1992 Tamaki by-election

1992 Tamaki by-election

15 February 1992
Turnout 17,383 (71.97%)
  First party Second party Third party
 
Candidate Clem Simich Chris Leitch Verna Smith
Party National Alliance Labour
Popular vote 7,901 6,649 2,121
Percentage 45.45% 38.25% 12.20%

Tamaki electorate boundaries used for the by-election

Member before election

Sir Robert Muldoon
National

Elected Member

Clem Simich
National

The Tamaki by-election 1992 was a by-election held in the Tāmaki electorate during the 43rd New Zealand Parliament, on 15 February 1992. It was caused by the resignation of incumbent MP Sir Robert Muldoon and was won by Clem Simich with a majority of 1,252. The by-election was also notable as the first contested by the recently formed Alliance Party, and for their success in coming second ahead of the Labour Party.

Background

Sir Robert Muldoon had held the seat of Tamaki since 1960, serving as Prime Minister of New Zealand from 1975 to 1984. Following National's win at the 1990 election Prime Minister Jim Bolger did not appoint Muldoon to a cabinet posting and he quickly became dissatisfied with his backbench role. Following the Mother of all Budgets in 1991, which marked a radical turn to the right in economic policy, Muldoon felt that National had moved too far from its position under his leadership. These factors combined to lead him to resign from parliament and quit politics altogether.

Candidates

Alliance

The newly formed Alliance, a coalition of several minor parties, sought to carry on its momentum after winning two by-elections for the Auckland Regional Council. The Democrat Party, Green Party, Mana Motuhake and NewLabour Party cooperated and stood joint candidates which saw them secure victories.

Four candidates from three of the component parties sought the Alliance nomination.

Leitch was selected after winning an electoral college of members in the Tamaki electorate.

Labour

There were four candidates for the Labour Party nomination.

  • Peter Kaiser, deputy principal of Ranui School and West Auckland representative on Labour's New Zealand Council
  • Deborah Shuttleworth, a property developer and committee member for the Mount Albert electorate
  • Verna Smith, an executive for the Royal New Zealand Foundation of the Blind and a party organiser
  • Shane Te Pou, an organiser for the Service Workers' Union and South Auckland representative on Labour's New Zealand Council

Smith was selected. She had joined Labour in 1987 having previously been an organiser for the British Labour Party.

National

David Kirk, a former All Blacks captain and Rhodes Scholar who had just returned from Oxford, launched a high-profile bid for the seat. He had the support of the National Party head office and endorsement from Bolger. The other main candidate was National's Tamaki electorate chairman Clem Simich, a former policeman, who was backed by Muldoon. Janie Pearce, the former deputy leader of the New Zealand Party who had just joined National in 1991, also launched a campaign for the seat.

The 19 nominees were narrowed to a shortlist of five candidates which went to a selection meeting ballot. The candidates were:

Simich won the selection, gaining a majority on the third ballot among the 84 local delegates. Kirk was runner-up and Langley was third. Eardley-Wilmot and Greer had been eliminated already. Simich had a far better connection to the electorate than Kirk which led to his victory.

Others

The Christian Heritage Party selected Printing, Packaging and Manufacturing Union organiser Clive Thomson to contest the seat. The New Zealand Defence Movement, an anti-immigration party, selected Auckland lawyer Bevan Skelton as its candidate. Former Rugby League player Dean Lonergan stood as an independent candidate as part of a publicity stunt for Radio Hauraki. Cliff Emeny (former leader of the Country Party) stood as an independent candidate. Tania Harris, who had organised a large protest march against trade union strike action the previous year, stood under the banner of her newly-formed United New Zealand party (unrelated to the United New Zealand formed three years later).

Polling

Three polls were conducted.

Poll Date Chris
Leitch
Clem
Simich
Verna
Smith
Clive
Thomson
ONE News-Heylen January 1992 39 44 13 -
TV3-Gallup 5–9 February 1992 48.4 36.5 9.1 2.7
ONE News-Heylen 10 February 1992 46 38 13 -
  1. These are the survey dates of the poll, or if the survey dates are not stated, the date the poll was released.

Previous election

1990 general election: Tamaki
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
National Robert Muldoon 12,191 58.93 +6.90
Labour Malcolm Johnston 4,599 22.23
Green Richard Green 2,633 12.73
NewLabour Bill Logue 789 3.81
McGillicuddy Serious Craig Thomas Young 183 0.88
Democrats Craig Douglas Thomas 134 0.65
Social Credit Charles Thomas Willoughby 67 0.32
Independent Matthew Ford Elliot 49 0.23
Independent Victor Bryers 44 0.21
Majority 7,592 36.70 +27.03
Turnout 20,689 85.65 -0.86
Registered electors 24,154

Results

The following table gives the election results:

1992 Tamaki by-election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
National Clem Simich 7,901 45.45 -13.47
Alliance Chris Leitch 6,649 38.25 +21.061
Labour Verna Smith 2,121 12.20 -10.03
Christian Heritage Clive Thomson 199 1.14
United New Zealand Tania Harris 118 0.67
Independent Dean Lonergan 105 0.60
McGillicuddy Serious Adrian Holroyd 73 0.42
Defence Movement Bevan Skelton 57 0.33
Independent Cliff Emeny 47 0.27
Blokes Liberation Front Frank Barker 46 0.26
Social Credit Colin Maloney 34 0.20
Independent Andrew Aitkenhead 19 0.11
Independent Victor Bryers 7 0.04 -0.17
Communist League James Robb 7 0.04
Majority 1,252 7.20
Turnout 17,383 71.972 -13.682
National hold Swing -29.49

1 Alliance vote increase over 3,556 combined vote for Green Party, New Labour and Democrats in 1990 election.
2 Based on 1990 election figures.

Aftermath

Simich served as MP for Tamaki until 2005 when he became a List MP before retiring from parliament in 2008. The National Party celebrated their win at a local Auckland yacht club. Labour Party deputy leader Helen Clark was a surprise attendee and was seen sipping chardonnay with Simich's campaign manager Ross Armstrong in a back room, rather than at her own Labour headquarters. Both National and Labour were relieved that their then common enemy, the Alliance, had been beaten.