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Destiny New Zealand

Defunct Christian political party in New Zealand

Destiny New Zealand

Summary

Defunct Christian political party in New Zealand

FieldValue
nameDestiny New Zealand
logo
coloursRed, black, white
colorcode#CC0000
leaderRichard Lewis
foundation
dissolution
ideologyChristian right
Social conservatism
Anti-LGBT
positionRight-wing to far-right
religionDestiny Church
internationalNone

Social conservatism Anti-LGBT

Destiny New Zealand was a Christian political party in New Zealand centred on the charismatic/pentecostal Destiny Church. The party described itself as "centre-right". It placed a strong focus on socially conservative values and argued that the breakdown of the traditional family was a primary cause of many of New Zealand's problems. It announced its de-registration as a political party on 18 September 2007, and was removed from the register a month later. It did not hold any seats in Parliament.

History

Destiny New Zealand formed early in 2003. By June 2004 the party claimed to have around three thousand members, and indicated an intent to stand candidates in all electorates. The party took a strongly conservative stance in most policy-areas. It repeatedly criticised what it saw as the permissive nature of modern society, with Brian Tamaki saying that New Zealand "has moved so far away from God that anything goes now".

The party's political leader, Richard Lewis, spoke out strongly against the former Labour-Progressive administration of 2002–2008, saying that the nation "simply cannot afford to spend another term under the dictates of an anti-marriage, anti-family and anti-Christian government". Destiny New Zealand also condemned the existence of "fatherless families", saying that lack of male leadership contributed to social ills. In 2000 Tamaki reportedly stated that having female political leaders (as New Zealand had at the time) formed part of the "Devil's strategy", although Tamaki says that reports have taken his remarks out of context.

2005 general election

In 2004, Tamaki predicted that Destiny Church would rule New Zealand by 2008. However, in the 2005 elections, Destiny New Zealand received just over 14,000 votes (out of over two million nationwide) or 0.62% of the vote—well short of 5% threshold required to enter Parliament without winning an electorate. This was the highest vote of any party not to make it into Parliament. Official Count Results – Overall Status {{webarchive |url= https://web.archive.org/web/20070429020140/http://2005.electionresults.govt.nz/partystatus.html Polling before the election consistently showed the party was well short of the threshold. None of its electorate candidates proved a serious factor in their respective races (Lewis had the best showing, gaining 1,111 votes for a distant third placing in Manukau East).

Deregistration, stalled merger, and successors

On 18 September 2007, Brian Tamaki announced that Destiny New Zealand would be deregistered as a political party. In its place, a new Christian political party would be formed, with Richard Lewis as the co-leader. The second co-leader was not announced. However, then-MP for The Kiwi Party Gordon Copeland announced that he was the other co-leader of the party. On 20 September Copeland announced that he "could not work" with Richard Lewis, and would remain an independent MP. In October, it was announced that Destiny New Zealand would put its support behind The Family Party, to be led by Lewis and former United Future MP Paul Adams. The Family Party contested the 2008 election without success and was disbanded in 2010.

In 2019, Hannah and Brian Tamaki announced a new party, initially called Coalition New Zealand then renamed as Vision NZ. Brian Tamaki founded another party called Freedoms New Zealand in 2022.

Electoral results

Election# of party votes% of party vote# of seats
wonGovernment/opposition?2005
14,2100.62Not in Parliament

References

References

  1. [http://www.elections.org.nz/news/ec-media-destiny-181007.html Electoral Commission – News Releases & Resources – Destiny New Zealand removed from party register] {{webarchive. link. (30 July 2012)
  2. Taylor, Kevin. (24 May 2003). "Evangelist's church spawns Christian political party". [[The New Zealand Herald]].
  3. Wall, Tony. (7 March 2010). "Is Tamaki's empire crumbling?". [[Stuff (website).
  4. (3 October 2004). "Is Destiny destined to rule?". [[Television New Zealand]].
  5. (17 September 2007). "Destiny Church widening political scope". [[Newstalk ZB]].
  6. (17 September 2007). "New Party to unify Christians". [[The Dominion Post (Wellington).
  7. Young, Audrey. (21 September 2007). "New Christian party – an idiot's guide". [[New Zealand Herald]].
  8. (20 September 2007). "Speed wobbles hit Christian party plan". [[The Dominion Post (Wellington).
  9. (17 October 2007). "Joint Christian party officially dead, as two new parties emerge". [[Radio New Zealand]].
  10. Earley, Melanie. (23 May 2019). "Destiny Church launches political party, promising 'politics with teeth'".
  11. (22 August 2022). "Brian Tamaki announces new political party". [[The New Zealand Herald]].
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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