46th New Zealand Parliament

http://dbpedia.org/resource/46th_New_Zealand_Parliament an entity of type: WikicatNewZealandParliaments

The 46th New Zealand Parliament was a term of the New Zealand Parliament. Its composition was determined by the 1999 election, and it sat until the 2002 election. The 46th Parliament marked a change of government, with a coalition of the Labour Party and the Alliance taking office. Helen Clark replaced Jenny Shipley as Prime Minister. The National Party, which had formed a minority government for the last part of the 45th Parliament, became the largest opposition party, eventually emerging under a new leader, Bill English. Other parties in Parliament were ACT, the Greens, New Zealand First, and United. Several parties represented at the end of the previous Parliament, such as Mauri Pacific, were wiped out, failing to retain any of their seats. rdf:langString
rdf:langString 46th New Zealand Parliament
xsd:integer 46
xsd:integer 1079291
xsd:integer 1115397720
xsd:integer 47
xsd:integer 45
rdf:langString Sovereign
rdf:langString File:46th New Zealand Parliament Seating.png
xsd:gMonthDay --10-08
xsd:gMonthDay --03-21 --04-04
xsd:integer 1999
xsd:integer 120
xsd:date 2002-06-11
xsd:date 1999-12-20
rdf:langString The 46th New Zealand Parliament was a term of the New Zealand Parliament. Its composition was determined by the 1999 election, and it sat until the 2002 election. The 46th Parliament marked a change of government, with a coalition of the Labour Party and the Alliance taking office. Helen Clark replaced Jenny Shipley as Prime Minister. The National Party, which had formed a minority government for the last part of the 45th Parliament, became the largest opposition party, eventually emerging under a new leader, Bill English. Other parties in Parliament were ACT, the Greens, New Zealand First, and United. Several parties represented at the end of the previous Parliament, such as Mauri Pacific, were wiped out, failing to retain any of their seats. The 46th Parliament consisted of one hundred and twenty representatives. Sixty-seven of these representatives were chosen by geographical electorates, including six Māori electorates. The remainder were elected by means of party-list proportional representation under the Mixed Member Proportional (MMP) electoral system.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 37153

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