41st New Zealand Parliament

http://dbpedia.org/resource/41st_New_Zealand_Parliament an entity of type: WikicatNewZealandParliaments

The 41st New Zealand Parliament was a term of the Parliament of New Zealand. Its composition was determined by the 1984 elections, and it sat until the 1987 elections. The 41st Parliament was the first term of the fourth Labour Party government. It marked the end of three terms of National Party administration under Robert Muldoon. David Lange become Prime Minister and Roger Douglas became Minister of Finance — the economic reforms undertaken by Douglas, nicknamed Rogernomics, would prove to be a defining feature of the fourth Labour government, and were deeply unpopular with Labour's traditional support base. The National Party, now in opposition, experienced a number of leadership disputes, replacing Muldoon first with Jim McLay and then with Jim Bolger. rdf:langString
rdf:langString 41st New Zealand Parliament
xsd:integer 41
xsd:integer 1262070
xsd:integer 1106762839
xsd:integer 42
xsd:integer 40
rdf:langString Sovereign
rdf:langString File:41st New Zealand Parliament Seating.png
xsd:gMonthDay --03-26 --05-01 --05-28 --11-29
xsd:gMonthDay --11-22
xsd:integer 1984
xsd:integer 95
xsd:date 1985-12-12
xsd:date 1984-08-15
xsd:date 1987-07-29
xsd:date 1986-02-26
xsd:date 1987-07-29
xsd:date 1984-08-15
rdf:langString The 41st New Zealand Parliament was a term of the Parliament of New Zealand. Its composition was determined by the 1984 elections, and it sat until the 1987 elections. The 41st Parliament was the first term of the fourth Labour Party government. It marked the end of three terms of National Party administration under Robert Muldoon. David Lange become Prime Minister and Roger Douglas became Minister of Finance — the economic reforms undertaken by Douglas, nicknamed Rogernomics, would prove to be a defining feature of the fourth Labour government, and were deeply unpopular with Labour's traditional support base. The National Party, now in opposition, experienced a number of leadership disputes, replacing Muldoon first with Jim McLay and then with Jim Bolger. The 41st Parliament consisted of ninety-five representatives, the highest number since the 10th Parliament (elected in 1887). All of these representatives were chosen by single-member geographical electorates, including four Māori electorates.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 6495

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