17th Cook Islands Parliament
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The 17th Cook Islands Parliament is a previous term of the Parliament of the Cook Islands.[1] Its composition was determined by the 2018 elections on 14 June 2018.[2]
Legislative bodyParliament of the Cook Islands
Election2018 general election
GovernmentFourth Cook Islands Party Government
Websiteparliament.gov.ck
| 17th Parliament of the Cook Islands | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| |||||
Parliament House, Avarua | |||||
| Overview | |||||
| Legislative body | Parliament of the Cook Islands | ||||
| Election | 2018 general election | ||||
| Government | Fourth Cook Islands Party Government | ||||
| Website | parliament.gov.ck | ||||
| House of Representatives | |||||
| Members | 24 | ||||
| Speaker of the House | Tai Tura â Niki Rattle until 15 February 2021 | ||||
| Prime Minister | Mark Brown â Henry Puna until 1 October 2020 | ||||
| Leader of the Opposition | Tina Browne | ||||
| House of Ariki | |||||
| Members | 24 | ||||
| President of the House of Ariki | Tou Travel Ariki | ||||
| Sovereign | |||||
| Monarch | Elizabeth II | ||||
| King's Representative | Tom Marsters | ||||
Officeholders
Presiding officers
- Speaker of the House:
- Tai Tura (Cook Islands Party) from March 2021[3][4]
- Niki Rattle until 15 February 2021[3][5]
- Deputy Speaker of the House:
Other parliamentary officers
- Clerk:
- Deputy Clerk:
Party leaders
- Prime Minister:
- Hon. Mark Brown (Cook Islands Party) from 1 October 2020[9]
- Hon. Henry Puna (Cook Islands Party) until 1 October 2020[4]
- Deputy Prime Minister:
- Hon. Robert Tapaitau (Independent) from 1 October 2020[9]
- Hon. Mark Brown (Cook Islands Party) until 1 October 2020
- Leader of the Opposition: Tina Browne (Democratic Party)
Members
Initial party standings
| Party | Votes | % | Seats | +/â |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Democratic Party | 11 | +2 | ||
| Cook Islands Party | 10 | â3 | ||
| One Cook Islands Movement | 1 | â1 | ||
| Titikaveka Oire | 83 | 0 | 0 | |
| Independents | 2 | +2 | ||
| Invalid/blank votes | â | â | â | |
| Total | 24 | 0 | ||
| Registered voters/turnout | 10,917 | â | â | |
| Source: Radio NZ Justice minister | ||||
Initial MPs
Summary of changes
- Toka Hagai resigned on 1 November 2018 after allegations of treating.[10] In December 2018 the Court of Appeal ruled that Tina Browne had won the seat.[11]
- Tony Armstrong died in November 2018.[12] A by-election for the vacant Ivirua seat was held on 21 January 2019, and was won by Agnes Armstrong.[13]
- Te-Hani Brown resigned from the Democratic party to support the government in January 2019. She was subsequently re-elected in a by-election.[14]
- Henry Puna resigned on 24 March 2021 to take up the position of Secretary General of the Pacific Islands Forum Secretariat.[15] Akaiti Puna was elected in the resulting by-election.[16]