900 days ago

Election 2023: Heartland electorate on the line as experienced political operators vie for Rangitata

Nicole Mathewson Reporter from The Press

In the lead-up to the 2023 general election, The Press is profiling Canterbury’s electoral races. Here’s what you need to know about the candidates running to be Rangitata’s MP. (By reporter Keiller MacDuff).

Rangitata is shaping up to be a battle royale, but it will be a big ask for incumbent Labour minister Jo Luxton to retain the deeply blue electorate, with some commentators already calling it for National party newcomer James Meager.

The electorate stretches along the eastern side of the South Island, from Timaru to the Rakaia River, and inland from the ocean to the Southern Alps. The predominately rural electorate encompasses Mid and South Canterbury, including Ashburton, Methven, Mt Somers, Temuka and Timaru, and skews slightly older - with more than one-quarter of its residents aged over 60, compared to one-fifth nationally.

It briefly existed for two separate parliamentary terms in the late 19th century, then was re-established for the 2008 election, largely replacing Aoraki and parts of the Rakaia electorate.

National’s Jo Goodhew was the first to represent the re-established electorate, holding it from 2008 until she decided not to contest the 2017 election.

National’s Andrew Falloon went on to a strong win, with a margin of 6331 votes, but resigned abruptly in July 2020 after he was alleged to have sent unsolicited images to young women.

Replaced just weeks before the 2020 election by then Environment Canterbury councillor Megan Hands, National lost the seat for the first time since its creation, with Luxton taking 4000 more votes than Hands.

Labour also increased its party vote share by 15 percentage points to 49% over National’s 40%, whose share dropped by more than 21% on 2017.

The electorate’s first meet the candidate event garnered national attention after Prime Minister Chris Hipkins highlighted comments by New Zealand First candidate Rob Ballantyne decrying “Māori elite” and saying “we are the party with the cultural mandate and the courage to cut out your disease and bury you permanently”.

Ballantyne has stood behind the comments, while NZ First leader Winston Peters enthusiastically endorsed them as coming “exactly from my speeches”.

A former early childhood teacher and business owner, Hinds-based Luxton first entered Parliament as a list MP in 2017. The grand-niece of iconic Labour Prime Minister Norm Kirk, she is associate minister of education and agriculture and minster of customs.

Consultant, former political adviser and press secretary James Meager (Ngāi Tahu) was selected to take over National’s candidacy in September 2022. The 36-year-old grew up in Timaru and now lives in Ashburton.

He has committed to starting work on a new Ashburton bridge in a National Government’s first term, reducing red tape and cutting tax. Well down the party list at 69, Meager will be relying on the electorate seat to get into Parliament.

There’s no disagreement on the need for the second bridge crossing, with both major parties committing to it.

Former Timaru District councillor, nurse and conservationist Barbara Gilchrist, vying for the Green vote, says her priorities are providing a guaranteed income, free dental care and supporting farmers to transition to sustainable agriculture.

Ballantyne, who runs an importing business (and is 16th on his party’s list), promises to remove “any regulations that are too difficult to comply with”, backs the new Ashburton bridge, and will give landowners and businesses “immunity from future Māori claims”.

ACT’s Rangitata candidate, Elaine Naidu Franz, resigned in August after it emerged she had compared Covid-19 mandates to concentration camps.

The rest of the candidates are Michael Clarkson, running for the unregistered Rock the Vote NZ party - which falls under the umbrella of Brian Tamaki and Sue Grey’s Freedom NZ coalition; Wayne Shearer, running for Liz Gunn’s New Zealand Loyal party; Karl Thomas (New Conservatives) and Dolf Van Amersfoot (New Nation Party).

Traditionally drawing strong voter turnout - 85% in 2020, compared to 82% nationally - Rangitata’s older population is keenly engaged, with over 60s averaging 90% and 91% turnout in 2017 and 2020 respectively.

Rangitata has the fourth-highest share of people identifying as Christian (43%) among the general electorates, and is predominantly European (87%) and Maori (9%), with one in 10 people (9%) identifying as either Asian or Pasifika.

The electorate ranked first in New Zealand for the number of residents working between 50 and 59 hours per week (15%), and families whose income was between $70,000 and $100,000 (23%).

A fifth of the population are labourers, while 16% work in manufacturing – the second-highest shares among electorates.

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1 day ago

Poll: Should we ditch daylight saving? 🕰️

The Team from Neighbourly.co.nz

First introduced in New Zealand in 1927 with the passing of the Summer Time Act, it's what we know as 'Daylight Saving' and this year it ends on the first Sunday in April.

While we do get to sleep in this time around, some people would like to scrap the clock tinkering for good.

And why? Some evidence suggests the time changes are bad for our health as they mess with sleep patterns leading to short-term fatigue and affecting mood. Meanwhile the hour change is frustrating for farmers and a nightmare for getting the littlies to sleep. But what's your take?

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Should we ditch daylight saving? 🕰️
  • 40.3% Yes - get rid of the clock changes
    40.3% Complete
  • 57.8% No, I enjoy it
    57.8% Complete
  • 1.9% Other - I'll share below
    1.9% Complete
1109 votes
5 hours ago

Alan and Hazel Kerr share Senior New Zealander of the Year Award 2026

Kevin Hickman Retirement Village

Dr Alan and Hazel Kerr describe themselves as ‘just ordinary old Kiwis’, despite being named as the 2026 Ryman Healthcare Senior New Zealanders of the Year Te Mātāpuputu o te Tau.

The amazing couple prompted a standing ovation at a star-studded Auckland event which recognised their tireless efforts, with Alan travelling to and from Gaza and the West Bank 40 times to help children over 20 years, and Hazel travelling 20 times.

Click read more to find out more.

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6 hours ago

Happy Anniversary to Nancy and John!

The Team from Neighbourly.co.nz

Nancy and John Lawrence are celebrating their 60th wedding anniversary this weekend in Timaru.

Meeting by chance at a dance, the couple married in Oāmaru in 1966 and have lived in 14 houses over that time in both Ōamaru and Timaru.

John trained as an electrician while Nancy trained as a primary school teacher and did several jobs before going on to manage the South Canterbury Community College for 17 years.

They raised five children, ran the Rangitata Store in the early 1980s and John has also been a farmer. They now co-own Matai Nurseries in Waimate with their daughter and son-in-law and are kept busy travelling around and delivering plants.

“And when we said ‘til death do us part’, we meant it,’’ Nancy said.

You can read more about them in the article on The Press here.

Those are some great innings and we love to hear stories like these at Neighbourly!

Have you come across Nancy and John over the years, or are you nearing a big milestone like this?