch North]]
| leaders_seat2 = [[Christchurch North (New Zealand electorate)|Christchurch North]]
Line 38: Line 41:
| seats2 = 34
| seats2 = 34
| seat_change2 = {{increase}} 9
| seat_change2 = {{increase}} 9
| popular_vote2 =
| popular_vote2 = 402,887
| percentage2 = 42.8%
| percentage2 = 42.8%
| swing2 = {{increase}} 2.5%
| swing2 = {{increase}} 2.5%

| map_image = 1943 New Zealand general election - Results.svg
| map_size = 400px
| map_caption = Results of the election.

| title = [[Prime Minister of New Zealand|Prime Minister]]
| title = [[Prime Minister of New Zealand|Prime Minister]]
| posttitle = Subsequent Prime Minister
| before_election = [[Peter Fraser]]
| before_election = [[Peter Fraser]]
| after_election = [[Peter Fraser]]
| after_election = Peter Fraser
| before_party = New Zealand Labour Party
| before_party = New Zealand Labour Party
| after_party = New Zealand Labour Party
| after_party = New Zealand Labour Party
Line 50: Line 59:


==Background==
==Background==
The [[New Zealand Labour Party|Labour Party]] had formed its first government after its resounding victory in the [[New Zealand general election, 1935|1935 elections]] and had been re-elected by a substantial margin in the [[New Zealand general election, 1938|1938 elections]]. [[Michael Joseph Savage]], the first Labour [[Prime Minister of New Zealand|Prime Minister]], died in 1940; he was replaced by [[Peter Fraser]], who was widely viewed as competent even if he was less popular than Savage. In the same year as Fraser took power, however, the opposition [[New Zealand National Party|National Party]] had replaced the ineffectual [[Adam Hamilton]] with [[Sidney Holland]], and was beginning to overcome the internal divisions that had plagued Hamilton's time as leader.
The [[New Zealand Labour Party|Labour Party]] had formed its first government after its resounding victory in the [[1935 New Zealand general election|1935 elections]] and had been re-elected by a substantial margin in the [[1938 New Zealand general election|1938 elections]]. [[Michael Joseph Savage]], the first Labour [[Prime Minister of New Zealand|Prime Minister]], died in 1940; he was replaced by [[Peter Fraser]], who was widely viewed as competent even if he was less popular than Savage. In the same year as Fraser took power, however, the opposition [[New Zealand National Party|National Party]] had replaced the ineffectual [[Adam Hamilton]] with [[Sidney Holland]], and was beginning to overcome the internal divisions that had plagued Hamilton's time as leader.


As [[World War II]] continued, the issues surrounding it naturally came to dominate political debate. Shortages appeared, prompting a certain amount of dissatisfaction with the government. The matter of [[conscription]] was also contentious &mdash; although both Labour and National supported it, many traditional followers of Labour were angry at their party's stance. Many early Labour leaders, including Fraser, had been jailed for opposing conscription in [[World War I]], and were branded hypocrites for later introducing it; Fraser justified his change of position by saying that World War I was a pointless war but that World War II was necessary. A faction of Labour, dissatisfied with the mainstream party's economic and conscription policies, followed dissident MP [[John A. Lee]] to his new [[Democratic Labour Party (New Zealand)|Democratic Labour Party]].
As [[World War II]] continued, the issues surrounding it naturally came to dominate political debate. Shortages appeared, prompting a certain amount of dissatisfaction with the government. The matter of [[conscription]] was also contentious &mdash; although both Labour and National supported it, many traditional followers of Labour were angry at their party's stance. Many early Labour leaders, including Fraser, had been jailed for opposing conscription in [[World War I]], and were branded hypocrites for later introducing it; Fraser justified his change of position by saying that World War I was a pointless war but that World War II was necessary. A faction of Labour, dissatisfied with the mainstream party's economic and conscription policies, followed dissident MP [[John A. Lee]] to his new [[Democratic Labour Party (New Zealand)|Democratic Labour Party]].


A general election was due to be held in 1941, but Fraser, who held a tight reign over the coalition war cabinet, persuaded Parliament to postpone it due to the war.{{sfn|King|2003|pp=395f}} During April and May 1943, there were three deaths by sitting members:
A general election was due to be held in 1941, but Fraser, who held a tight rein over the coalition war cabinet, persuaded Parliament to postpone it due to the war.{{sfn|King|2003|pp=395f}}

===MPs retiring in 1943===
Five National MPs, two Labour MPs and two independent MPs intended to retire at the end of the Parliament.

{| class="wikitable"
|-
! colspan=2| Party !! Name !! Electorate
|-
| rowspan=2 style="background-color: {{party color|New Zealand Labour Party}}" |
| rowspan=2| [[New Zealand Labour Party|Labour]]
| [[Gervan McMillan]] || [[Dunedin West (New Zealand electorate)|Dunedin West]]
|-
| [[Lee Martin (politician)|Lee Martin]] || [[Raglan (New Zealand electorate)|Raglan]]
|-
| rowspan=5 style="background-color: {{party color|New Zealand National Party}}" |
| rowspan=5| [[New Zealand National Party|National]]
| [[John Cobbe]] || [[Manawatu (New Zealand electorate)|Manawatu]]
|-
| [[Harold Dickie]] || [[Patea (New Zealand electorate)|Patea]]
|-
| [[George Forbes (New Zealand politician)|George Forbes]] || [[Hurunui (New Zealand electorate)|Hurunui]]
|-
| [[Mary Grigg]] || [[Mid-Canterbury (New Zealand electorate)|Mid-Canterbury]]
|-
| [[Alfred Ransom]] || [[Pahiatua (New Zealand electorate)|Pahiatua]]
|-
| rowspan=2 style="background-color: {{party color|Independent politician}}" |
| rowspan=2| [[Independent politician|Independent]]
| [[Bert Kyle]] || [[Riccarton (New Zealand electorate)|Riccarton]]
|-
| [[Charles Wilkinson (New Zealand politician)|Charles Wilkinson]] || [[Egmont (New Zealand electorate)|Egmont]]
|-
|}

[[Bill Endean]] also left parliament at the election. He intended to stand again in {{NZ electorate link|Remuera}} but was deselected as a candidate by the National Party.{{sfn|Gustafson|1986|p=235}}

== By-elections ==
During April and May 1943, there were three deaths of sitting members:
* [[Paraire Karaka Paikea]] – {{NZ electorate link|Northern Maori}} – died on 6 April{{sfn|Wilson|1985|p=225}}
* [[Paraire Karaka Paikea]] – {{NZ electorate link|Northern Maori}} – died on 6 April{{sfn|Wilson|1985|p=225}}
* [[Alfred Ransom]] – {{NZ electorate link|Pahiatua}} – died on 22 May{{sfn|Wilson|1985|p=228}}
* [[Alfred Ransom]] – {{NZ electorate link|Pahiatua}} – died on 22 May{{sfn|Wilson|1985|p=228}}
* [[Gordon Coates]] – {{NZ electorate link|Kaipara}} – died on 27 May{{sfn|Wilson|1985|p=189}}
* [[Gordon Coates]] – {{NZ electorate link|Kaipara}} – died on 27 May{{sfn|Wilson|1985|p=189}}


This would have caused three by-elections in a year where the government was planning on holding an election, and in fact, the writ for the Northern Maori by-election was issued on 19 May. On 11 June, the government announced that a general election would be held in September, and at the same time they introduced legislation that postponed the three by-elections.<ref>{{cite news |title=Early Election |url=https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NZH19430611.2.16 |accessdate=16 May 2017 |work=[[The New Zealand Herald]] |volume=80 |issue=24607 |date=11 June 1943 |page=2}}</ref> The By-elections Postponement Act 1943 was passed, and amongst other things it revoked the writ issued for the Northern Maori by-election. This was the first time that legislation had been used to postpone by-elections (it happened once more in 1969).<ref>{{cite web|title=By-elections Postponement Act 1943 (7 GEO VI 1943 No 7) |url=http://www.nzlii.org/nz/legis/hist_act/bpa19437gv1943n7379/ |publisher=[[Parliamentary Counsel Office (New Zealand)|Parliamentary Counsel Office]] |accessdate=16 May 2017}}</ref>
This would have required three by-elections in a year where the government was planning to hold a general election, and in fact, the writ for the Northern Maori by-election was issued on 19 May. On 11 June, the government announced that a general election would be held in September, and at the same time they introduced legislation that postponed the three by-elections.<ref>{{cite news |title=Early Election |url=https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NZH19430611.2.16 |access-date=16 May 2017 |work=[[The New Zealand Herald]] |volume=80 |issue=24607 |date=11 June 1943 |page=2}}</ref> The By-elections Postponement Act 1943 <ref>{{cite web|url= http://www.nzlii.org/nz/legis/hist_act/bpa19437gv1943n7379/ |title= By-elections Postponement Act 19431 |publisher=New Zealand Law online }}</ref> was passed, and amongst other things it revoked the writ issued for the Northern Maori by-election. This was the first time that legislation had been used to postpone by-elections (it happened once more in 1969).<ref>{{cite web|title=By-elections Postponement Act 1943 (7 GEO VI 1943 No 7) |url=http://www.nzlii.org/nz/legis/hist_act/bpa19437gv1943n7379/ |publisher=[[Parliamentary Counsel Office (New Zealand)|Parliamentary Counsel Office]] |access-date=16 May 2017}}</ref>


==The election==
==The election==
The date for the main 1943 election was 25 September, a Saturday. The election to the four [[Māori electorates]] was held the day before. 1,021,034 civilians and an uncertain number of serving military personnel were registered to vote &mdash; special legislation provided voting rights to all serving members of the armed forces regardless of age, and they voted over several days prior to 25 September.<ref name="General elections 1853-2005">{{cite web |title=General elections 1853–2005 - dates & turnout |url= http://www.elections.org.nz/events/past-events-0/general-elections-1890-1993 |publisher=Elections New Zealand |accessdate=12 January 2011}}</ref>{{sfn|Wood|1996|p=108}} Among the civilian population, there was a [[voter turnout|turnout]] of 82.8%. The number of seats in Parliament was 80, a number that had been fixed since 1902.<ref name="General elections 1853-2005" />
The date for the main 1943 election was 25 September, a Saturday. The election to the four [[Māori electorates]] was held the day before. 1,021,034 civilians and an uncertain number of serving military personnel were registered to vote &mdash; special legislation provided voting rights to all serving members of the armed forces regardless of age, and they voted over several days prior to 25 September.<ref name="General elections 1853-2005">{{cite web |title=General elections 1853–2005 - dates & turnout |url=http://www.elections.org.nz/events/past-events-0/general-elections-1890-1993 |publisher=Elections New Zealand |access-date=12 January 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130809204937/http://www.elections.org.nz/events/past-events-0/general-elections-1890-1993 |archive-date=9 August 2013 |url-status=dead }}</ref>{{sfn|Wood|1996|p=108}} Among the civilian population, there was a [[voter turnout|turnout]] of 82.8%. The number of seats in Parliament was 80, a number that had been fixed since 1902.<ref name="General elections 1853-2005" />


There were three minor movements participating with 45 candidates: the [[People's Movement (New Zealand)|People's Movement]] or Independent People's Group (25), the [[Real Democracy Movement (New Zealand)|Real Democracy Movement]] (17) and the Fighting Forces League (3). However these groups got only 12,867 votes (provisional count: PM or IPG 7,389 (0.89%); RDM 4,421 (0.53%); others or FFL 1,057 (0.13%)).<ref>{{cite web|url= http://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/cgi-bin/paperspast?a=d&cl=search&d=NZH19430927.2.48&srpos=4&e=23-09-1943-29-09-1943--10--1----0People%27s+Movement-ARTICLE- |title= Party Support: Results analysed |publisher= Papers Past |date=27 September 1943}}</ref> Two of the three Fighting Forces League candidates were also supported by the Real Democracy Movement,<ref>{{cite web|url= http://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/cgi-bin/paperspast?a=d&cl=search&d=NZH19430925.2.35&srpos=13&e=01-08-1943-01-12-1943--10--11----2Fighting+Forces+League-- |title= Election Today | work= [[The New Zealand Herald]] |date=25 September 1943}}</ref> which had been formed by the Social Credit Association.
There were three minor movements participating with 45 candidates: the [[People's Movement (New Zealand)|People's Movement]] or Independent People's Group (25), the [[Real Democracy Movement (New Zealand)|Real Democracy Movement]] (17) and the Fighting Forces League (3). However these groups got only 12,867 votes (provisional count: PM or IPG 7,389 (0.89%); RDM 4,421 (0.53%); others or FFL 1,057 (0.13%)).<ref>{{cite news |url= https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/cgi-bin/paperspast?a=d&cl=search&d=NZH19430927.2.48 |work= [[The New Zealand Herald]] |title= Party Support: Results analysed | via= Papers Past |date=27 September 1943}}</ref> Two of the three Fighting Forces League candidates were also supported by the Real Democracy Movement,<ref>{{cite news|url=https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/cgi-bin/paperspast?a=d&cl=search&d=NZH19430925.2.35 |title= Election Today | work= [[The New Zealand Herald]] |date=25 September 1943}}</ref> which had been formed by the Social Credit Association.


Two seats were uncontested: [[Awarua (New Zealand electorate)|Awarua]] and [[Mataura (New Zealand electorate)|Matarura]]. Both seats were held for the [[New Zealand National Party|National Party]] by serving officers; [[James Hargest]] (Awarua) was interned in Switzerland, and [[Tom Macdonald (politician)|Tom Macdonald]] (Mataura) had just been invalided home.<ref>{{cite news |title=To-Morrow's Election|url= http://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/cgi-bin/paperspast?a=d&cl=search&d=BPB19430924.2.13.1 |accessdate=28 August 2013 |newspaper=Bay of Plenty Beacon |date=24 September 1943 |volume=7 |issue=9 |page=4}}</ref> Labour did not contest those two electorates or {{NZ electorate link|Nelson}} where [[Harry Atmore]] stood. National did not contest three electorates: {{NZ electorate link|Kaipara}} and {{NZ electorate link|Palmerston North}} where Independent Nationalists stood, or {{NZ electorate link|Buller}}. 1943 was the last general election when some candidates were elected unopposed.{{sfn|Wilson|1985|pp=285–286}}
Two seats were uncontested: [[Awarua (New Zealand electorate)|Awarua]] and [[Mataura (New Zealand electorate)|Matarura]]. Both seats were held for the [[New Zealand National Party|National Party]] by serving officers; [[James Hargest]] (Awarua) was interned in Switzerland, and [[Tom Macdonald (politician)|Tom Macdonald]] (Mataura) had just been invalided home.<ref>{{cite news |title=To-Morrow's Election|url= https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/cgi-bin/paperspast?a=d&cl=search&d=BPB19430924.2.13.1 |access-date=28 August 2013 |work=Bay of Plenty Beacon |date=24 September 1943 |volume=7 |issue=9 |page=4}}</ref> Labour did not contest those two electorates or {{NZ electorate link|Nelson}} where [[Harry Atmore]] stood. National did not contest three electorates: {{NZ electorate link|Kaipara}} and {{NZ electorate link|Palmerston North}} where Independent Nationalists stood, or {{NZ electorate link|Buller}}. 1943 was the last general election when some candidates were elected unopposed.{{sfn|Wilson|1985|pp=285–286}}


With seamen's and servicemen's votes taking time to come in, it took until mid-October before all results were finalised. Initially, the outcome in at least ten electorates was in doubt: {{NZ electorate link|Oamaru}}, {{NZ electorate link|Eden}}, {{NZ electorate link|Raglan}}, {{NZ electorate link|New Plymouth}}, {{NZ electorate link|Otaki}}, {{NZ electorate link|Wairarapa}}, {{NZ electorate link|Waitemata}}, {{NZ electorate link|Hamilton}}, {{NZ electorate link|Nelson}}, and {{NZ electorate link|Motueka}}.<ref>{{cite news |title=Ten in Doubt |url= https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/AS19430928.2.58 |accessdate=16 May 2017 |work=[[Auckland Star]] |volume=LXXIV |issue=230 |date=28 September 1943 |page=4}}</ref> In its 27 September edition, ''[[The New Zealand Herald]]'' posted profiles of new members of parliament. This included National's T. R. Beatty, a building contractor from Oamaru who had supposedly beaten [[Arnold Nordmeyer]], a sitting cabinet minister.<ref>{{cite news |title=The New Parliament |url= https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NZH19430927.2.15?query=Beatty%20Oamaru |accessdate=16 May 2017 |work=[[The New Zealand Herald]] |volume=80 |issue=24699 |date=27 September 1943 |page=3}}</ref> In initial results, Beatty had a majority of just six votes,<ref>{{cite news |title=Not Definite |url= https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NZH19430927.2.28|accessdate=16 May 2017 |work=[[The New Zealand Herald]] |volume=80 |issue=24699 |date=27 September 1943 |page=4}}</ref> but incumbents had strong support by military staff,<ref>{{cite news |title=The Election |url= https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/CHP19431019.2.49 |accessdate=16 May 2017 |work=[[The Press]] |volume=LXXIX |issue=24082 |date=19 October 1943 |page=6}}</ref> and Nordmeyer had a final majority of 125 votes.<ref name="General Election, 1943" />
With seamen's and servicemen's votes taking time to come in, it took until mid-October before all results were finalised. Initially, the outcome in at least ten electorates was in doubt: {{NZ electorate link|Oamaru}}, {{NZ electorate link|Eden}}, {{NZ electorate link|Raglan}}, {{NZ electorate link|New Plymouth}}, {{NZ electorate link|Otaki}}, {{NZ electorate link|Wairarapa}}, {{NZ electorate link|Waitemata}}, {{NZ electorate link|Hamilton}}, {{NZ electorate link|Nelson}}, and {{NZ electorate link|Motueka}}.<ref>{{cite news |title=Ten in Doubt |url= https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/AS19430928.2.58 |access-date=16 May 2017 |work=[[Auckland Star]] |volume=LXXIV |issue=230 |date=28 September 1943 |page=4}}</ref> In its 27 September edition, ''[[The New Zealand Herald]]'' posted profiles of new members of parliament. This included National's T. R. Beatty, a building contractor from Oamaru who had supposedly beaten [[Arnold Nordmeyer]], a sitting cabinet minister.<ref>{{cite news |title=The New Parliament |url= https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NZH19430927.2.15?query=Beatty%20Oamaru |access-date=16 May 2017 |work=[[The New Zealand Herald]] |volume=80 |issue=24699 |date=27 September 1943 |page=3}}</ref> In initial results, Beatty had a majority of just six votes,<ref>{{cite news |title=Not Definite |url= https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NZH19430927.2.28|access-date=16 May 2017 |work=[[The New Zealand Herald]] |volume=80 |issue=24699 |date=27 September 1943 |page=4}}</ref> but incumbents had strong support by military staff,<ref>{{cite news |title=The Election |url= https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/CHP19431019.2.49 |access-date=16 May 2017 |work=[[The Press]] |volume=LXXIX |issue=24082 |date=19 October 1943 |page=6}}</ref> and Nordmeyer had a final majority of 125 votes.<ref name="General Election, 1943" />


==Election results==
==Election results==
[[File:Auckland Weekly News, 6 Oct 1943.jpg|thumb|The leaders of National and Labour, plus the 24 new MPs following the 1943 general election]]
[[File:Auckland Weekly News, 6 Oct 1943.jpg|thumb|The leaders of National and Labour, plus the 24 new MPs following the 1943 general election]]
The 1943 election saw the governing [[New Zealand Labour Party|Labour Party]] retain office by a ten-seat margin, winning forty-five seats to the [[New Zealand National Party|National Party]]'s thirty-four, with one independent. The popular vote was considerably closer &mdash; Labour won 47.6%, while National won 42.8%. [[Sidney Holland|Holland]] was stunned by the result, and called for a Commission of Inquiry to look at the servicemens’ vote, but was answered by a report from the Chief Electoral Officer. The Labour vote dropped, particularly in rural areas where the now more prosperous farmers returned to their normal political allegiance. There were strikes by the miners, and resentment at wartime restrictions. Lee’s "Democratic Soldier Labour" party took votes in closely contested seats, and there was a "vast and weird variety of miscellaneous candidates under strange labels". However the forces vote favoured both Labour and Democratic Soldier Labour, see table below. And 22 seats were won on a minority vote. {{sfn|Lipson|2011|p=218-19}}
The 1943 election saw the governing [[New Zealand Labour Party|Labour Party]] retain office by a ten-seat margin, winning forty-five seats to the [[New Zealand National Party|National Party]]'s thirty-four, with one independent. The popular vote was considerably closer &mdash; Labour won 47.6%, while National won 42.8%. [[Sidney Holland|Holland]] was stunned by the result, and called for a Commission of Inquiry to look at the servicemens' vote, but was answered by a report from the Chief Electoral Officer. The Labour vote dropped, particularly in rural areas where the now more prosperous farmers returned to their normal political allegiance. There were strikes by the miners, and resentment at wartime restrictions. Lee's "Democratic Soldier Labour" party took votes in closely contested seats, and there was a "vast and weird variety of miscellaneous candidates under strange labels". However the forces vote favoured both Labour and Democratic Soldier Labour, see table below. And 22 seats were won on a minority vote. {{sfn|Lipson|2011|p=218-19}}


On the morning of election day, overseas counts from London, Ottawa and the Middle East indicated a majority for Labour, but domestic results coming in during the evening suggested to several government officials and even to [[Walter Nash]] thal Labour would lose. By 10.30 pm only 35 of the 80 seats were certain for Labour, with Barclay (Marsden) defeated and even Nordmeyer (Oamaru) uncertain. But with 73,000 servicemens’ votes that came in during the day, Lowry (Otaki), Hodgens (Palmerston North) and Roberts (Wairarapa) scraped in. Over subsequent days with 60,000 special votes plus over 20,000 more servicemens’ votes, both Nordmeyer and Anderton (Eden) also scraped in. Fraser, who had campaigned among the troops, quipped that ''it was not only North Africa that the Second Division had saved''.{{sfn|Atkinson|2003|p=154}}{{sfn|Bassett|2000|p=?}} By 7 October, National's lead in four seats had been overturned by the services votes,<ref>{{cite web|url= http://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/cgi-bin/paperspast?a=d&cl=search&d=EP19431007.2.89&srpos=6&e=07-10-1943-07-10-1943--10--1----1votes-- |title= Turned the Scales: Servicemen's Votes |publisher= Papers Past |date=7 October 1943}}</ref> and by 12 October, it was apparent that the result in six seats (Eden, Nelson, Oamaru, Otaki, Palmerston North and Wairarapa) had been overturned by the services vote.<ref>{{cite web|url= http://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/cgi-bin/paperspast?a=d&cl=search&d=EP19431012.2.26&srpos=14&e=25-09-1943-15-10-1943--10--11----0Nelson+result-- |title= Election Result: State of Parties |publisher= Papers Past |date=12 October 1943}}</ref>
On the morning of election day, overseas counts from London, Ottawa and the Middle East indicated a majority for Labour, but domestic results coming in during the evening suggested to several government officials and even to [[Walter Nash]] thal Labour would lose. By 10.30 pm only 35 of the 80 seats were certain for Labour, with Barclay (Marsden) defeated and even Nordmeyer (Oamaru) uncertain. But with 73,000 servicemens' votes that came in during the day, Lowry (Otaki), Hodgens (Palmerston North) and Roberts (Wairarapa) scraped in. Over subsequent days with 60,000 special votes plus over 20,000 more servicemens' votes, both Nordmeyer and Anderton (Eden) also scraped in. Fraser, who had campaigned among the troops, quipped that ''it was not only North Africa that the Second Division had saved''.{{sfn|Atkinson|2003|p=154}}{{sfn|Bassett|2000|p=?}} By 7 October, National's lead in four seats had been overturned by the services votes,<ref>{{cite news|url=https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/cgi-bin/paperspast?a=d&cl=search&d=EP19431007.2.89&srpos=6&e=07-10-1943-07-10-1943--10--1----1votes-- |title= Turned the Scales: Servicemen's Votes |publisher=Papers Past |date=7 October 1943}}</ref> and by 12 October, it was apparent that the result in six seats (Eden, Nelson, Oamaru, Otaki, Palmerston North and Wairarapa) had been overturned by the services vote.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/cgi-bin/paperspast?a=d&cl=search&d=EP19431012.2.26&srpos=14&e=25-09-1943-15-10-1943--10--11----0Nelson+result-- |title= Election Result: State of Parties |publisher=Papers Past |date=12 October 1943}}</ref>


[[John A. Lee]]'s new [[Democratic Labour Party (New Zealand)|Democratic Labour Party]] won only 4.3% of the vote, and no seats. [[Bill Barnard]] and [[Colin Scrimgeour]] were formerly on the Labour left. Barnard had left the Labour Party with [[John A. Lee]] but had fallen out with him and left Lee's Democratic Labour Party, standing as an independent. Scrimgeour stood as an independent against Prime Minister [[Peter Fraser]] in {{NZ electorate link|Wellington Central}} and polled well, reducing Fraser's majority so that Fraser ''only sneaked back on a minority vote''.
[[John A. Lee]]'s new [[Democratic Labour Party (New Zealand)|Democratic Labour Party]] won only 4.3% of the vote, and no seats. [[Bill Barnard]] and [[Colin Scrimgeour]] were formerly on the Labour left. Barnard had left the Labour Party with [[John A. Lee]] but had fallen out with him and left Lee's Democratic Labour Party, standing as an independent. Scrimgeour stood as an independent against Prime Minister [[Peter Fraser]] in {{NZ electorate link|Wellington Central}} and polled well, reducing Fraser's majority so that Fraser ''only sneaked back on a minority vote''.


[[Albert Davy]] the organiser of the Independent People’s Group (IPG) or [[People's Movement (New Zealand)|People's Movement]] complained that the election was decided on "strictly party" lines, and said that the effect of the [[Democratic Labour Party (New Zealand)|Democratic Labour Party]] standing was to give six seats to the [[New Zealand National Party|National Party]].
[[Albert Davy]] the organiser of the Independent People's Group (IPG) or [[People's Movement (New Zealand)|People's Movement]] complained that the election was decided on "strictly party" lines, and said that the effect of the [[Democratic Labour Party (New Zealand)|Democratic Labour Party]] standing was to give six seats to the [[New Zealand National Party|National Party]].
<ref>{{cite web|url= http://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/cgi-bin/paperspast?a=d&cl=search&d=EP19430927.2.113&srpos=2&e=23-09-1943-29-09-1943--10--1----0Davy-ARTICLE- |title= On Party Lines: Mr Davys' analysis |publisher= Papers Past |date=27 September 1943 }}</ref>
<ref>{{cite news|url=https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/cgi-bin/paperspast?a=d&cl=search&d=EP19430927.2.113&srpos=2&e=23-09-1943-29-09-1943--10--1----0Davy-ARTICLE- |title= On Party Lines: Mr Davys' analysis |publisher=Papers Past |date=27 September 1943 }}</ref>


Two defeated Labour MPs, [[James Gillespie Barclay|James Barclay]] and [[Charles Boswell]], were appointed to diplomatic posts in Australia and Russia, respectively.
Two defeated Labour MPs, [[James Gillespie Barclay|James Barclay]] and [[Charles Boswell]], were appointed to diplomatic posts in Australia and Russia, respectively.


The election was also notable for the defeat of [[Āpirana Ngata]] a renowned [[Māori people|Māori]] statesman and member for [[Eastern Maori]] after 38 years in parliament, by [[Rātana]]–Labour candidate [[Tiaki Omana]]. Labour now held all four [[Māori electorates]] and would continue to do so until 1993.
The election was also notable for the defeat of [[Āpirana Ngata]] a renowned [[Māori people|Māori]] statesman and member for [[Eastern Maori]] after 38 years in parliament, by [[Rātana]]–Labour candidate [[Tiaki Omana]]. Labour now held all four [[Māori electorates]] and would continue to do so until 1993.


One independent was re-elected: [[Harry Atmore]] from Nelson &mdash; this was the last electoral victory by a candidate not from the major parties until the [[New Zealand general election, 1966|1966 election]]. Atmore had the tactical support of Labour who (as in 1935 and 1938) did not stand a candidate against him, and he generally voted with Labour.{{sfn|Milne|1966|p=76}} The slight margin to National in Nelson on civilian votes was reversed by the service votes.<ref>{{cite web|url= http://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/cgi-bin/paperspast?a=d&cl=search&d=EP19430927.2.114&srpos=3&e=25-09-1943-01-10-1943--10--1----1Atmore+Nelson+vote-- |title= Big Influence: Service votes |publisher= Papers Past |date=7 October 1943}}</ref>
One independent was re-elected: [[Harry Atmore]] from Nelson &mdash; this was the last electoral victory by a candidate not from the major parties until the [[1966 New Zealand general election|1966 election]]. Atmore had the tactical support of Labour who (as in 1935 and 1938) did not stand a candidate against him, and he generally voted with Labour.{{sfn|Milne|1966|p=76}} The slight margin to National in Nelson on civilian votes was reversed by the service votes.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/cgi-bin/paperspast?a=d&cl=search&d=EP19430927.2.114&srpos=3&e=25-09-1943-01-10-1943--10--1----1Atmore+Nelson+vote-- |title= Big Influence: Service votes |publisher=Papers Past |date=7 October 1943}}</ref>


===Party standings===
===Party standings===
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:right"
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:right"
!colspan=7|[[File:1943 nz parliament.svg|center]]
|-
|-
!colspan=7| Election results
!colspan=7| Election results
|-
|-
!colspan=2|Party
!colspan=2|Party
!Candidates
!Candidates
!Votes
!Votes
!Percentage
!Percentage
Line 99: Line 147:
!change
!change
|- align=right
|- align=right
|{{Meta color|New Zealand Labour Party|5}}
|{{Party color cell|New Zealand Labour Party}}
|align=left |[[New Zealand Labour Party|Labour]]
|align=left |[[New Zealand Labour Party|Labour]]
| 77
| 77
Line 107: Line 155:
| -8
| -8
|- align=right
|- align=right
| {{Meta color|New Zealand National Party}}
| {{Party color cell|New Zealand National Party}}
|align=left |[[New Zealand National Party|National]]
|align=left |[[New Zealand National Party|National]]
| 77
| 77
Line 115: Line 163:
| +9
| +9
|- align=right
|- align=right
| {{Meta color|Democratic Labour Party (New Zealand)}}
| {{Party color cell|Democratic Labour Party (New Zealand)}}
|align=left |[[Democratic Labour Party (New Zealand)|Democratic Labour]]
|align=left |[[Democratic Labour Party (New Zealand)|Democratic Labour]]
| 54
| 54
| 40,443
| 40,443
| 4.29
| 4.29
| 0
| 0
| ±0
| ±0
|- align=right
|- align=right
| {{Meta color|People's Movement (New Zealand)}}
| {{Party color cell|People's Movement (New Zealand)}}
|align=left |[[People's Movement (New Zealand)|People's Movement]]
|align=left |[[People's Movement (New Zealand)|People's Movement]]
| 25
| 25
| 7,389
| 7,389
| 0.89
| 0.89
| 0
| 0
| ±0
| ±0
|- align=right
|- align=right
| {{Meta color|Real Democracy Movement}}
| {{Party color cell|Real Democracy Movement}}
|align=left |[[Real Democracy Movement (New Zealand)|Real Democracy]]
|align=left |[[Real Democracy Movement (New Zealand)|Real Democracy]]
| 25
| 25
| 4,421
| 4,421
| 0.53
| 0.53
| 0
| 0
| ±0
| ±0
|- align=right
|- align=right
| {{Meta color|Independent politician}}
| {{Party color cell|Independent politician}}
|align=left |[[Independent politician|Independents]]
|align=left |[[Independent politician|Independents]]
| 38
| 38
Line 149: Line 197:
|colspan=2 align=left|Total
|colspan=2 align=left|Total
| 291
| 291
| 941,828
| 941,828
|
|
|'''80'''
|'''80'''
Line 162: Line 210:
| barwidth=410px
| barwidth=410px
| bars=
| bars=
{{bar percent|'''Labour'''|{{New Zealand Labour Party/meta/color}}|47.60}}
{{bar percent|'''Labour'''|{{party color|New Zealand Labour Party}}|47.60}}
{{bar percent|National|{{New Zealand National Party/meta/color}}|42.80}}
{{bar percent|National|{{party color|New Zealand National Party}}|42.80}}
{{bar percent|Democratic Labour|{{Democratic Labour Party (New Zealand)/meta/color}}|4.30}}
{{bar percent|Democratic Labour|{{party color|Democratic Labour Party (New Zealand)}}|4.30}}
{{bar percent|Independent|{{Independent politician/meta/color}}|3.90}}
{{bar percent|Independent|{{party color|Independent politician}}|3.90}}
{{bar percent|Others|#777777|1.50}}
{{bar percent|Others|#777777|1.50}}
}}
}}
Line 175: Line 223:
| barwidth=410px
| barwidth=410px
| bars=
| bars=
{{bar percent|'''Labour'''|{{New Zealand Labour Party/meta/color}}|56.25}}
{{bar percent|'''Labour'''|{{party color|New Zealand Labour Party}}|56.25}}
{{bar percent|National|{{New Zealand National Party/meta/color}}|42.50}}
{{bar percent|National|{{party color|New Zealand National Party}}|42.50}}
{{bar percent|Independent|{{Independent politician/meta/color}}|1.25}}
{{bar percent|Independent|{{party color|Independent politician}}|1.25}}
}}
}}


===Initial MPs===
===Initial MPs===

{{New Zealand general election, 1943}}
<section begin="Electorate results" />The table below shows the results of the 1943 general election:<!-- The table is sorted alphabetically by electorate. -->

'''Key'''

{{Party index link|New Zealand Labour Party}}
{{Party index link|New Zealand National Party}}
{{Party index link|Democratic Labour Party (New Zealand)}}
{{Party index link|Real Democracy Movement}}
{{Party index link|Independent politician}}

{{NZ electorate result start|Electorate results for the 1943 New Zealand general election<ref name="General Election, 1943">{{cite web |title=The General Election, 1943 |url= http://www.atojs.natlib.govt.nz/cgi-bin/atojs?a=d&cl=search&d=AJHR1944-I.2.2.5.37 |publisher=[[National Library of New Zealand|National Library]] |access-date=2 January 2014 |pages=1–12 |year=1944}}</ref>
}}
|-
|colspan=8 style="background-color:#FFDEAD" | '''General electorates'''<!-- sort alphabetically by electorate -->
|-
{{NZ electorate result hold
|electorate = Auckland Central
|incumbent = [[Bill Parry (politician)|Bill Parry]]
|incumbent-party = New Zealand Labour Party
|majority = 4,769
|second = William George Stanley Swabey<ref name="Herald 13 Oct">{{cite news | title=Electoral | url= https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NZH19431013.2.49.6 | access-date=15 May 2017 | work=[[The New Zealand Herald]] | volume=80 | issue=24713 | date=13 October 1943 | page=5}}</ref>
|second-party = New Zealand National Party
}}
{{NZ electorate result hold
|electorate = Auckland East
|incumbent = [[Bill Schramm]]
|incumbent-party = New Zealand Labour Party
|majority = 962
|second = Harry Tom Merritt<ref name="Akld Star 7 Dec">{{cite news | title=Electoral | url= https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/AS19431207.2.103.4 | access-date=15 May 2017 | work=[[Auckland Star]] | volume=LXXIV | issue=290 | date=7 December 1943 | page=6}}</ref>
|second-party = New Zealand National Party
}}
{{NZ electorate result hold
|electorate = Auckland Suburbs
|incumbent = [[Rex Mason]]
|incumbent-party = New Zealand Labour Party
|majority = 3,028
|second = Thomas Augustus Bishop<ref name="Herald 13 Oct" />
|second-party = New Zealand National Party
}}
{{NZ electorate result hold
|electorate = Auckland West
|incumbent = [[Peter Carr (New Zealand politician)|Peter Carr]]
|incumbent-party = New Zealand Labour Party
|majority = 5,402
|second = [[John W. Kealy]]
|second-party = New Zealand National Party
}}
{{NZ electorate result hold
|electorate = Avon
|incumbent = [[Dan Sullivan (New Zealand politician)|Dan Sullivan]]
|incumbent-party = New Zealand Labour Party
|majority = 4,460
|second = James Neil Clarke<ref name="Press 12 Oct">{{cite news | title=Public Notices | url= https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/CHP19431012.2.6.6 | access-date=15 May 2017 | work=[[The Press]] | volume=LXXIX | issue=24076 | date=12 October 1943 | page=1}}</ref>
|second-party = New Zealand National Party
}}
{{NZ electorate result uncontested
|electorate = Awarua
|incumbent = [[James Hargest]]
|incumbent-party = New Zealand National Party
}}
{{NZ electorate result change
|electorate = Bay of Islands
|incumbent = [[Charles Boswell]]
|incumbent-party = New Zealand Labour Party
|winner = [[Sidney Walter Smith]]
|winner-party = New Zealand National Party
|majority = 1,276
|second = [[Charles Boswell]]
|second-party = New Zealand Labour Party
}}
{{NZ electorate result hold
|electorate = Bay of Plenty
|incumbent = [[Bill Sullivan (politician)|Bill Sullivan]]
|incumbent-party = New Zealand National Party
|majority = 1,679
|second = Walter William Jonasen<ref name="BoP 15 Oct">{{cite news |title=Public Notices |url= https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/BPB19431015.2.32.2 |access-date=16 May 2017 |work=Bay of Plenty Beacon | volume=7 |issue=15 |date=15 October 1943 |page=5}}</ref>
|second-party = New Zealand Labour Party
}}
{{NZ electorate result hold
|electorate = Buller
|incumbent = [[Paddy Webb]]
|incumbent-party = New Zealand Labour Party
|majority = 4,635
|second = Edward William Nicolaus
|second-party = New Zealand National Party
}}
{{NZ electorate result hold
|electorate = Central Otago
|incumbent = [[William Bodkin (New Zealand politician)|William Bodkin]]
|incumbent-party = New Zealand National Party
|majority = 2,723
|second = James McIndoe Mackay<ref>{{cite news | title=Declaration of Result of Poll for the Electoral District of Central Otago | url= https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/AHCOG19431013.2.14.2 | access-date=15 May 2017 | work=Alexandra Herald and Central Otago Gazette | date=13 October 1943 | page=4}}</ref>
|second-party = New Zealand Labour Party
}}
{{NZ electorate result hold
|electorate = Christchurch East
|incumbent = [[Mabel Howard]]
|incumbent-party = New Zealand Labour Party
|majority = 5,537
|second = Reginald Gilbert Brown<ref name="Press 12 Oct" />
|second-party = New Zealand National Party
}}
{{NZ electorate result hold
|electorate = Christchurch North
|incumbent = [[Sidney Holland]]
|incumbent-party = New Zealand National Party
|majority = 2,645
|second = [[George Manning (New Zealand politician)|George Manning]]<ref>{{DNZB|Sharfe|Jean|5m33|Manning, George|17 February 2010}}</ref>
|second-party = New Zealand Labour Party
}}
{{NZ electorate result hold
|electorate = Christchurch South
|incumbent = [[Robert Macfarlane (New Zealand politician)|Robert Macfarlane]]
|incumbent-party = New Zealand Labour Party
|majority = 4,416
|second = [[Ron Guthrey]]<ref name="Press 13 Oct">{{cite news | title=Public Notices | url= https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/CHP19431013.2.8.7 | access-date=15 May 2017 | work=[[The Press]] | volume=LXXIX | issue=24077 | date=13 October 1943 | page=1}}</ref>
|second-party = New Zealand National Party
}}
{{NZ electorate result hold
|electorate = Clutha
|incumbent = [[James Roy (politician)|James Roy]]
|incumbent-party = New Zealand National Party
|majority = 1,587
|second = Herbert Kerr Edie
|second-party = New Zealand Labour Party
}}
{{NZ electorate result hold
|electorate = Dunedin Central
|incumbent = [[Peter Neilson (politician born 1879)|Peter Nielson]]
|incumbent-party = New Zealand Labour Party
|majority = 2,155
|second = Leonard James Tobin Ireland
|second-party = New Zealand National Party
}}
{{NZ electorate result hold
|electorate = Dunedin North
|incumbent = [[Jim Munro (politician)|Jim Munro]]
|incumbent-party = New Zealand Labour Party
|majority = 2,798
|second = Alexander Cassie
|second-party = New Zealand National Party
}}
{{NZ electorate result hold
|electorate = Dunedin South
|incumbent = [[Fred Jones (New Zealand politician)|Fred Jones]]
|incumbent-party = New Zealand Labour Party
|majority = 3,061
|second = [[David Murdoch (politician)|David Murdoch]]
|second-party = New Zealand National Party
}}
{{NZ electorate result change
|electorate = Dunedin West
|incumbent = [[Gervan McMillan]]
|incumbent-party = New Zealand Labour Party
|winner = [[Phil Connolly]]
|winner-party = New Zealand Labour Party
|majority = 1,338
|second = Alexander Smith Falconer
|second-party = New Zealand National Party
}}
{{NZ electorate result hold
|electorate = Eden
|incumbent = [[Bill Anderton]]
|incumbent-party = New Zealand Labour Party
|majority = 14
|second = [[Wilfred Fortune]]
|second-party = New Zealand National Party
}}
{{NZ electorate result change
|electorate = Egmont
|incumbent = [[Charles Wilkinson (New Zealand politician)|Charles Wilkinson]]
|incumbent-party = Independent politician
|winner = [[Ernest Corbett]]
|winner-party = New Zealand National Party
|majority = 2,422
|second = [[Edwin Thoms Cox]]<ref>{{cite news |title=Labour Candidate for Egmont |url=https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/CHP19430809.2.54 |access-date=14 May 2017 |work=[[The Press]] |volume=LXXIX |issue=24021 |date=9 August 1943 |page=4}}</ref>
|second-party = New Zealand Labour Party
}}
{{NZ electorate result hold
|electorate = Franklin
|incumbent = [[Jack Massey (politician)|Jack Massey]]
|incumbent-party = New Zealand National Party
|majority = 3,285
|second = Aaron Best<ref name="Herald 14 Oct">{{cite news | title=Electoral | url= https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NZH19431014.2.43.5 | access-date=16 May 2017 | work=[[The New Zealand Herald]] | volume=80 | issue=24714 | date=14 October 1943 | page=6}}</ref><ref name="Labour Candidates">{{cite news |title=Labour Candidates |url=https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/EP19430728.2.14.3 |access-date=15 May 2017 |work=[[The Evening Post (New Zealand)|The Evening Post]] |volume=CXXXVI |issue=24 |date=28 July 1943 |page=3}}</ref>
|second-party = New Zealand Labour Party
}}
{{NZ electorate result hold
|electorate = Gisborne
|incumbent = [[David Coleman (New Zealand politician)|David Coleman]]
|incumbent-party = New Zealand Labour Party
|majority = 572
|second = [[Harry Barker (mayor)|Harry Barker]]<ref>{{DNZB|Milton-Tee|Ann|5b6|Harry Heaton Barker|2 January 2014}}</ref>
|second-party = New Zealand National Party
}}
{{NZ electorate result change
|electorate = Grey Lynn
|incumbent = [[John A. Lee]]
|incumbent-party = Democratic Labour Party (New Zealand)
|winner = [[Fred Hackett]]
|winner-party = New Zealand Labour Party
|majority = 6,059
|second = [[John A. Lee]]
|second-party = Democratic Labour Party (New Zealand)
}}
{{NZ electorate result change
|electorate = Hamilton
|incumbent = [[Charles Barrell]]
|incumbent-party = New Zealand Labour Party
|winner = [[Frank Findlay]]
|winner-party = New Zealand National Party
|majority = 454
|second = [[Charles Barrell]]
|second-party = New Zealand Labour Party
}}
|-
| [[Hauraki (New Zealand general electorate)|Hauraki]]
| style="background-color:{{party color|New Zealand National Party}};" |
| colspan=3 style="text-align:center;background-color:{{New Zealand National Party/meta/shading}};" | '''[[Andy Sutherland]]'''
| style="text-align:right;" | 2,723
| style="background-color:{{party color|New Zealand Labour Party}};" |
| style="text-align:center;" | Edmund Colin Nigel Robinson<ref name="Herald 14 Oct" />
|-
{{NZ electorate result hold
|electorate = Hawke's Bay
|incumbent = [[Ted Cullen]]
|incumbent-party = New Zealand Labour Party
|majority = 1,636
|second = Eric N. Pryor{{sfn|Gustafson|1986|p=382}}
|second-party = New Zealand National Party
}}
{{NZ electorate result change
|electorate = Hurunui
|incumbent = [[George Forbes (New Zealand politician)|George Forbes]]
|incumbent-party = New Zealand National Party
|winner = [[William Gillespie (New Zealand politician)|William Gillespie]]
|winner-party = New Zealand National Party
|majority = 1,566
|second = James William Morgan<ref name="Press 12 Oct" />
|second-party = New Zealand Labour Party
}}
{{NZ electorate result hold
|electorate = Hutt
|incumbent = [[Walter Nash]]
|incumbent-party = New Zealand Labour Party
|majority = 5,260
|second = John H. Hogan
|second-party = Real Democracy Movement
}}
{{NZ electorate result hold
|electorate = Invercargill
|incumbent = [[William Denham]]
|incumbent-party = New Zealand Labour Party
|majority = 987
|second = William Bell<ref>{{cite news |title=General Election |url=https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/AS19430624.2.88 |access-date=15 May 2017 |work=[[Auckland Star]] |volume=LXXIV |issue=148 |date=24 June 1943 |page=6}}</ref>
|second-party = New Zealand National Party
}}
{{NZ electorate result hold
|electorate = Kaiapoi
|incumbent = [[Morgan Williams (politician)|Morgan Williams]]
|incumbent-party = New Zealand Labour Party
|majority = 761
|second = Harold Overton<!-- full name William Harold Overton Q96588874; was mayor of Queenstown Borough (1927–1939) and then moved to Sandy Knolls in Selwyn District --><ref>{{cite news | title=Public Notices | url= https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/CHP19431012.2.6.7 | access-date=16 May 2017 | work=[[The Press]] | volume=LXXIX | issue=24076 | date=12 October 1943 | page=1}}</ref>
|second-party = New Zealand National Party
}}
{{NZ electorate result change
|electorate = Kaipara
|incumbent = [[Gordon Coates]]
|incumbent-party = Independent politician
|winner = [[Clifton Webb (politician)|Clifton Webb]]
|winner-party = Independent politician
|majority = 2,800
|second = [[John Stewart (New Zealand politician)|John Stewart]]<ref name="Herald 13 Oct" />
|second-party = New Zealand Labour Party
}}
{{NZ electorate result hold
|electorate = Lyttelton
|incumbent = [[Terry McCombs]]
|incumbent-party = New Zealand Labour Party
|majority = 1,374
|second = [[Ted Taylor (politician)|Ted Taylor]]<ref name="Press 13 Oct" />{{sfn|Gustafson|1986|p=387}}
|second-party = New Zealand National Party
}}
{{NZ electorate result change
|electorate = Manawatu
|incumbent = [[John Cobbe]]
|incumbent-party = New Zealand National Party
|winner = [[Matthew Oram]]
|winner-party = New Zealand National Party
|majority = 2,305
|second = William Henry Oliver{{refn|group=nb|Father of the historian [[W. H. Oliver]]<ref>{{cite web |title=William Henry Oliver |url=http://www.aucklandmuseum.com/war-memorial/online-cenotaph/record/C52177 |publisher=[[Auckland War Memorial Museum]] |access-date=2 October 2015}}</ref>}}
|second-party = New Zealand Labour Party
}}
{{NZ electorate result hold
|electorate = Marlborough
|incumbent = [[Ted Meachen]]
|incumbent-party = New Zealand Labour Party
|majority = 450
|second = [[Tom Shand]]
|second-party = New Zealand National Party
}}
{{NZ electorate result change
|electorate = Marsden
|incumbent = [[Jim Barclay (politician)|Jim Barclay]]
|incumbent-party = New Zealand Labour Party
|winner = [[Alfred Murdoch]]
|winner-party = New Zealand National Party
|majority = 1,006
|second = [[Jim Barclay (politician)|Jim Barclay]]
|second-party = New Zealand Labour Party
}}
{{NZ electorate result change
|electorate = Masterton
|incumbent = [[John Robertson (New Zealand politician, born 1875)|John Robertson]]
|incumbent-party = New Zealand Labour Party
|winner = [[Garnet Mackley]]
|winner-party = New Zealand National Party
|majority = 494
|second = [[John Robertson (New Zealand politician, born 1875)|John Robertson]]
|second-party = New Zealand Labour Party
}}
{{NZ electorate result uncontested
|electorate = Mataura
|incumbent = [[Tom Macdonald (politician)|Tom Macdonald]]
|incumbent-party = New Zealand National Party
}}
{{NZ electorate result change
|electorate = Mid-Canterbury
|incumbent = [[Mary Grigg]]
|incumbent-party = New Zealand National Party
|winner = [[Geoff Gerard (politician)|Geoff Gerard]]
|winner-party = New Zealand National Party
|majority = 634
|second = [[David Barnes (politician)|David Barnes]]<ref name="Press 13 Oct" />
|second-party = New Zealand Labour Party
}}
{{NZ electorate result hold
|electorate = Motueka
|incumbent = [[Jerry Skinner]]
|incumbent-party = New Zealand Labour Party
|majority = 301
|second = John Robert Haldane
|second-party = New Zealand National Party
}}
{{NZ electorate result change
|electorate = Napier
|incumbent = [[Bill Barnard]]
|incumbent-party = Democratic Labour Party (New Zealand)
|winner = [[Tommy Armstrong (New Zealand politician)|Tommy Armstrong]]
|winner-party = New Zealand Labour Party
|majority = 1,273
|second = Morris Spence<ref>{{cite news |title=General Election |url= https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/AS19430709.2.81 |access-date=16 May 2017 |work=[[Auckland Star]] |volume=LXXIV |issue=161 |date=9 July 1943 |page=4}}</ref>
|second-party = New Zealand National Party
}}
{{NZ electorate result hold
|electorate = Nelson
|incumbent = [[Harry Atmore]]
|incumbent-party = Independent politician
|majority = 191
|second = Frederick William Huggins<ref>{{cite news |title=Nelson Seat |url= https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/EP19430715.2.35 |access-date=16 May 2017 |work=[[The Evening Post (New Zealand)|The Evening Post]] |volume=CXXXVI |issue=13 |date=15 July 1943 |page=3}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |title=Obituary |url= https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/EP19451124.2.72 |access-date=16 May 2017 |work=[[The Evening Post (New Zealand)|The Evening Post]] |volume=CXL |issue=126 |date=24 November 1945 |page=3}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=Frederick William Huggins |url=https://www.nzwargraves.org.nz/casualties/frederick-william-huggins |publisher=New Zealand War Graves Project |access-date=16 May 2017}}</ref>
|second-party = New Zealand National Party
}}
{{NZ electorate result change
|electorate = New Plymouth
|incumbent = [[Fred Frost]]
|incumbent-party = New Zealand Labour Party
|winner = [[Ernest Aderman]]
|winner-party = New Zealand National Party
|majority = 1,276
|second = [[Fred Frost]]
|second-party = New Zealand Labour Party
}}
{{NZ electorate result hold
|electorate = Oamaru
|incumbent = [[Arnold Nordmeyer]]
|incumbent-party = New Zealand Labour Party
|majority = 125
|second = Thomas Ross Beatty
|second-party = New Zealand National Party
}}
{{NZ electorate result hold
|electorate = Onehunga
|incumbent = [[Arthur Osborne (politician)|Arthur Osborne]]
|incumbent-party = New Zealand Labour Party
|majority = 3,324
|second = [[John Park (architect)|John Park]]
|second-party = New Zealand National Party
}}
{{NZ electorate result hold
|electorate = Otahuhu
|incumbent = [[Charles Robert Petrie|Charles Petrie]]
|incumbent-party = New Zealand Labour Party
|majority = 464
|second = Gordon Hamilton<ref name="Herald 13 Oct" />
|second-party = New Zealand National Party
}}
{{NZ electorate result hold
|electorate = Otaki
|incumbent = [[Leonard Lowry]]
|incumbent-party = New Zealand Labour Party
|majority = 191
|second = [[Bert Cooksley]]
|second-party = New Zealand National Party
}}
{{NZ electorate result change
|electorate = Pahiatua
|incumbent = [[Alfred Ransom]]
|incumbent-party = New Zealand National Party
|winner = [[Keith Holyoake]]
|winner-party = New Zealand National Party
|majority = 1,825
|second = George Anders Hansen
|second-party = New Zealand Labour Party
}}
{{NZ electorate result hold
|electorate = Palmerston North
|incumbent = [[Joe Hodgens]]
|incumbent-party = New Zealand Labour Party
|majority = 212
|second = [[Gus Mansford]]
|second-party = Independent politician
}}
{{NZ electorate result change
|electorate = Patea
|incumbent = [[Harold Dickie]]
|incumbent-party = New Zealand National Party
|winner = [[William Sheat]]
|winner-party = New Zealand National Party
|majority = 912
|second = Alex Langslow<ref name="Labour Candidates" />
|second-party = New Zealand Labour Party
}}
{{NZ electorate result change
|electorate = Raglan
|incumbent = [[Lee Martin (politician)|Lee Martin]]
|incumbent-party = New Zealand Labour Party
|winner = [[Robert Coulter (New Zealand politician)|Robert Coulter]]
|winner-party = New Zealand Labour Party
|majority = 108
|second = Robert James Glasgow<ref name="Herald 11 Dec">{{cite news | title=Electoral | url= https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NZH19431211.2.44.1 | access-date=16 May 2017 | work=[[The New Zealand Herald]] | volume=80 | issue=24764 | date=11 December 1943 | page=6}}</ref>
|second-party = New Zealand National Party
}}
{{NZ electorate result hold
|electorate = Rangitikei
|incumbent = [[Edward Gordon (politician)|Edward Gordon]]
|incumbent-party = New Zealand National Party
|majority = 1,612
|second = Robert Freeman<ref name="Labour Candidates" />
|second-party = New Zealand Labour Party
}}
{{NZ electorate result change
|electorate = Remuera
|incumbent = [[Bill Endean]]
|incumbent-party = New Zealand National Party
|winner = [[Ronald Algie]]
|winner-party = New Zealand National Party
|majority = 4,183
|second = [[Martyn Finlay]]
|second-party = New Zealand Labour Party
}}
{{NZ electorate result change
|electorate = Riccarton
|incumbent = [[Bert Kyle]]
|incumbent-party = Independent politician
|winner = [[Jack Watts (politician)|Jack Watts]]
|winner-party = New Zealand National Party
|majority = 1,322
|second = Harold Denton<ref name="Press 12 Oct" />
|second-party = New Zealand Labour Party
}}
{{NZ electorate result hold
|electorate = Roskill
|incumbent = [[Arthur Shapton Richards|Arthur Richards]]
|incumbent-party = New Zealand Labour Party
|majority = 962
|second = [[Roy McElroy]]{{sfn|Gustafson|1986|p=375}}
|second-party = New Zealand National Party
}}
{{NZ electorate result change
|electorate = Rotorua
|incumbent = [[Alexander Moncur]]
|incumbent-party = New Zealand Labour Party
|winner = [[Geoffrey Sim]]
|winner-party = New Zealand National Party
|majority = 715
|second = [[Alexander Moncur]]<ref name="Herald 14 Oct" />
|second-party = New Zealand Labour Party
}}
{{NZ electorate result hold
|electorate = Stratford
|incumbent = [[William Polson]]
|incumbent-party = New Zealand National Party
|majority = 2,059
|second = Brian Richmond<ref>{{cite news | title=General Election | url= https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/CHP19430702.2.54 | access-date=16 May 2017 | work=[[The Press]] | volume=LXXIX | issue=23989 | date=2 July 1943 | page=6}}</ref>
|second-party = New Zealand Labour Party
}}
{{NZ electorate result hold
|electorate = Tauranga
|incumbent = [[Frederick Doidge]]
|incumbent-party = New Zealand National Party
|majority = 3,625
|second = Dudley A. Hill<ref name="BoP 15 Oct" />
|second-party = New Zealand Labour Party
}}
{{NZ electorate result hold
|electorate = Temuka
|incumbent = [[Jack Acland]]
|incumbent-party = New Zealand National Party
|majority = 1,690
|second = George Harris<ref>{{cite news | title=General Election | url= https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/CHP19430623.2.44 | access-date=16 May 2017 | work=[[The Press]] | volume=LXXIX | issue=23981 | date=23 June 1943 | page=4}}</ref>
|second-party = New Zealand Labour Party
}}
{{NZ electorate result hold
|electorate = Thames
|incumbent = [[Jim Thorn]]
|incumbent-party = New Zealand Labour Party
|majority = 935
|second = William Alexander Clark<ref name="Herald 11 Dec" />
|second-party = New Zealand National Party
}}
{{NZ electorate result hold
|electorate = Timaru
|incumbent = [[Clyde Carr]]
|incumbent-party = New Zealand Labour Party
|majority = 1,701
|second = Jack Satterthwaite<ref>{{cite news | title=Timaru Electorate | url= https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/CHP19430507.2.48 | access-date=16 May 2017 | work=[[The Press]] | volume=LXXIX | issue=23941 | date=7 May 1943 | page=6}}</ref>
|second-party = New Zealand National Party
}}
{{NZ electorate result hold
|electorate = Waikato
|incumbent = [[Stan Goosman]]
|incumbent-party = New Zealand National Party
|majority = 4,615
|second = Charles Croall<ref>{{cite news | title=Candidates Chosen | url= https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/AS19430728.2.44.2 | access-date=16 May 2017 | work=[[Auckland Star]] | volume=LXXIV | issue=177 | date=28 July 1943 | page=4}}</ref>
|second-party = New Zealand Labour Party
}}
{{NZ electorate result hold
|electorate = Waimarino
|incumbent = [[Frank Langstone]]
|incumbent-party = New Zealand Labour Party
|majority = 1,404
|second = Roger Oswald Montgomerie
|second-party = New Zealand National Party
}}
{{NZ electorate result hold
|electorate = Waipawa
|incumbent = [[Cyril Harker]]
|incumbent-party = New Zealand National Party
|majority = 2,091
|second = Archie Low<ref>{{cite news |title=General Election |url=http://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/cgi-bin/paperspast?a=d&cl=search&d=EP19430825.2.14 |access-date=16 May 2017 |work=[[The Evening Post (New Zealand)|The Evening Post]] |volume=CXXXVI |issue=48 |date=25 August 1943 |page=3}}</ref>
|second-part
|second-party = New Zealand Labour Party
}}
{{NZ electorate result hold
|electorate = Wairarapa
|incumbent = [[Ben Roberts (politician)|Ben Roberts]]
|incumbent-party = New Zealand Labour Party
|majority = 151
|second = [[Jimmy Maher (politician)|Jimmy Maher]]
|second-party = New Zealand National Party
}}
{{NZ electorate result hold
|electorate = Waitaki
|incumbent = [[David Campbell Kidd]]
|incumbent-party = New Zealand National Party
|majority = 821
|second = John S. Adams
|second-party = New Zealand Labour Party
}}
{{NZ electorate result change
|electorate = Waitemata
|incumbent = [[Mary Dreaver]]
|incumbent-party = New Zealand Labour Party
|winner = [[Henry Thorne Morton]]
|winner-party = New Zealand National Party
|majority = 321
|second = [[Mary Dreaver]]
|second-party = New Zealand Labour Party
}}
{{NZ electorate result hold
|electorate = Waitomo
|incumbent = [[Walter Broadfoot]]
|incumbent-party = New Zealand National Party
|majority = 1,881
|second = [[Ben Waters]]
|second-party = New Zealand Labour Party
}}
{{NZ electorate result hold
|electorate = Wallace
|incumbent = [[Adam Hamilton]]
|incumbent-party = New Zealand National Party
|majority = 1,607
|second = John James Lynch<ref>{{cite news |title=Declaration of Result of Poll for the Electoral District of Wallace |url= https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/LWM19431007.2.35.1 |access-date=16 May 2017 |work=Lake Wakatip Mail |issue=4637 |date=7 October 1943 |page=5}}</ref>
|second-party = New Zealand Labour Party
}}
{{NZ electorate result hold
|electorate = Wanganui
|incumbent = [[Joe Cotterill]]
|incumbent-party = New Zealand Labour Party
|majority = 2,437
|second = Eric James Kirk
|second-party = New Zealand National Party
}}
{{NZ electorate result hold
|electorate = Wellington Central
|incumbent = [[Peter Fraser]]
|incumbent-party = New Zealand Labour Party
|majority = 1,206
|second = [[Will Appleton]]
|second-party = New Zealand National Party
}}
{{NZ electorate result hold
|electorate = Wellington East
|incumbent = [[Bob Semple]]
|incumbent-party = New Zealand Labour Party
|majority = 2,588
|second = Len Jacobsen
|second-party = New Zealand National Party
}}
{{NZ electorate result hold
|electorate = Wellington North
|incumbent = [[Charles Chapman (New Zealand politician)|Charles Chapman]]
|incumbent-party = New Zealand Labour Party
|majority = 1,897
|second = [[Thomas Hislop (mayor)|Thomas Hislop]]
|second-party = New Zealand National Party
}}
{{NZ electorate result hold
|electorate = Wellington South
|incumbent = [[Robert McKeen]]
|incumbent-party = New Zealand Labour Party
|majority = 4,156
|second = [[Ernest Toop]]
|second-party = New Zealand National Party
}}
{{NZ electorate result hold
|electorate = Wellington Suburbs
|incumbent = [[Harry Combs (politician)|Harry Combs]]
|incumbent-party = New Zealand Labour Party
|majority = 2,581
|second = [[Bill Veitch]]
|second-party = New Zealand National Party
}}
{{NZ electorate result change
|electorate = Wellington West
|incumbent = [[Catherine Stewart]]
|incumbent-party = New Zealand Labour Party
|winner = [[Charles Bowden (politician)|Charles Bowden]]
|winner-party = New Zealand National Party
|majority = 1,183
|second = [[Catherine Stewart]]
|second-party = New Zealand Labour Party
}}
{{NZ electorate result hold
|electorate = Westland
|incumbent = [[James O'Brien (New Zealand politician)|James O'Brien]]
|incumbent-party = New Zealand Labour Party
|majority = 2,600
|second = Frank Chivers<ref>{{cite news |title=General Election |url= https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/cgi-bin/paperspast?a=d&cl=search&d=AS19430827.2.70 |access-date=3 November 2014 |work=[[Auckland Star]] |volume=LXXIV |issue=203 |date=27 August 1943 |page=4}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=Chivers, E Frank, DSM, MID |url= http://navymuseum.co.nz/medals/index.php/78-display-numbers/85-chivers-e-frank-dsm-mid |publisher=[[Torpedo Bay Navy Museum]] |access-date=3 November 2014}}</ref>
|second-party = New Zealand National Party
}}
|-
|colspan=8 style="background-color:#FFDEAD" | '''[[Māori electorates]]'''<!-- sort alphabetically by electorate -->
|-
{{NZ electorate result change
|electorate = Eastern Maori
|incumbent = [[Āpirana Ngata]]
|incumbent-party = New Zealand National Party
|winner = [[Tiaki Omana]]
|winner-party = New Zealand Labour Party
|majority = 240
|second = Āpirana Ngata
|second-party = New Zealand National Party
}}
{{NZ electorate result change
|electorate = Northern Maori
|incumbent = [[Paraire Karaka Paikea]]
|incumbent-party = New Zealand Labour Party
|winner = [[Tapihana Paraire Paikea]]
|winner-party = New Zealand Labour Party
|majority = 2,438
|second = Eru Moka Pou<ref name="Akld Star 7 Dec" />
|second-party = New Zealand National Party
}}
{{NZ electorate result hold
|electorate = Southern Maori
|incumbent = [[Eruera Tirikatene]]
|incumbent-party = New Zealand Labour Party
|majority = 558
|second = John Piuraki Tikao-Barrett
|second-party = Real Democracy Movement
}}
{{NZ electorate result hold
|electorate = Western Maori
|incumbent = [[Toko Ratana]]
|incumbent-party = New Zealand Labour Party
|majority = 3,309
|second = [[Pei Te Hurinui Jones]]
|second-party = Independent politician
}}
|}
Table footnotes:
{{reflist|group=nb}}<section end="Electorate results" />


==Notes==
==Notes==
{{Reflist|30em}}
{{Reflist}}

==External links==
*{{cite web|url= https://atojs.natlib.govt.nz/cgi-bin/atojs?a=d&cl=search&d=AJHR1944-I.2.2.5.40&srpos=5&e=-------10--1------0General+Election%2c+1941-- |title= 1943 General Election, Reports of Special Returning Officers |publisher= National Library |date= 2022}}


==References==
==References==
*{{cite book | ref=harv | last=Atkinson | first=Neill | year=2003 | title=Adventures in Democracy: A History of the Vote in New Zealand | publisher=University of Otago Press | location=Dunedin}}
*{{cite book | last=Atkinson | first=Neill | year=2003 | title=Adventures in Democracy: A History of the Vote in New Zealand | publisher=University of Otago Press | location=Dunedin}}
*{{cite book | ref=harv |last=Bassett |authorlink=Michael Bassett |first= Michael |title= Tomorrow Comes the Song: A life of Peter Fraser |year= 2000 |publisher= Penguin |location= Auckland |isbn= 0-14-029793-6 |oclc=}}
*{{cite book |last=Bassett |author-link=Michael Bassett |first= Michael |title= Tomorrow Comes the Song: A life of Peter Fraser |year= 2000 |publisher=Penguin |location= Auckland |isbn= 0-14-029793-6 }}
*{{cite book | ref=harv |last = Gustafson |first = Barry |authorlink = Barry Gustafson |title = The First 50 Years : A History of the New Zealand National Party |year = 1986 |publisher = Reed Methuen |location = Auckland |isbn = 0-474-00177-6}}
*{{cite book |last = Gustafson |first = Barry |author-link = Barry Gustafson |title = The First 50 Years : A History of the New Zealand National Party |year = 1986 |publisher = Reed Methuen |location = Auckland |isbn = 0-474-00177-6}}
*{{cite book | ref=harv |last1=King |first1=Michael |authorlink1=Michael King |title=Penguin History of New Zealand |date=2003 |publisher=[[Penguin Books]] |isbn=0 14 301867 1}}
*{{cite book |last1=King |first1=Michael |author-link1=Michael King (historian) |title=Penguin History of New Zealand |date=2003 |publisher=[[Penguin Books]] |isbn=0-14-301867-1}}
*{{cite book | ref=harv |last= Lipson |first= Leslie |title= The Politics of Equality: New Zealand’s Adventures in Democracy |origyear= 1948 |year= 2011 |publisher= Victoria University Press |location= Wellington |isbn= 978-0-86473-646-8 |oclc=}}
*{{cite book |last= Lipson |first= Leslie |title= The Politics of Equality: New Zealand's Adventures in Democracy |orig-year= 1948 |year= 2011 |publisher=Victoria University Press |location= Wellington |isbn= 978-0-86473-646-8 }}
*{{cite book | ref=harv |first = Robert Stephen |last = Milne |title = Political Parties in New Zealand |place = [[Oxford]], England |publisher = [[Clarendon Press]] |year = 1966}}
*{{cite book |first = Robert Stephen |last = Milne |title = Political Parties in New Zealand | url=https://archive.org/details/politicalparties0000miln | url-access=registration |place = [[Oxford]], England |publisher = [[Clarendon Press]] |year = 1966}}
*{{cite book |ref= harv |last= Wilson |first= James Oakley |title= New Zealand Parliamentary Record, 1840–1984 |edition= 4th |origyear=First published in 1913 |year= 1985 |publisher= V.R. Ward, Govt. Printer |location= Wellington |oclc= 154283103}}
*{{cite book |last= Wilson |first= James Oakley |title= New Zealand Parliamentary Record, 1840–1984 |edition= 4th |orig-year=First published in 1913 |year= 1985 |publisher=V.R. Ward, Govt. Printer |location= Wellington |oclc= 154283103}}
*{{cite book | ref=harv |last= Wood |first= G. A. |title= Ministers and Members in the New Zealand Parliament |edition= 2 |origyear= First ed. published 1987 |year= 1996 |publisher= University of Otago Press |location= Dunedin |isbn= 1-877133-00-0}}
*{{cite book |last= Wood |first= G. A. |title= Ministers and Members in the New Zealand Parliament |edition= 2 |orig-year= First ed. published 1987 |year= 1996 |publisher=University of Otago Press |location= Dunedin |isbn= 1-877133-00-0}}


{{New Zealand elections}}
{{New Zealand elections}}


[[Category:New Zealand general election, 1943]]
[[Category:1943 New Zealand general election| ]]
[[Category:February 1943 events in New Zealand]]

Latest revision as of 03:14, 9 June 2024

1943 New Zealand general election

← 1938 24 (Māori) & 25 September (general) 1943 1946 →

All 80 seats in the New Zealand Parliament
41 seats were needed for a majority
  First party Second party
 
Leader Peter Fraser Sidney Holland
Party Labour National
Leader since 4 April 1940 26 November 1940
Leader's seat Wellington Central Christchurch North
Last election 53 seats, 55.8% 25 seats, 40.3%
Seats won 45 34
Seat change Decrease 8 Increase 9
Popular vote 447,919 402,887
Percentage 47.6% 42.8%
Swing Decrease 8.2% Increase 2.5%

Results of the election.

Prime Minister before election

Peter Fraser
Labour

Subsequent Prime Minister

Peter Fraser
Labour

The 1943 New Zealand general election was a nationwide vote to determine the shape of the New Zealand Parliament's 27th term. With the onset of World War II, elections were initially postponed, but it was eventually decided to hold a general election in September 1943, around two years after it would normally have occurred. The election saw the governing Labour Party re-elected by a comfortable margin, although the party nevertheless lost considerable ground to the expanding National Party.

Background

[edit]

The Labour Party had formed its first government after its resounding victory in the 1935 elections and had been re-elected by a substantial margin in the 1938 elections. Michael Joseph Savage, the first Labour Prime Minister, died in 1940; he was replaced by Peter Fraser, who was widely viewed as competent even if he was less popular than Savage. In the same year as Fraser took power, however, the opposition National Party had replaced the ineffectual Adam Hamilton with Sidney Holland, and was beginning to overcome the internal divisions that had plagued Hamilton's time as leader.

As World War II continued, the issues surrounding it naturally came to dominate political debate. Shortages appeared, prompting a certain amount of dissatisfaction with the government. The matter of conscription was also contentious — although both Labour and National supported it, many traditional followers of Labour were angry at their party's stance. Many early Labour leaders, including Fraser, had been jailed for opposing conscription in World War I, and were branded hypocrites for later introducing it; Fraser justified his change of position by saying that World War I was a pointless war but that World War II was necessary. A faction of Labour, dissatisfied with the mainstream party's economic and conscription policies, followed dissident MP John A. Lee to his new Democratic Labour Party.

A general election was due to be held in 1941, but Fraser, who held a tight rein over the coalition war cabinet, persuaded Parliament to postpone it due to the war.[1]

MPs retiring in 1943

[edit]

Five National MPs, two Labour MPs and two independent MPs intended to retire at the end of the Parliament.

Party Name Electorate
Labour Gervan McMillan Dunedin West
Lee Martin Raglan
National John Cobbe Manawatu
Harold Dickie Patea
George Forbes Hurunui
Mary Grigg Mid-Canterbury
Alfred Ransom Pahiatua
Independent Bert Kyle Riccarton
Charles Wilkinson Egmont

Bill Endean also left parliament at the election. He intended to stand again in Remuera but was deselected as a candidate by the National Party.[2]

By-elections

[edit]

During April and May 1943, there were three deaths of sitting members:

This would have required three by-elections in a year where the government was planning to hold a general election, and in fact, the writ for the Northern Maori by-election was issued on 19 May. On 11 June, the government announced that a general election would be held in September, and at the same time they introduced legislation that postponed the three by-elections.[6] The By-elections Postponement Act 1943 [7] was passed, and amongst other things it revoked the writ issued for the Northern Maori by-election. This was the first time that legislation had been used to postpone by-elections (it happened once more in 1969).[8]

The election

[edit]

The date for the main 1943 election was 25 September, a Saturday. The election to the four Māori electorates was held the day before. 1,021,034 civilians and an uncertain number of serving military personnel were registered to vote — special legislation provided voting rights to all serving members of the armed forces regardless of age, and they voted over several days prior to 25 September.[9][10] Among the civilian population, there was a turnout of 82.8%. The number of seats in Parliament was 80, a number that had been fixed since 1902.[9]

There were three minor movements participating with 45 candidates: the People's Movement or Independent People's Group (25), the Real Democracy Movement (17) and the Fighting Forces League (3). However these groups got only 12,867 votes (provisional count: PM or IPG 7,389 (0.89%); RDM 4,421 (0.53%); others or FFL 1,057 (0.13%)).[11] Two of the three Fighting Forces League candidates were also supported by the Real Democracy Movement,[12] which had been formed by the Social Credit Association.

Two seats were uncontested: Awarua and Matarura. Both seats were held for the National Party by serving officers; James Hargest (Awarua) was interned in Switzerland, and Tom Macdonald (Mataura) had just been invalided home.[13] Labour did not contest those two electorates or Nelson where Harry Atmore stood. National did not contest three electorates: Kaipara and Palmerston North where Independent Nationalists stood, or Buller. 1943 was the last general election when some candidates were elected unopposed.[14]

With seamen's and servicemen's votes taking time to come in, it took until mid-October before all results were finalised. Initially, the outcome in at least ten electorates was in doubt: Oamaru, Eden, Raglan, New Plymouth, Otaki, Wairarapa, Waitemata, Hamilton, Nelson, and Motueka.[15] In its 27 September edition, The New Zealand Herald posted profiles of new members of parliament. This included National's T. R. Beatty, a building contractor from Oamaru who had supposedly beaten Arnold Nordmeyer, a sitting cabinet minister.[16] In initial results, Beatty had a majority of just six votes,[17] but incumbents had strong support by military staff,[18] and Nordmeyer had a final majority of 125 votes.[19]

Election results

[edit]
The leaders of National and Labour, plus the 24 new MPs following the 1943 general election

The 1943 election saw the governing Labour Party retain office by a ten-seat margin, winning forty-five seats to the National Party's thirty-four, with one independent. The popular vote was considerably closer — Labour won 47.6%, while National won 42.8%. Holland was stunned by the result, and called for a Commission of Inquiry to look at the servicemens' vote, but was answered by a report from the Chief Electoral Officer. The Labour vote dropped, particularly in rural areas where the now more prosperous farmers returned to their normal political allegiance. There were strikes by the miners, and resentment at wartime restrictions. Lee's "Democratic Soldier Labour" party took votes in closely contested seats, and there was a "vast and weird variety of miscellaneous candidates under strange labels". However the forces vote favoured both Labour and Democratic Soldier Labour, see table below. And 22 seats were won on a minority vote. [20]

On the morning of election day, overseas counts from London, Ottawa and the Middle East indicated a majority for Labour, but domestic results coming in during the evening suggested to several government officials and even to Walter Nash thal Labour would lose. By 10.30 pm only 35 of the 80 seats were certain for Labour, with Barclay (Marsden) defeated and even Nordmeyer (Oamaru) uncertain. But with 73,000 servicemens' votes that came in during the day, Lowry (Otaki), Hodgens (Palmerston North) and Roberts (Wairarapa) scraped in. Over subsequent days with 60,000 special votes plus over 20,000 more servicemens' votes, both Nordmeyer and Anderton (Eden) also scraped in. Fraser, who had campaigned among the troops, quipped that it was not only North Africa that the Second Division had saved.[21][22] By 7 October, National's lead in four seats had been overturned by the services votes,[23] and by 12 October, it was apparent that the result in six seats (Eden, Nelson, Oamaru, Otaki, Palmerston North and Wairarapa) had been overturned by the services vote.[24]

John A. Lee's new Democratic Labour Party won only 4.3% of the vote, and no seats. Bill Barnard and Colin Scrimgeour were formerly on the Labour left. Barnard had left the Labour Party with John A. Lee but had fallen out with him and left Lee's Democratic Labour Party, standing as an independent. Scrimgeour stood as an independent against Prime Minister Peter Fraser in Wellington Central and polled well, reducing Fraser's majority so that Fraser only sneaked back on a minority vote.

Albert Davy the organiser of the Independent People's Group (IPG) or People's Movement complained that the election was decided on "strictly party" lines, and said that the effect of the Democratic Labour Party standing was to give six seats to the National Party. [25]

Two defeated Labour MPs, James Barclay and Charles Boswell, were appointed to diplomatic posts in Australia and Russia, respectively.

The election was also notable for the defeat of Āpirana Ngata a renowned Māori statesman and member for Eastern Maori after 38 years in parliament, by Rātana–Labour candidate Tiaki Omana. Labour now held all four Māori electorates and would continue to do so until 1993.

One independent was re-elected: Harry Atmore from Nelson — this was the last electoral victory by a candidate not from the major parties until the 1966 election. Atmore had the tactical support of Labour who (as in 1935 and 1938) did not stand a candidate against him, and he generally voted with Labour.[26] The slight margin to National in Nelson on civilian votes was reversed by the service votes.[27]

Party standings

[edit]
Election results
Party Candidates Votes Percentage Seats won change
Labour 77 447,919 47.56 45 -8
National 77 402,887 42.78 34 +9
Democratic Labour 54 40,443 4.29 0 ±0
People's Movement 25 7,389 0.89 0 ±0
Real Democracy 25 4,421 0.53 0 ±0
Independents 38 38,789 3.95 1 -1
Total 291 941,828 80

Votes summary

[edit]
Popular Vote
Labour
47.60%
National
42.80%
Democratic Labour
4.30%
Independent
3.90%
Others
1.50%
Parliament seats
Labour
56.25%
National
42.50%
Independent
1.25%

Initial MPs

[edit]

The table below shows the results of the 1943 general election:

Key

  Labour   National   Democratic Labour   Real Democracy   Independent

Electorate results for the 1943 New Zealand general election[19]
Electorate Incumbent Winner Majority Runner up
General electorates
Auckland Central Bill Parry 4,769 William George Stanley Swabey[28]
Auckland East Bill Schramm 962 Harry Tom Merritt[29]
Auckland Suburbs Rex Mason 3,028 Thomas Augustus Bishop[28]
Auckland West Peter Carr 5,402 John W. Kealy
Avon Dan Sullivan 4,460 James Neil Clarke[30]
Awarua James Hargest Uncontested
Bay of Islands Charles Boswell Sidney Walter Smith 1,276 Charles Boswell
Bay of Plenty Bill Sullivan 1,679 Walter William Jonasen[31]
Buller Paddy Webb 4,635 Edward William Nicolaus
Central Otago William Bodkin 2,723 James McIndoe Mackay[32]
Christchurch East Mabel Howard 5,537 Reginald Gilbert Brown[30]
Christchurch North Sidney Holland 2,645 George Manning[33]
Christchurch South Robert Macfarlane 4,416 Ron Guthrey[34]
Clutha James Roy 1,587 Herbert Kerr Edie
Dunedin Central Peter Nielson 2,155 Leonard James Tobin Ireland
Dunedin North Jim Munro 2,798 Alexander Cassie
Dunedin South Fred Jones 3,061 David Murdoch
Dunedin West Gervan McMillan Phil Connolly 1,338 Alexander Smith Falconer
Eden Bill Anderton 14 Wilfred Fortune
Egmont Charles Wilkinson Ernest Corbett 2,422 Edwin Thoms Cox[35]
Franklin Jack Massey 3,285 Aaron Best[36][37]
Gisborne David Coleman 572 Harry Barker[38]
Grey Lynn John A. Lee Fred Hackett 6,059 John A. Lee
Hamilton Charles Barrell Frank Findlay 454 Charles Barrell
Hauraki Andy Sutherland 2,723 Edmund Colin Nigel Robinson[36]
Hawke's Bay Ted Cullen 1,636 Eric N. Pryor[39]
Hurunui George Forbes William Gillespie 1,566 James William Morgan[30]
Hutt Walter Nash 5,260 John H. Hogan
Invercargill William Denham 987 William Bell[40]
Kaiapoi Morgan Williams 761 Harold Overton[41]
Kaipara Gordon Coates Clifton Webb 2,800 John Stewart[28]
Lyttelton Terry McCombs 1,374 Ted Taylor[34][42]
Manawatu John Cobbe Matthew Oram 2,305 William Henry Oliver[nb 1]
Marlborough Ted Meachen 450 Tom Shand
Marsden Jim Barclay Alfred Murdoch 1,006 Jim Barclay
Masterton John Robertson Garnet Mackley 494 John Robertson
Mataura Tom Macdonald Uncontested
Mid-Canterbury Mary Grigg Geoff Gerard 634 David Barnes[34]
Motueka Jerry Skinner 301 John Robert Haldane
Napier Bill Barnard Tommy Armstrong 1,273 Morris Spence[44]
Nelson Harry Atmore 191 Frederick William Huggins[45][46][47]
New Plymouth Fred Frost Ernest Aderman 1,276 Fred Frost
Oamaru Arnold Nordmeyer 125 Thomas Ross Beatty
Onehunga Arthur Osborne 3,324 John Park
Otahuhu Charles Petrie 464 Gordon Hamilton[28]
Otaki Leonard Lowry 191 Bert Cooksley
Pahiatua Alfred Ransom Keith Holyoake 1,825 George Anders Hansen
Palmerston North Joe Hodgens 212 Gus Mansford
Patea Harold Dickie William Sheat 912 Alex Langslow[37]
Raglan Lee Martin Robert Coulter 108 Robert James Glasgow[48]
Rangitikei Edward Gordon 1,612 Robert Freeman[37]
Remuera Bill Endean Ronald Algie 4,183 Martyn Finlay
Riccarton Bert Kyle Jack Watts 1,322 Harold Denton[30]
Roskill Arthur Richards 962 Roy McElroy[49]
Rotorua Alexander Moncur Geoffrey Sim 715 Alexander Moncur[36]
Stratford William Polson 2,059 Brian Richmond[50]
Tauranga Frederick Doidge 3,625 Dudley A. Hill[31]
Temuka Jack Acland 1,690 George Harris[51]
Thames Jim Thorn 935 William Alexander Clark[48]
Timaru Clyde Carr 1,701 Jack Satterthwaite[52]
Waikato Stan Goosman 4,615 Charles Croall[53]
Waimarino Frank Langstone 1,404 Roger Oswald Montgomerie
Waipawa Cyril Harker 2,091 Archie Low[54]
Wairarapa Ben Roberts 151 Jimmy Maher
Waitaki David Campbell Kidd 821 John S. Adams
Waitemata Mary Dreaver Henry Thorne Morton 321 Mary Dreaver
Waitomo Walter Broadfoot 1,881 Ben Waters
Wallace Adam Hamilton 1,607 John James Lynch[55]
Wanganui Joe Cotterill 2,437 Eric James Kirk
Wellington Central Peter Fraser 1,206 Will Appleton
Wellington East Bob Semple 2,588 Len Jacobsen
Wellington North Charles Chapman 1,897 Thomas Hislop
Wellington South Robert McKeen 4,156 Ernest Toop
Wellington Suburbs Harry Combs 2,581 Bill Veitch
Wellington West Catherine Stewart Charles Bowden 1,183 Catherine Stewart
Westland James O'Brien 2,600 Frank Chivers[56][57]
Māori electorates
Eastern Maori Āpirana Ngata Tiaki Omana 240 Āpirana Ngata
Northern Maori Paraire Karaka Paikea Tapihana Paraire Paikea 2,438 Eru Moka Pou[29]
Southern Maori Eruera Tirikatene 558 John Piuraki Tikao-Barrett
Western Maori Toko Ratana 3,309 Pei Te Hurinui Jones

Table footnotes:

  1. ^ Father of the historian W. H. Oliver[43]

Notes

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  1. ^ King 2003, pp. 395f.
  2. ^ Gustafson 1986, p. 235.
  3. ^ Wilson 1985, p. 225.
  4. ^ Wilson 1985, p. 228.
  5. ^ Wilson 1985, p. 189.
  6. ^ "Early Election". The New Zealand Herald. Vol. 80, no. 24607. 11 June 1943. p. 2. Retrieved 16 May 2017.
  7. ^ "By-elections Postponement Act 19431". New Zealand Law online.
  8. ^ "By-elections Postponement Act 1943 (7 GEO VI 1943 No 7)". Parliamentary Counsel Office. Retrieved 16 May 2017.
  9. ^ a b "General elections 1853–2005 - dates & turnout". Elections New Zealand. Archived from the original on 9 August 2013. Retrieved 12 January 2011.
  10. ^ Wood 1996, p. 108.
  11. ^ "Party Support: Results analysed". The New Zealand Herald. 27 September 1943 – via Papers Past.
  12. ^ "Election Today". The New Zealand Herald. 25 September 1943.
  13. ^ "To-Morrow's Election". Bay of Plenty Beacon. Vol. 7, no. 9. 24 September 1943. p. 4. Retrieved 28 August 2013.
  14. ^ Wilson 1985, pp. 285–286.
  15. ^ "Ten in Doubt". Auckland Star. Vol. LXXIV, no. 230. 28 September 1943. p. 4. Retrieved 16 May 2017.
  16. ^ "The New Parliament". The New Zealand Herald. Vol. 80, no. 24699. 27 September 1943. p. 3. Retrieved 16 May 2017.
  17. ^ "Not Definite". The New Zealand Herald. Vol. 80, no. 24699. 27 September 1943. p. 4. Retrieved 16 May 2017.
  18. ^ "The Election". The Press. Vol. LXXIX, no. 24082. 19 October 1943. p. 6. Retrieved 16 May 2017.
  19. ^ a b "The General Election, 1943". National Library. 1944. pp. 1–12. Retrieved 2 January 2014.
  20. ^ Lipson 2011, p. 218-19.
  21. ^ Atkinson 2003, p. 154.
  22. ^ Bassett 2000, p. ?.
  23. ^ "Turned the Scales: Servicemen's Votes". Papers Past. 7 October 1943.
  24. ^ "Election Result: State of Parties". Papers Past. 12 October 1943.
  25. ^ "On Party Lines: Mr Davys' analysis". Papers Past. 27 September 1943.
  26. ^ Milne 1966, p. 76.
  27. ^ "Big Influence: Service votes". Papers Past. 7 October 1943.
  28. ^ a b c d "Electoral". The New Zealand Herald. Vol. 80, no. 24713. 13 October 1943. p. 5. Retrieved 15 May 2017.
  29. ^ a b "Electoral". Auckland Star. Vol. LXXIV, no. 290. 7 December 1943. p. 6. Retrieved 15 May 2017.
  30. ^ a b c d "Public Notices". The Press. Vol. LXXIX, no. 24076. 12 October 1943. p. 1. Retrieved 15 May 2017.
  31. ^ a b "Public Notices". Bay of Plenty Beacon. Vol. 7, no. 15. 15 October 1943. p. 5. Retrieved 16 May 2017.
  32. ^ "Declaration of Result of Poll for the Electoral District of Central Otago". Alexandra Herald and Central Otago Gazette. 13 October 1943. p. 4. Retrieved 15 May 2017.
  33. ^ Sharfe, Jean. "Manning, George". Dictionary of New Zealand Biography. Ministry for Culture and Heritage. Retrieved 17 February 2010.
  34. ^ a b c "Public Notices". The Press. Vol. LXXIX, no. 24077. 13 October 1943. p. 1. Retrieved 15 May 2017.
  35. ^ "Labour Candidate for Egmont". The Press. Vol. LXXIX, no. 24021. 9 August 1943. p. 4. Retrieved 14 May 2017.
  36. ^ a b c "Electoral". The New Zealand Herald. Vol. 80, no. 24714. 14 October 1943. p. 6. Retrieved 16 May 2017.
  37. ^ a b c "Labour Candidates". The Evening Post. Vol. CXXXVI, no. 24. 28 July 1943. p. 3. Retrieved 15 May 2017.
  38. ^ Milton-Tee, Ann. "Harry Heaton Barker". Dictionary of New Zealand Biography. Ministry for Culture and Heritage. Retrieved 2 January 2014.
  39. ^ Gustafson 1986, p. 382.
  40. ^ "General Election". Auckland Star. Vol. LXXIV, no. 148. 24 June 1943. p. 6. Retrieved 15 May 2017.
  41. ^ "Public Notices". The Press. Vol. LXXIX, no. 24076. 12 October 1943. p. 1. Retrieved 16 May 2017.
  42. ^ Gustafson 1986, p. 387.
  43. ^ "William Henry Oliver". Auckland War Memorial Museum. Retrieved 2 October 2015.
  44. ^ "General Election". Auckland Star. Vol. LXXIV, no. 161. 9 July 1943. p. 4. Retrieved 16 May 2017.
  45. ^ "Nelson Seat". The Evening Post. Vol. CXXXVI, no. 13. 15 July 1943. p. 3. Retrieved 16 May 2017.
  46. ^ "Obituary". The Evening Post. Vol. CXL, no. 126. 24 November 1945. p. 3. Retrieved 16 May 2017.
  47. ^ "Frederick William Huggins". New Zealand War Graves Project. Retrieved 16 May 2017.
  48. ^ a b "Electoral". The New Zealand Herald. Vol. 80, no. 24764. 11 December 1943. p. 6. Retrieved 16 May 2017.
  49. ^ Gustafson 1986, p. 375.
  50. ^ "General Election". The Press. Vol. LXXIX, no. 23989. 2 July 1943. p. 6. Retrieved 16 May 2017.
  51. ^ "General Election". The Press. Vol. LXXIX, no. 23981. 23 June 1943. p. 4. Retrieved 16 May 2017.
  52. ^ "Timaru Electorate". The Press. Vol. LXXIX, no. 23941. 7 May 1943. p. 6. Retrieved 16 May 2017.
  53. ^ "Candidates Chosen". Auckland Star. Vol. LXXIV, no. 177. 28 July 1943. p. 4. Retrieved 16 May 2017.
  54. ^ "General Election". The Evening Post. Vol. CXXXVI, no. 48. 25 August 1943. p. 3. Retrieved 16 May 2017.
  55. ^ "Declaration of Result of Poll for the Electoral District of Wallace". Lake Wakatip Mail. No. 4637. 7 October 1943. p. 5. Retrieved 16 May 2017.
  56. ^ "General Election". Auckland Star. Vol. LXXIV, no. 203. 27 August 1943. p. 4. Retrieved 3 November 2014.
  57. ^ "Chivers, E Frank, DSM, MID". Torpedo Bay Navy Museum. Retrieved 3 November 2014.
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References

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