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What this course covers. Politics from 1891 to todayIncludes economics, international relations, interest groups and partiesWork consists of chapter precis, essay and MMP exercise (40%)Lectures 9-10 Tuesdays
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1. Our System of Politics Lecture 1 for 148.205 by Peter Lineham
2. What this course covers Politics from 1891 to today
Includes economics, international relations, interest groups and parties
Work consists of chapter precis, essay and MMP exercise (40%)
Lectures 9-10 Tuesdays & Thursdays, tutorial follows (choose either day)
Co-Ordinator Prof Howe (starts 26 August) & Assoc Professor Peter Lineham
3. The Westminster Model The Crown
The House of Lords
The House of Commons
The Church of England
The Civil Service
The Judiciary
Reforms in the system from 1832
4. The beginnings of New Zealand politics Elections from 14 July 1853
Parliament first sat May 1854
Six provinces established
Responsible government from 1856
No parties, rather ‘Continuous Ministry’
Provinces abolished in 1876
5. System of Elections 37 MPs in 1854
Public voting system at first, only for property owning males
Secret ballot from 1869
Property franchise lowered 1879
‘One man, one vote’, 1889
1890 election introduced party politics; 1893 introduced women
6. Central Government Government moved to Wellington in 1865
Parliament Building erected in 1876, burnt down in 1907 tho the General Assembly Library erected 1898 remains.
7. Parliament Legislative Council of 15-54 members
House of Representatives 95 members in 1880s, then 74 members from 1889
Country Quota from 1889 of 28%
Parliament dominated by runholders – ‘squattocracy’ forming ‘Continuous Ministry’
8. The Governor Appointed by the Monarch on the advice of British ministers
Name checked in New Zealand after 1892
Acted on advice of his New Zealand ministers
9. Civil Government Administration began with Executive Council and British Army
Cabinet
Civilian government included administration of laws
Local government from 1850s
Post Office (picture)
10. The issues facing 19th century governments Race relations: how far to give, how far to coerce – and how to satisfy Britain
Development: How bold or how cautious in the face of economic uncertainty and need for population
Regional or Central – where the focus lay – regions were stronger until 1870
11. Economic issues in the Eighties Depression in the southern economy
Departure of many migrants
Maritime Strike, August-Oct 1890
Royal Commission on Sweated Labour 1890
12. Politics in the 1880s Emergence of a ‘Liberal’ approach linked to Grey, Sir Robert Stout and John Balance
Stout-Vogel Ministry 1884-7
Continuous Ministry returned as ‘Scarecrow Ministry’ 1887-1891
Ballance led the opposition with regional support in Canterbury
13. Sir George Grey 1812-1898 Governor of South Australia 1840-45 then of New Zealand 1845-53 then of Cape Colony
Returned to Kawau Island 1870s
Fought abolition of provinces 1874-6
Radical PM 1877-79
Scholar, writer
14. Sir Robert Stout 1844-1930 Shetland Scot, lawyer, debater, freethinker
MP for Dunedin
Interested in radicalism especially land reform
Minister for Grey, became leading liberal but defeated 1887
Ended up as Chief Justice
15. Sir Harry Atkinson 1831-1892 Richmonds and Atkinsons to Taranaki 1847-53
Farmer, provincial council, anti-Maori
MP from 1872, Minister from 1874, PM 1877, 1883-4, 1887-91
Colonial treasurer, cautious and yet original