Term of the Parliament of New Zealand
The 21st New Zealand Parliament was a term of the New Zealand Parliament . It was elected at the 1922 general election in December of that year.
1922 general election [ edit ]
The 1922 general election was held on Monday, 6 December in the Māori electorates and on Tuesday, 7 December in the general electorates, respectively.[ 1] A total of 80 MPs were elected; 45 represented North Island electorates, 31 represented South Island electorates, and the remaining four represented Māori electorates. 700,111 voters were enrolled and the official turnout at the election was 88.7%.[ 1]
The 21st Parliament sat for four sessions (there were two sessions in 1923), and was prorogued on 14 October 1925.
Session
Opened
Adjourned
first
7 February 1923
17 February 1923
second
14 June 1923
29 August 1923
third
26 June 1924
6 November 1924
fourth
25 June 1925
1 October 1925
Start of Parliament [ edit ]
[ 4]
The second Massey Ministry led by William Massey of the Reform Party had come to power in August 1919. Massey ruled until his death on 10 May 1925.[ 6] Francis Bell had been acting Prime Minister during Massey's illness and took on the temporary leadership following Massey's death.[ 7] Bell led the Bell Ministry from 14 to 30 May 1925, when the Reform Party elected Gordon Coates as its leader. The Coates Ministry was in place for the remainder of the parliamentary term and for the duration of the 22nd Parliament .
Reform had a narrow margin of three votes in the house if Liberal and Labour combined as they did when the house resumed in February 1923 (but Bell, Witty and Isitt voted with Massey). Hence the Government could not introduce any controversial legislation, and Massey said it was "hell most of the time".
Initial composition of the 21st Parliament [ edit ]
The results of the 1922 election were as follows:
Key
Reform
Liberal
Labour
Independent Liberal
Independent
Electorate results for the 1922 New Zealand general election[ 11]
Electorate
Incumbent
Winner
Majority
Runner up
General electorates
Ashburton
William Nosworthy
1,482[ 14]
Henry Manwell Jones
Avon
Dan Sullivan
2,036
George Warren Russell
Awarua
John Hamilton
Philip De La Perrelle
51[ 15]
John Hamilton
Auckland Central
Bill Parry
1,003
Albert Glover
Auckland East
Clutha Mackenzie
John A. Lee
751
Clutha Mackenzie
Auckland West
Michael Joseph Savage
1,349
John Farrell
Bay of Islands
Vernon Reed
Allen Bell
188
Vernon Reed
Bay of Plenty
Kenneth Williams
Uncontested
Buller
Harry Holland
1,541[ 14]
John Menzies
Chalmers
James Dickson
679
Joseph Stephens[ 16]
Christchurch East
Henry Thacker
Tim Armstrong
1,094
Henry Thacker
Christchurch North
Leonard Isitt
1,950
John Archer
Christchurch South
Ted Howard
3,140
H C Lane
Clutha
Alexander Malcolm
John Edie
120
Alexander Malcolm
Dunedin Central
Charles Statham
723
John Gilchrist
Dunedin North
Jim Munro
55
James Clark
Dunedin West
Thomas Sidey
1,281
John McManus
Dunedin South
William Downie Stewart
1,727
C M Moss
Eden
James Parr
675
Rex Mason
Egmont
Oswald Hawken
372
D L A Astbury
Ellesmere
Heaton Rhodes
732
J C Free
Franklin
William Massey
2,750
Joseph Rea
Grey Lynn
Fred Bartram
1,407
William John Holdsworth
Gisborne
Douglas Lysnar
500[ 14]
George Wildish [ 17]
Hamilton
New electorate
Alexander Young
2,043
Arthur Shapton Richards
Hawke's Bay
Hugh Campbell
Gilbert McKay
317
Andrew Hamilton Russell [ 18]
Hurunui
George Forbes
1,198
S Andrew
Hutt
Thomas Wilford
802[ 14]
David Pritchard
Invercargill
Josiah Hanan
993
J Armstead
Kaipara
Gordon Coates
2,464
Robert Hornblow
Kaiapoi
David Jones
David Buddo
65[ 19]
David Jones
Lyttelton
James McCombs
614
Robert Macartney
Manawatu
Edward Newman
Joseph Linklater
1,505
F D Whibley
Manukau
Frederic Lang
Bill Jordan
209
Frederic Lang
Marsden
Francis Mander
Alfred Murdoch
136
William Jones
Masterton
George Sykes
556[ 14]
A. C. Holmes
Mataura
George Anderson
1,041
David McDougall
Motueka
Richard Hudson
538
R Patterson
Napier
Vigor Brown
Lew McIlvride
763
John Mason
Oamaru
Ernest Lee
John MacPherson
14
Ernest Lee
Ohinemuri
Hugh Poland
939
Stephen Allen
Oroua
David Guthrie
43
John Cobbe
Nelson
Harry Atmore
2,164[ 14]
Albert Gilbert
Otaki
William Hughes Field
58[ 14]
G. H. M. McClure
Pahiatua
Archibald McNicol
Alfred Ransom
59
Archibald McNicol
Palmerston
Jimmy Nash
1,067
Joe Hodgens
Parnell
James Samuel Dickson
2,324
S M Wren
Patea
Edwin Dixon
James Randall Corrigan
151
Edwin Dixon
Raglan
Richard Bollard
776
S C G Lye
Rangitikei
Billy Glenn
1,007
F P Brady
Riccarton
George Witty
235
Bert Kyle
Roskill
Vivian Potter
2,007
Alfred Hall-Skelton [ 20]
Rotorua
Frank Hockly
404
Cecil Clinkard
Stratford
Robert Masters
363
John Hine
Taranaki
Sydney George Smith
134
Charles Bellringer
Tauranga
William Herries
1,440[ 21]
Laurence Johnstone
Temuka
Thomas Burnett
407
Thomas Herbert Langford
Thames
Thomas William Rhodes
790
W A Allan
Timaru
James Craigie
Frank Rolleston
288[ 14]
Percy Vinnell
Waikato
Alexander Young
Frederick Lye
44
J T Johnson
Waimarino
Robert William Smith
Frank Langstone
887
Robert William Smith
Waipawa
George Hunter
1,076
John Joshua Langridge
Wairarapa
Alex McLeod
698
John Wiltshire Card
Waitemata
Alexander Harris
1,271
Frank Henry Burbush[ 20]
Wairau
Richard McCallum
William Girling
186
Richard McCallum
Waitaki
John Bitchener
William Paul
Waitomo
William Thomas Jennings
John Rolleston
25
William Thomas Jennings
Wakatipu
James Horn
1,637
J Ritchie
Wallace
Adam Hamilton
John Charles Thomson
205
Adam Hamilton
Wanganui
Bill Veitch
1,072
John Coull
Wellington Central
Peter Fraser
4,202
William Bennett
Wellington North
John Luke
375
Harry Combs
Wellington East
Alfred Newman
Alec Monteith
473
Thomas Forsyth
Wellington South
George Mitchell
Robert McKeen
422
George Mitchell
Wellington Suburbs
Robert Wright
291
Alexander Croskery
Westland
Tom Seddon
James O'Brien
487
Tom Seddon
Māori electorates
Eastern Maori
Āpirana Ngata
1,501
Taranaki Kanara te Uamairangi
Northern Maori
Taurekareka Henare
1,441
Nau Parone Kawiti
Southern Maori
Henare Uru
87
Peter MacDonald
Western Maori
Māui Pōmare
798
Ngarangi Katitia
By-elections during 21st Parliament [ edit ]
There were a number of changes during the term of the 21st Parliament.
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Scholefield (1950) [First ed. published 1913]. New Zealand Parliamentary Record, 1840–1949 (3rd ed.). Wellington: Govt. Printer.