1914 New Zealand general election

The 1914 New Zealand general election was held on 10 December to elect a total of 80 MPs to the 19th session of the New Zealand Parliament. The Maori vote was held on 11 December. A total number of 616,043 voters were registered, of which 84.7% voters turned out to vote.

The election saw William Massey's Reform Government maintain power.

The second-ballot voting system had been repealed in 1913, and first-past-the-post voting reinstated for the 1914 election.

Soldiers serving overseas in the NZEF were given a vote by the Expeditionary Forces Voting Act, 1914. They voted for a party (Liberal, Labour or Reform) and their votes were allocated to a candidate for their electorate by a representative of their party; which sometimes required the representative to choose between rival "Liberal" or "Labour" candidates.

Party totals

 * Auckland West, Hawke's Bay, Taumarunui, Wairarapa, Waitaki and Wellington Central were won by the Liberals from Reform
 * Chalmers, Dunedin West, Motueka, and Northern Maori were won by Reform from the Liberals
 * Nelson was won by Reform from an independent.
 * Otaki was won by Reform from the Social Democrats.
 * Dunedin North was won by United Labour from Reform
 * Four electorates replaced their incumbent MP with another from the same party: Christchurch East and Temuka (Liberal), Eden and Wellington Suburbs and Country (Reform).

Results
The following are the results of the 1914 general election:

Key

|colspan=8 style="background-color:#FFDEAD" | General electorates

|colspan=8 style="background-color:#FFDEAD" | Māori electorates


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