Английская Википедия:2017 in New Zealand
Шаблон:More citations needed Шаблон:Use dmy dates Шаблон:Use New Zealand English Шаблон:Year in New Zealand The following lists events that happened during 2017 in New Zealand.
Population
- National
Estimated populations as at 30 June.[1]
- New Zealand total – 4,793,700
- North Island – 3,677,200
- South Island – 1,115,800
- Main urban areas
Estimated populations as at 30 June.[1] Шаблон:Div col
- Auckland – 1,534,700
- Blenheim – 31,300
- Christchurch – 396,700
- Dunedin – 120,200
- Gisborne – 36,600
- Hamilton – 235,900
- Invercargill – 50,800
- Kapiti – 42,300
- Napier-Hastings – 133,000
- Nelson – 66,700
- New Plymouth – 57,500
- Palmerston North – 85,300
- Rotorua – 58,800
- Tauranga – 137,900
- Wellington – 412,500
- Whanganui – 40,300
- Whangārei – 57,700
Incumbents
Regal and vice-regal
-
Elizabeth II
-
Patsy Reddy
Government
2017 is the third and final full year of the 51st Parliament, which first sat on 21 October 2014 and was dissolved on 17 August 2017. A general election was held on 23 September to elect the 52nd Parliament.
The Fifth National Government, first elected in 2008, ends. The Sixth Labour Government begins.
- Speaker of the House – David Carter, then Trevor Mallard from 8 November
- Prime Minister – Bill English until 26 October, then Jacinda Ardern
- Deputy Prime Minister – Paula Bennett until 26 October, then Winston Peters
- Leader of the House – Gerry Brownlee until 2 May, then Simon Bridges until 26 October, then Chris Hipkins
- Minister of Finance – Steven Joyce until 26 October, then Grant Robertson
- Minister of Foreign Affairs – Murray McCully until 2 May, then Gerry Brownlee until 26 October, then Winston Peters
-
David Carter
-
Trevor Mallard
-
Bill English
-
Jacinda Ardern
-
Paula Bennett
-
Winston Peters
-
Gerry Brownlee
-
Chris Hipkins
-
Steven Joyce
-
Grant Robertson
-
Murray McCully
Other party leaders
- Labour – Andrew Little until 1 August, then Jacinda Ardern (Leader of the Opposition until 26 October)
- Green – James Shaw and, until 9 August, Metiria Turei
- New Zealand First – Winston Peters
- Māori Party – Te Ururoa Flavell and Marama Fox
- ACT New Zealand – David Seymour
- United Future – Peter Dunne until 23 August, then Damian Light until 14 November (party disbanded)
-
Andrew Little
-
Jacinda Ardern
-
James Shaw
-
Metiria Turei
-
Winston Peters
-
Te Ururoa Flavell
-
Marama Fox
-
David Seymour
-
Peter Dunne
Judiciary
-
Sian Elias
Main centre leaders
- Mayor of Auckland – Phil Goff
- Mayor of Tauranga – Greg Brownless
- Mayor of Hamilton – Andrew King
- Mayor of Wellington – Justin Lester
- Mayor of Christchurch – Lianne Dalziel
- Mayor of Dunedin – Dave Cull
-
Phil Goff
-
Greg Brownless
-
Andrew King
-
Justin Lester
-
Lianne Dalziell
-
Dave Cull
Events
February
- 6 February – Sapphire Jubilee of Elizabeth II's accession as Queen of New Zealand
- 13 February to 20 April – Wild fires burn on the Port Hills of Christchurch
- 22 February – The Canterbury Earthquake National Memorial opens on the sixth anniversary of the 2011 Christchurch earthquake
- 25 February – Mount Albert by-election takes place
March
- 7 March – Jacinda Ardern is elected deputy leader of the Labour Party
- March – Pumpkin Patch is put into liquidation[2]
April
- 6 April – A state of emergency is declared as the town of Edgecumbe is evacuated due to flooding caused by the remnants of Cyclone Debbie[3]
- 13–14 April – Cyclone Cook, now an extratropical cyclone, moves across the North Island[4]
May
- 25 May – The 2017 New Zealand budget is presented to Parliament by the Minister of Finance, Steven Joyce[5]
June
- 5 June – The 2017 Queen's Birthday Honours are announced[6]
July
- 19–21 July – Severe flooding hits the east coast of the South Island between Christchurch and Balclutha
- 21 July – Mycoplasma bovis disease found in a South Island herd of cows
August
- 1 August – Jacinda Ardern elected leader of the Labour Party after Andrew Little resigns[7]
September
- 23 September – The 2017 general election is held
October
- 26 October – Jacinda Ardern is sworn in as the 40th Prime Minister of New Zealand
- 31 October – Trolleybuses are withdrawn from service in Wellington[8]
December
- 4 December – The Healthy Homes Guarantee Act 2017 receives royal assent, having passed its third reading in Parliament on 29 November
- 30 December – The 2018 New Year Honours are announced[9]
Sport
Rugby union
- 2017 British & Irish Lions tour to New Zealand, 3 June – 8 July
Shooting
- Ballinger Belt –
- Jim Bailey (Australia)
- Brian Carter (Te Puke), third, top New Zealander[10]
Births
- 9 November – Johnny Get Angry, Thoroughbred racehorse
- 20 November – Mo'unga, Thoroughbred racehorse
Deaths
January
- 7 January
- Nick Calavrias, businessman (born 1949)
- Sir Bruce Slane, public servant (born 1931)
- 8 January – Elspeth Kennedy, sharebroker, community leader (born 1931)
- 9 January
- Michael Chamberlain, pastor, exonerated in the death of Azaria Chamberlain (born 1944)
- Brown Turei, Anglican archbishop (born 1924)
- 10 January – Heather McPherson, poet (born 1942)
- 11 January – Newman Hoar, cricketer (born 1920)
- 23 January – Pat Downey, barrister and solicitor, Human Rights Commissioner, legal editor (born 1927)
- 24 January – Manu Maniapoto, rugby union player (born 1935)
- 26 January – Dame Laurie Salas, women's rights and peace activist (born 1922)
February
- 1 February – Bernie Portenski, athlete (born 1949)
- 4 February – John Dickson, poet (born 1944)
- 8 February – Steve Sumner, association footballer (born 1955)
- 12 February – Sione Lauaki, rugby union player (born 1981)
- 13 February – Jim Watson, biotechnologist and entrepreneur (born 1943)
- 14 February – John Watkinson, soil chemist (born 1932)
- 19 February – Halaevalu Mataʻaho ʻAhomeʻe, Tongan royal (born 1926)
March
- 1 March – Tania Dalton, netball player (born 1971)
- 3 March – Bramwell Cook, gastroenterologist (born 1936)
- 6 March – Dudley Storey, rower (born 1939)
- 12 March
- Murray Ball, cartoonist (born 1939)
- Eunice Eichler, midwife, open adoption advocate (born 1932)
- 15 March – Phil Garland, folk musician (born 1942)
- 23 March – Nigel Hutchinson, film producer and commercial director (born 1941)
- 24 March – Roger Bradley, cricketer (born 1962)
- 25 March – Eric Watson, rugby union player and coach, cricketer (born 1925)
- 27 March
- Shirley Annan, netball player (born 1940)
- Sean Roberts, cricket (born 1968)
April
- 3 April
- Tomairangi Paki, Tainui kuia, kapa haka exponent (born Шаблон:Circa1953)
- Bruce Palmer, lawyer, judge (born 1935)
- Bill Tinnock, rower (born 1930)
- 6 April – John Anslow, field hockey player (born 1935)
- 7 April – Robin Kay, artist, historian (born 1919)
- 8 April – Sir Douglas Myers, businessman (born 1938)
- 9 April – John Clarke, satirist (born 1948)
- 18 April – Digby Taylor, sailor (born 1941)
- 19 April – Jill Amos, politician, activist (born 1927)
- 20 April
- David Dougherty, wrongly convicted of rape and abduction (born 1967)
- Sandy McNicol, rugby union player (born 1944)
- 27 April
- Danny O'Connor, lawn bowls player
- Alexia Pickering, disabilities rights campaigner (born 1930)
May
- 2 May – Hugo Judd, diplomat (born 1939)
- 3 May – Doug Rollerson, rugby union and rugby league player (born 1953)
- 4 May
- Rosie Scott, author (born 1948)
- Beryl Te Wiata, actor, author, scriptwriter (born 1925)
- 6 May – Lyn McLean, lawn bowls player (born Шаблон:Circa)
- 13 May – Nicholas Tarling, historian, academic, author (born 1931)
- 15 May – Graeme Barrow, author (born 1936)
- 17 May – Kevin Stanton, musician (born Шаблон:Circa1956)
- 18 May – George Martin, rugby league player, field athlete (born 1931)
- 25 May – Earl Hagaman, hotel operator (born 1925)
June
- 11 June – Lois McIvor, artist (born 1930)
- 15 June – Dame Ngāneko Minhinnick, Ngāti Te Ata leader (born 1939)
- 21 June – Oliver Jessel, businessman (born 1929)
- 24 June – Nick Kirk, Anglican cleric (born Шаблон:Circa1958)
- 25 June – David Goldsmith, field hockey player (born 1931)
- 26 June
- Sir Duncan McMullin, jurist (born 1927)
- Guy Ngan, artist (born 1926)
- 27 June – Jacinta Gray, cyclist (born 1974)
- 28 June – Bruce Stewart, author, playwright, marae founder (born 1936)
- 29 June – Marrion Roe, Olympic swimmer (born 1935)
July
- 3 July – Rolf Prince, chemical engineering academic (born 1928)
- 5 July
- Chris de Freitas, climatologist (born 1948)
- John Karlsen, actor (born 1919)
- 7 July – Frank Ryan, local-body politician (born 1932)[11]
- 8 July – Gay Eaton, textile artist (born 1933)
- 10 July – Marama Martin, radio and television personality (born 1930)
- 12 July – Allan Hunter, rugby union player, teacher, historian (born 1922)
- 15 July – Michael Cooper, economist (born 1938)
- 16 July – Cliff Whiting, artist, master carver, heritage advocate (born 1936)
- 17 July – George Hill, agronomist (born 1938)
- 18 July – Ian Mason, cricketer (born 1942)
- 23 July
- Wenceslaus Anthony, businessman (born 1957)
- Tom Lister, rugby union player (born 1943)
August
- 2 August
- Sir John Graham, rugby union player and administrator, educator (born 1935)
- Paul Renton, rugby union player, farmer (born 1962)
- 4 August – Trevor Martin, cricket umpire (born 1925)
- 6 August – Tim Homer, radio personality (born Шаблон:Circa1973)
- 10 August
- Dorothy Fletcher, historian (born 1927)
- Sheila Natusch, naturalist, writer, illustrator (born 1926)
- 14 August – J. S. Parker, painter (born 1944)
- 15 August – Tui Flower, food writer (born 1925)
- 19 August – Alan Sayers, athlete, journalist, writer (born 1915)
- 20 August – Sir Colin Meads, rugby union player, coach and manager (born 1936)
- 22 August – Tom Pritchard, cricketer (born 1917)
September
- 5 September – Cedric Hassall, chemist, academic (born 1919)
- 9 September – Sir Pat Goodman, businessman, philanthropist (born 1929)
- 11 September – Malcolm Templeton, diplomat (born 1924)
- 15 September – Alma Evans-Freke, television presenter (born 1931)
- 16 September – Andrew Leachman, master mariner (born 1945)
- 18 September – Tony Laffey, association footballer (born 1925)
- 19 September – John Nicholson, motor racing driver and engine builder (born 1941)
- 21 September
- David Beatson, journalist, broadcaster (born 1944)
- Vera Burt, cricketer, hockey player, coach and administrator (born 1927)
- 26 September – Wanda Cowley, children's writer (born 1924)
- 29 September
- Annette Johnson, alpine skier (born 1928)
- Ian Smith, rugby union player (born 1941)
October
- 2 October – Peter Burke, rugby union player, coach and administrator (born 1927)
- 3 October – Norma Williams, swimmer, swimming administrator (born 1928)
- 12 October – Derek Steward, athlete (born 1928)
- 15 October – Francis Pound, art historian, curator and writer (born 1948)
- 19 October – Edmund Cotter, mountaineer (born 1927)
- 21 October – Dave Leech, hammer thrower (born 1927)
- 22 October – Sandy Thomas, military leader (born 1919)
- 23 October – Gordon Ogilvie, historian, biographer (born 1934)
- 29 October – Roly Green, rugby union player (born 1927)
- 30 October – James Beard, architect, town planner, landscape architect (born 1924)
- 31 October
- Norman Hardie, mountaineer (born 1924)
- Terry McCashin, rugby union player, brewer (born 1944)
November
- 5 November – Geoff Rothwell, World War II bomber pilot (born 1920)
- 6 November – Clem Parker, athlete (born 1926)
- 7 November – Paddles, cat owned by Jacinda Ardern
- 9 November – Tom Coughlan, rugby union player (born 1934)
- 15 November
- Dame Sister Pauline Engel, educator (born 1930)
- Moana Manley, swimmer, beauty pageant contestant (born 1935)
- Bert Ormond, association footballer (born 1931)
December
- 7 December – Neil Ritchie, cyclist (born 1933)
- 12 December – Jane Galletly, television scriptwriter (born 1928)
- 13 December
- Simon Dickie, rowing coxswain (born 1951)
- Gerald O'Brien, MP for Island Bay from 1969 to 1978 (born 1924)
- 15 December – Michael Hartshorn, organic chemist (born 1936)
- 17 December – Castletown, Thoroughbred racehorse (foaled 1986)
- 21 December – John Vear, cricketer (born 1938)
- 30 December – Dame Cheryll Sotheran, museum executive (born 1945)
Exact date unknown
- Lyn Barnett, singer
References
Шаблон:Years in New Zealand Шаблон:Year in Oceania
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- Английская Википедия
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- 2017 in Oceania
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