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Helensville electorate 2008.png

Helensville is a New Zealand Parliamentary electorate, returning one Member of Parliament to the New Zealand House of Representatives. The current MP for Helensville is John Key, leader of the National Party and Prime Minister of New Zealand.[1] He has held this position since 2002. The seat was created in 2002, but there was an earlier Helensville seat from 1978 to 1984.

Helensville covers an area of the rapidly growing northern Auckland urban fringe, drawing Helensville and Kumeu from Rodney District, moving south to take in Paremoremo, Greenhithe and Albany from North Shore City, and finally tacking west to include Whenuapai, Hobsonville and West Harbour from Waitakere City.

The seat was promulgated in time for the 2002 election, and is the second general seat created since the introduction of Mixed Member Proportional voting, in reaction to continued high population growth in and around Auckland. It was made by cutting off the northern flank of the seat of Waitakere and adding in areas from the Rodney around its southern boundary. Its only MP has been the current Prime Minister, John Key, who beat sitting Waitakere MP Brian Neeson to the nomination, and in a tight year for his party, won the seat by 1,705 votes in a split field when a disgruntled Neeson chose to stand as an independent. Helensville is partly rural, and wealthy beyond the national average, making it a safe National seat, and the results in 2002 notwithstanding, Key was returned easily in 2005 and 2008 with large majorities.

Contents

[edit] Members of Parliament for Helensville

John Key's electorate office
Name Party Elected Left Office Reason
Dail Jones National 1978, 1981 1984 constituency abolished
John Key National 2002, 2005, 2008 incumbent

[edit] List MPs from Helensville

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

Helensville is the only electorate to have three list MPs who contested the 2008 election.

Name Party First Elected Left Office Contested Helensville
Dail Jones New Zealand First 2002 2005 2002
15 February 2008 1 2008 2005
Darien Fenton Labour 2005 current MP 2008
David Garrett ACT 2008 current MP 2008
David Clendon Greens 2009 2 incoming MP 2008

1 Jones re-entered Parliament on the resignation of Brian Donnelly in 2008. 2 Clendon will enter Parliament following the resignation of Sue Bradford in September 2009.

[edit] Election results

[edit] 2008 election

General Election 2008: Helensville[2][3]

Notes: Green background denotes the winner of the electorate vote. Pink background denotes a candidate elected from their party list.
A YesY or NoN denotes status of any incumbent, win or lose respectively.

Party Candidate Votes % ±% Party Votes % ±%
National YesY John Key 26,771 73.61 +9.51 23,559 63.69 +8.60
Labour Darien Fenton 6,224 17.11 -9.77 6,826 18.45 -9.52
Green David Clendon 2,166 5.96 +5.79 1,814 4.90 +0.87
ACT David Garrett 811 2.23 +1.10 2,481 6.71 +4.36
United Future Angela Lovelock 309 0.85 -0.82 289 0.78 -1.69
Libertarianz Peter Osborne 89 0.24 21 0.06 +0.01
NZ First 940 2.54 -3.34
Progressive 195 0.53 -0.28
Family Party 182 0.49
Māori 182 0.49 +0.08
Bill and Ben 170 0.46
Legalise Cannabis 131 0.35 +0.16
Kiwi 105 0.28
Pacific 45 0.12
Alliance 19 0.05 +0.02
Workers Party 9 0.02
NZ Democrats 8 0.02 ±0.00
RAM 8 0.02
RONZ 4 0.01 ±0.00
Informal votes 251 110
Total Valid votes 36,370 36,988
Turnout 37,298 82.27 -0.58
National hold Majority 20,547 56.49


[edit] 2005 election

General Election 2005: Hellensville[3][4][5]

Notes: Green background denotes the winner of the electorate vote. Pink background denotes a candidate elected from their party list.
A YesY or NoN denotes status of any incumbent, win or lose respectively.

Party Candidate Votes % ±% Party Votes % ±%
National YesY John Key 22,008 64.10 +29.92 19,224 55.09 +29.28
Labour Judy Lawley 9,230 26.88 -0.24 9761 27.97 -2.86
NZ First Dail Jones 1,400 4.08 -5.45 2051 5.88 -6.06
United Future Andrea Deeth 573 1.67 -2.47 863 2.47 -5.82
ACT Stephen Langford-Tebby 389 1.13 821 2.35 -10.26
Māori Awa Hudson 359 1.05 142 0.41
Progressive Julian Aaron 318 0.93 -0.02 218 0.81 -0.08
Green Helen Koster 58 0.17 1407 4.03 -1.99
Destiny 151 0.43
Legalise Cannabis 66 0.19 -0.21
Christian Heritage 48 0.14 -0.85
Libertarianz 16 0.05
Direct Democracy 11 0.03
Alliance 9 0.03 -1.00
NZ Democrats 8 0.02
Family Rights 8 0.02
99 MP 5 0.01
RONZ 5 0.01
One NZ 4 0.01 -0.04
Informal votes 253 110
Total Valid votes 34,335 34,896
Turnout 35,222 82.85 +3.21
National hold Majority 12,778 37.22 +31.26

[edit] 2002 election

General Election 2002: Helensville[4][6]

Notes: Green background denotes the winner of the electorate vote. Pink background denotes a candidate elected from their party list.
A YesY or NoN denotes status of any incumbent, win or lose respectively.

Party Candidate Votes % ±% Party Votes % ±%
National John Key 9,775 34.18 7,524 25.81
Labour Gary Russell 8,070 28.21 8,988 30.83
Independent Brian Neeson 5,644 19.73
NZ First Dail Jones 2,725 9.53 3,481 11.94
United Future Andrea Deeth 1,184 4.14 2,416 8.29
Alliance Helen MacKinlay 581 2.03 299 1.03
Christian Heritage David Simpkin 350 1.22 288 0.99
Progressive Clare Dickson 273 0.95 272 0.93
ACT 3,676 12.61
Green 1,755 6.02
ORNZ 313 1.07
Legalise Cannabis 118 0.40
One NZ 15 0.05
Mana Māori 10 0.03
NMP 2 0.01
Informal votes 327 78
Total Valid votes 28,602 29,157
Turnout 29,428 79.64
National win new seat Majority 1,705 5.96

[edit] References

[edit] External links




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