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Home / New Zealand


ELECTION 2023: EXPLORE THE FINAL RESULTS WITH OUR INTERACTIVE GRAPHICS

3 Nov, 2023 02:30 PM3 minutes to read
By

CHRIS KNOX

Data Editor and Head of Data Journalism

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Final election results
National
38.1%
Labour
26.9%
Green
11.6%
ACT
8.6%
NZ First
6.1%
Māori
3.1%




Parliament
How Parliament will look
ACT
GREEN
LABOUR
NATIONAL
NZ FIRST
TE PĀTI MĀORI
TOTAL SEATS: 122
34
15
6
8
11
48
The Electorates : Explore results
Electorate Results
See how your area voted by clicking on the region or electorate names.
UNDECLARED

PREVIOUS WINNER
ACT
GREEN
LABOUR
NATIONAL
NZ FIRST
TE PĀTI MĀORI
View by
MAP
GRID

WRKTTATTTTTHTMKIKRHWAWIGWHRWPAWHGWCTWLGWTIWRPWMKWAIUHBTUKTEATGATAUTKCTĀMTAKTAISTHSELROTRONREMRANRTAPTWPAPPANPNHPAKŌTKŌRUNTHNCONSHNPLNLYNELNAPMTRMTAMAUMWAMĀNMNAKELKKMKAIINVILMHTSHMWHMEEPSECBECTDUNCORCHECHCBOTBOPBANAKLNorthlandAucklandWaikatoBay
ofPlentyHawke'sBayTaranakiManawatuWhanganuiWellingtonSouth Island
SORT BY
COMPLETION
TIGHTNESS
LABOUR
NATIONAL
ACT
GREENS
NZ FIRST
MĀORI
RESET
VOTES
PERCENTAGE

Click on an electorate on the map. Or click on a region label to see the
electorate names and then pick an electorate.

Electorates are coloured based on the party of the candidate currently winning
the electorate. The colour in the top left corner is the colour of the party
that won the electorate in 2020.

If you click on little grid icon on the right side of the map you will switch to
a grid view. Sort the grid by completion, tightness, or party's party vote.

Use the switch above the map to toggle between displaying and sorting by votes
or percentage

If you want to return to this view click on the back arrow on the right side of
the electorate view.



Follow our election live coverage here

After a three week wait since election night, the final result has been released
today. Explore the outcome with the Herald’s interactive election graphics and
charts.

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Our interactive map of New Zealand electorates shows which have flipped from one
party to another. The map can also be filtered to rank electorates by tightness
and party by first selecting the “grid” option then the various filters at the
bottom of the map.

Today’s results will reveal the shape of our next parliament and show all
parties where they stand. It will confirm whether National and Act, which
secured 38.95 per cent and 8.98 per cent of the preliminary votes respectively
on election night, need NZ First to form a government.

They will also confirm the winning electorate MPs. Some electorates are tight,
like Te Atatū, where National’s Angee Nicholas is leading by a margin of only 30
votes.


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Policy.

National’s Blair Cameron is leading the Nelson electorate by 54 votes and
Vanessa Weenink, also National, has a tight 83-vote lead in Banks Peninsula.



The official result is being released today, three weeks after election night,
because the Electoral Commission needed time to count the estimated 567,000
special votes.

The commission has also spent the last three weeks counting all votes a second
time and validating the votes. The result released on October 14, election
night, was preliminary because it only included about 80 per cent of the votes
cast. Special votes were not counted then.

The three weeks it takes the commission to count the votes is a trade-off for
having a system that makes it very easy for people vote. Anyone eligible can
vote from anywhere in the country at any time during the voting period,
regardless of whether they are enrolled or not.

On election night, the right bloc (National and Act) received 47.99 per cent of
the ordinary votes. The left bloc (Labour, Green Party and Te Pāti Māori)
received 40.23 per cent. New Zealand First got 6.46 per cent and 5 per cent of
votes went to parties that did not end up receiving representation in election
outcome.

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Traditionally, special votes have favoured more left-leaning parties due to the
demographic characteristics of the voters. Many special voters tend to be
younger and more transient – a population that often supports left-wing parties.
Think students who move flats regularly and may not have updated their enrolment
details to their new address.

In 2017, there were 419,669 special votes - which is 16.2 per cent of the vote.
By the time the official result was declared, National’s initial seat allocation
was reduced by two while Labour and the Greens both gained one seat each.

In the 2020 election, 493,967 people cast valid special votes - accounting for
around 17.1 per cent of the total vote count. Once again, special votes leaned
left and after they were included in the final count, National had two fewer
seats than the election night result predicted.

For more political news and views, listen to On the Tiles, the Herald’s politics
podcast.
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