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This New Zealand article has some associated metadata templates to display political party colours and names in election candidate and results tables.
The table below shows the content of these metadata templates.
Green Party of Aotearoa New Zealand — political party metadata | |||
Color | Shortname | ||
#098137 | Green |
I've noticed the link on the world Aotearoa (to Aotearoa) has come and gone. It should, in my opinion, go. The reasoning behind this? It is the organisations name. The article on George W. Bush doesn't link to George for example. I more appropiate place to have a link to Aotearoa would be somewhere on the opening line such as "New Zealand (Aotearoa) Parliament" --Midnighttonight 09:34, 10 May 2006 (UTC)
Hi, I moved the Aotearoa down to the first use in the text of the article, as per standard practice. Mostlyharmless 00:23, 11 May 2006 (UTC)
"In the 1999 election, the Greens gained 5.16% of the vote and seven seats in Parliament. The party's co-leader, Jeanette Fitzsimons, also won the electorate seat of Coromandel, believed to be a world-first in a First-past-the-post election system." Surely this is incorrect as New Zealand was under a Mixed Member Proportional electoral system at the time? 130.195.86.40 (talk) 23:55, 27 July 2008 (UTC)
If things go the way the opinion polls predict it, the Green Party will have a number of new MPs in the 50th New Zealand Parliament. The NZ politics task force has decided that the creation of biographies prior to the election can be assisted in the project space. Wikipedians with an interest in possible new MPs are most welcome to work on those draft biographies, which can be found here. Please note the rules that are listed on that page. Happy editing! And if you have questions on how to go about it, simply post on an article's talk page, and somebody with more experience will come and help. Schwede66 04:37, 27 October 2011 (UTC)
The Green Party is described as politically "Left". As its roots lie in socialist political movements and social protest, and it is at the outside of mainstream political parties, shouldn't it be described as "far left"?124.197.15.138 (talk) 20:52, 30 June 2012 (UTC)
In the introductory section of the article it has this: "In addition, the Green Party contests Auckland Council elections under the City Vision banner, in concert with the Labour Party and the Alliance." This seems quite out of date? I'm not from Auckland so I don't know the specifics, but the wikipedia article for 'City Vision' doesn't have any mention of any candidates post 2010. Hence I would suggest getting rid of it from the opening section.
However, I do think there's the need to talk about the Green Party and local government at some point in this article. In Wellington, an increasing number of councillors have been running (and winning) on a Green Party ticket. Shouldn't that get some mention here, or is this article restricted solely to the parliamentary party? Ballofstring (talk) 11:33, 16 October 2013 (UTC)
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Kia ora, I am one of the Party Co-convenors of the Green Party, hence I have a CoI, so I am unable to edit the page myself. However, there are a number of outdated areas listed below.
The structure section will need to be updated under the new Green Party constitution.
Structure
The party adopted a new constitution in 2022, named Te Waka Framework.[1] This is a te tiriti-based structure that is derived from the party's charter and commitment to Te Tiriti o Waitangi. The framework contains four sections: Te Waka, Ngā Haumi, Te Hāpai, and Ngā Tumu, and is based on the journey of a waka.[2]
Te Waka | Te Waka covers the governance and policy development and includes areas such as Kaunihera (Council), Te Rōpū Pounamu, Policy Hub, and Kaumātua Kākāriki. |
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Ngā Haumi | Ngā Haumi are the administration and operation aspects of the party and covers the party office. |
Te Hāpai | Te Hāpai covers membership engagement and representation. It is instructed by and answerable to the membership and includes provinces, branches, and networks. One of the decision making bodies of the party, Member Assembly, also falls under Te Hāpai, as well as Te Awa, the party's magazine. |
Ngā Tumu | Ngā Tumu are the leaders of the party and include both parliamentary caucus and local government caucus. |
Iparxan (talk) 02:10, 10 November 2023 (UTC)
@Iparxan and Schwede66: Is this to replace the current "Three-petal structure" section, leaving the other three sections of "Structure" in place? If so, the paragraph on Te Rōpū Pounamu will need adjustment as it refers to that network as an unofficial "fourth petal".-gadfium 00:21, 13 November 2023 (UTC)
Done-gadfium 03:05, 14 November 2023 (UTC)
References