120
As of the 2008 general election, the New Zealand Labour Party holds 43 seats (out of 122) in the New Zealand Parliament - 21 filled with electorate MP's and the remaining 22 being list MPs.
Members of Parliament get paid according to a pay scale and their position. Backbench MPs are not paid as much as Cabinet MPs or as much as the Prime Minister. Refer to the related link below which gives the current pay scale.
New Zealand's Parliament Buildings are in Wellington.
John Key and Gerry Brownlee, two of New Zealand's MPs, received bomb threats in March 2012.
MMP stands for "Mixed Member Proportional". It's the type of electoral system we use to elect our parliament in New Zealand. Basically it's called "Mixed Member" because there are two kinds of MPs - list MPs and electorate MPs. The "proportional" bit relates to how these seats are allocated. If a party wins 50% of the party votes, it gets 50% of the seats in parliament. There are 120 seats in parliament so 50% of the vote would equate to 60 seats. If the party wins 40 electorate seats, they will get 20 list seats to make up the proportion of seas they're entitled to.
wellington
The first parliament in New Zealand was called the 1st New Zealand Parliament. It commenced in 1854, two years after the British colonial power sought to give the colony representative government by enacting the New Zealand Constitution Act of 1852.
Parliament
Apparently they do, since ALL of the MPs on the Green Party in New Zealand support same-sex marriage.
New Zealand's parliament building, the 'Beehive'.
There are about 120+ Members of Parliament in New Zealand, and the Prime Minister is John Keys.
yes