2008 in New Zealand
The following lists events that happened during 2008 in New Zealand.
Population
- Estimated population as of 31 December: 4,280,300.
- Increase since 31 December 2007: 34,500.
- Males per 100 Females: 95.7.
Incumbents
Regal and vice regal
Government
2008 was the third and last year of the 48th Parliament, which was dissolved on 3 October. A general election was held on 8 November to elect the 49th Parliament, which saw the Fifth National Government elected.- Speaker of the House – Margaret Wilson then Lockwood Smith
- Prime Minister – Helen Clark to 19 November, then John Key
- [Deputy Prime Minister of New Zealand|Prime Minister of New Zealand|Deputy Prime Minister] – Michael Cullen to 19 November, then Bill English
- Minister of Finance – Michael Cullen to 19 November, then Bill English
- Minister of Foreign Affairs – Winston Peters to 29 August, then Helen Clark to 19 November, then Murray McCully
Party leaders
- [New Zealand New Zealand Labour Party|Labour Party|Labour] – Helen Clark to 11 November, then Phil Goff
- National – John Key
- Progressive – Jim Anderton
- New Zealand First – Winston Peters
- United Future – Peter Dunne
- Act – Rodney Hide
- Greens – Jeanette Fitzsimons and Russel Norman
- Māori Party – Tariana Turia and Pita Sharples
Judiciary
Main centre leaders
- Mayor of Auckland – John Banks
- Mayor of Tauranga – Stuart Crosby
- Mayor of Hamilton – Bob Simcock
- Mayor of Wellington – Kerry Prendergast
- Mayor of Christchurch – Bob Parker
- Mayor of Dunedin – Peter Chin
Events
January
- 22 January – State funeral for Sir Edmund Hillary
February
- 17 February – A helicopter and a Cessna 152 collide mid-air in Paraparaumu, causing the deaths of three people. The aeroplane hit the roof of a house, and the helicopter fell onto a PlaceMakers store.
April
- 5 April – A propane explosion at a coolstore in Tamahere kills firefighter senior station officer Derek Lovell, and seriously injures seven others.
May
- 8 May – The Tapuae Marine Reserve is established.
June
- 5 June – A newly redesigned flag for the Governor General of New Zealand is flown for the first time at Government House, Auckland.
July
- 1 July – Rail transport network is renationalised as KiwiRail
- 11 July – Police Sergeant Derek Wootton is struck and killed by a vehicle fleeing police, while laying road spikes at Titahi Bay.
- 30 July – A state of emergency is declared in Marlborough due to flooding.
August
- 1 August – Crown entities Land Transport New Zealand and Transit New Zealand merge to form the NZ Transport Agency
- 16 August – Dunedin Hospital is put in lockdown for a week after approximately 170 staff and patients fall ill to a norovirus outbreak, resulting in 2,300 appointments and procedures being delayed.
September
- 5 September – Fonterra advise Prime Minister Helen Clark of the 2008 baby milk scandal.
- 7 September – The Taputeranga Marine Reserve is opened.
- 11 September – Undercover police Sergeant Don Wilkinson is fatally shot in Māngere, after being discovered attempting to secretly fix a tracking device to a car.
- 24 September - [2008 GO Basin Reserve|Wellington dispute|GO Wellington dispute] - an industrial dispute between the GO Wellington bus company and drivers
October
On the 17th The Dominion Post Billboard Heading Reads "Market Madness"There is also a graph on the Billboard showing the NZX taking a big dive.
This was indicative of the worlds sharemarkets in turmoil.
November
- 8 November – John Key and the New Zealand National Party win the 2008 general election. John Key is able to form a Government and in Helen Clark's speech that she resigns as leader of the New Zealand Labour Party.
- 9 November – Michael Cullen resigns as deputy leader of the Labour Party.
- 19 November – John Key is sworn in as Prime Minister of New Zealand.
- 27 November – 2008 Air New Zealand A320 test flight crash. Air New Zealand A320 Airbus crashes into the Mediterranean during a test flight, killing five New Zealand and two German air crew.
Holidays and observances
- 6 February – Waitangi Day
- 21 March – Good Friday
- 23 March – Easter Sunday
- 24 March – Easter Monday
- 25 April – Anzac Day
- 2 June – Queen's Birthday
- 5 June – Matariki
- 27 October – Labour Day
Arts and literature
Awards
- BPANZ Book Design Awards - In association with Spectrum Print and the New Zealand Listener
- BEST BOOK Title: Bill Hammond: Jingle Jangle Morning
- BEST COVER Winner: Bill Hammond: Jingle Jangle Morning
- NON-ILLUSTRATED Winner: Dear to Me
- ILLUSTRATED Winner: Bill Hammond: Jingle Jangle Morning
- EDUCATIONAL Winner: Astronomy Aotearoa NCEA Level 1 by Robert Shaw
- CHILDREN’S Winner: The King's Bubbles by Ruth Paul
Music
- May - New Zealand Music Month
- 3 September: Technical Awards for the Vodafone New Zealand Music Awards
- 8 October: Vodafone New Zealand Music Awards
Performing arts
- Benny Award presented by the Variety Artists Club of New Zealand to Suzanne Lynch MNZM.
Television
- [Freeview (New Zealand)|Freeview
| HD] Digital television is launched. - The country's first Chinese television channel, CTV8 is launched in early October.
Sport
Cricket
- New Zealand men's cricket team, the Black Caps plays three test matches against England and draws the series, each team having won a game
Horse racing
Harness racing
- New Zealand Trotting Cup: Changeover
- Auckland Trotting Cup: Gotta Go Cullen
Netball
- The ANZ Netball Championship begins in April 2008.
Olympic Games
- New Zealand sends a team of 182 competitors across 17 sports.
| Total | |||
| 3 | 2 | 4 | 9 |
Paralympics
- New Zealand sends a team of 30 competitors across seven sports.
| Total | |||
| 5 | 3 | 4 | 12 |
Rugby league
- The New Zealand national rugby league team won the 2008 Rugby League World Cup.
- The New Zealand Warriors finished 8th in the National Rugby League and in the playoffs made it through to the semi-finals, beating minor premiers the Melbourne Storm in the progress.
- The inaugural season of the new Bartercard Premiership saw Auckland defeat Canterbury 38-10 in the grand final.
Shooting
- Ballinger Belt – Brian Carter
Soccer
- 30 October – 16 November – New Zealand hosts the inaugural FIFA U-17 Women's World Cup. Matches are held in Albany, Christchurch, Hamilton and Wellington.
- The Chatham Cup is won by East Coast Bays AFC who beat Dunedin Technical 1—0 in the final.
Births
- 17 March - Nate Wilbourne, environmentalist and activist
- 12 August – Dwayne Li, figure skater
- 18 September – Silent Achiever, Thoroughbred racehorse
- 23 September – Zurella, Thoroughbred racehorse
- 13 October – Ocean Park, Thoroughbred racehorse
Deaths
January
- 1 January – Joan Dingley, mycologist
- 2 January – Lindsay Poole, botanist and forester
- 4 January
- * Graham Percy, artist, designer and illustrator
- * Bert Walker, politician
- 6 January – Charlie Steele, Jr., association football player
- 10 January – Sir George Laking, diplomat
- 11 January – Sir Edmund Hillary, mountaineer, explorer and philanthropist
- 16 January – Hone Tuwhare, poet
February
- 12 February – Ron Chippindale, pilot, air accident investigator
- 14 February – June Schoch, athlete
- 16 February – K. Radway Allen, fisheries biologist
- 19 February – Barry Barclay, filmmaker
- 28 February – Peter Bannister, botanist
March
- 13 March – Tessa Birnie, concert pianist
- 18 March – Ruth Dallas, poet and children's author
- 21 March – Merv Wallace, cricketer
April
- 2 April – Sir Geoffrey Cox, newspaper and television journalist
- 6 April – Tony Davies, rugby union player
- 10 April – Greg Hough, association football player
- 11 April – Fraser Colman, politician
- 12 April – Dame Augusta Wallace, jurist, first woman District Court judge
- 15 April – Mahinārangi Tocker singer–songwriter
May
- 4 May – Colin Murdoch, pharmacist, veterinarian and inventor
- 8 May – William L. Holland, Pacific affairs academic
- 20 May – Mihi Edwards, writer, social worker, teacher
June
- 1 June – Doug Zohrab, diplomat
- 4 June – John Armitt, wrestler
- 5 June
- * Colin Kay, athlete and politician, mayor of Auckland
- * Bruce Purchase, actor
- 24 June
- * Neill Austin, politician
- * Charlie Dempsey, association football administrator
- 27 June – Lyn Davis, rugby union player
- 30 June – Just An Excuse, Standardbred racehorse
July
- 16 July – Bob Walton, police officer
- 17 July – Sir Graham Speight, jurist
- 25 July – Walter Metcalf, physical chemistry academic
- 31 July – Falani Aukuso, Tokelauan public servant
August
- 6 August – Ken Going, rugby union player
- 9 August – Bob Cunis, cricket player and coach
- 16 August – Rei Hamon, artist
- 25 August – Hardwicke Knight, historian and photographer
- 31 August – Victor Yates, rugby union and league player
September
- 7 September – Sir Hamish Hay, politician, mayor of Christchurch
- 8 September – Ron Guthrey, soldier, politician, mayor of Christchurch
- 11 September – Sue Garden-Bachop, rugby union player, coach and administrator
- 13 September – Duncan Laing, swimming coach
- 15 September
- * Peter Hanan, swimmer
- * Arthur Stubbs, soldier, oldest New Zealand war veteran
- 21 September – Al Hobman, professional wrestler
- 25 September
- * Wynne Bradburn, cricketer
- * Brian Donnelly, politician and diplomat
October
- 2 October – Rob Guest, actor and singer
- 14 October – Dame Daphne Purves, educator
- 15 October – Des Townson, yacht designer
- 26 October – Neil Purvis, rugby union player
- 29 October – John Darwin, statistician and public servant
November
- 6 November – Kevin J. Sharpe, mathematician, theologian and archaeologist
- 7 November – Hedley Howarth, cricketer
- 8 November – Hugh Cook, science fiction writer
- 27 November – Mike Minogue, politician
- 29 November – Robert Wade, chess player
December
- 6 December – Peter Wardle, plant ecologist
- 13 December – John Drake, rugby union player
- 16 December – Peg Batty, cricketer
- 24 December – Ian Ballinger, sports shooter