The Niue Assembly or Niue Parliament (Niuean: Niue Fono Ekepule) is the legislature of Niue. It consists of 20 members; 14 representatives of the villages and 6 elected on a common island-wide roll. Members are directly elected by universal suffrage, and serve a three-year term. Niue follows the Westminster system of government, with the prime minister elected by the Assembly and the Cabinet drawn from it.

Niue Assembly

Niue Fono Ekepule
Coat of arms or logo
Type
Type
Leadership
Billy Talagi
since 13 May 2026
Structure
Seats20
Political groups
  Common roll (6)
  Village representatives (14)
Elections
Last election
2 May 2026
Next election
2029
Meeting place
Alofi
Website
www.gov.nu/parliament

History

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The Assembly is descended from the Island Council established under the Cook Islands Act 1915. This was disbanded in 1959 and reconstituted as the Assembly, which was successively granted greater control.[1] The Assembly assumed full law-making power within the constitution upon self-government in 1974.

The Assembly is physically located in Alofi.

Speaker of the Assembly

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The Assembly is presided over by a Speaker, elected by its members from outside their ranks. If a member of the Assembly is elected Speaker, they must resign their seat.[2] A majority of 11 is required to elect a speaker.[3] The Speaker does not vote in proceedings, and does not enjoy a casting vote.

The current Speaker is Hima Douglas.

Elections

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Elections are held under a simple plurality system, with electors in the fourteen villages electing one member per village by majority vote, and six members from a common roll. Electors and candidates must be either New Zealand citizens or permanent residents of Niue, continually resident for at least three years at some point, and ordinarily resident for twelve months prior to enrolment as an elector or, as the case may be, nomination as a candidate.

Terms of the Niue Assembly

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Legislative procedures

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The power of the Assembly to pass legislation is circumscribed by the constitution. Any member may introduce a bill, but the Assembly may not proceed on bills dealing with financial matters without the consent of the Prime Minister. Bills affecting the criminal law or personal status, the public service or Niuean land may not proceed without a report from the Chief Justice, the Niue Public Service Commission, or an appropriate Commission of Inquiry respectively.[4]

A bill becomes law when passed by the Assembly and certified by the Speaker.[5] There is no Royal Assent.

See also

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References

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  1. Island Territories: Niue Island Archived 23 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine in Te Ara: An Encyclopaedia of New Zealand, edited by A. H. McLintock, originally published in 1966.
  2. Constitution of Niue, article 20 (3).
  3. ""Over the years, the role of the Speaker has become blurred so we need to sharpen the focus": New Speaker Hima Douglas". TV Niue. 11 June 2020. Retrieved 3 May 2026. The vote by secret ballot went to three rounds. In the first round, both candidates received 10 votes each. The second round of voting resulted in the same outcome a deadlock at 10 votes each. In the third round of voting, the deadlock was broken with Hima Douglas receiving 11 votes and Togia Pihigia 9 votes.
  4. Constitution of Niue, Articles 30 – 33.
  5. Constitution of Niue, Article 34.
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