Hipkins will be reappointed on Saturday afternoon.
Grant Robertson will be appointed Minister of Foreign Affairs and Minister for Disarmament and Arms Control. Willie Jackson will take over Nanaia Mahuta’s delegations as Associate Minister for Māori Development.
“This solution to a constitutional quirk has been amicably agreed and we continue to consult closely with the incoming Government on all key decisions,” Hipkins said.
Meanwhile, Labour’s Rachel Boyack has held the seat of Nelson after a recount, beating National’s Blair Cameron by just 26 votes.
The result was delivered this afternoon, as it was also confirmed the current caretaker Government arrangements would continue until the new Government was formed.
Hipkins and Prime Minister-designate Christopher Luxon agreed to advise Governor-General Cindy Kiro of the arrangements.
Boyack, who first won the seat in 2020, said she was “delighted” to have been confirmed as Nelson’s MP.
“It is the privilege of my life to be the MP for Nelson and I’m looking forward to continuing my work as a strong advocate for the Nelson region.”
She said she acknowledged Cameron, who ran a “strong campaign”.
She said Labour would be a “formidable Opposition”. Her local focus included public transport, the Nelson Hospital upgrade, housing and significant economic development projects.
The recount was one of three requested - the most of any general election since the advent of the MMP (mixed member proportional) voting system in the early 1990s.
The Māori seat of Tāmaki Makaurau has the smallest margin, with Te Pāti Māori’s Takutai Tarsh Kemp leading Labour incumbent Peeni Henare by just four votes. The seat has been held by Henare since 2014, although in the event he falls short he will return to Parliament on the party list.
The typically impenetrable red fortress of Mt Albert is one of the more shocking results of the election; National’s Melissa Lee is trailing Labour’s Helen White by just 20 votes.
The past three MPs for Mt Albert were Labour leaders Helen Clark, David Shearer and Dame Jacinda Ardern, who held a 21,000-vote majority in 2020. It has never been held by National.
Both of those recounts are due to begin on Monday. After the final votes were delivered, chief electoral officer Karl Le Quesne said recounts would generally take up to three days but for larger electorates, such as Tāmaki Makaurau, they could take as long as eight days.
Professor Andrew Geddis of the University of Otago previously told the Herald most elections saw one recount, but having three was “out of the box”.
The job isn’t quite as simple as emptying the boxes and starting from scratch. Geddis said the recount has two elements; a literal recount of the votes, and a closer look at disallowed votes.
All ballots have to be checked against the electoral roll to ensure voters haven’t voted twice, are enrolled, and have voted in the right electorate. Even the voter’s mark on the voting paper can be called into question.
“A call has to be made as to whether the voter’s intent is obvious. If you can tell, you count the vote. If you can’t, it’s disregarded.
“Recounts always result in some change because of human error. But the change is usually less than 20 votes, give or take.”
The recounts are separate from other issues the Electoral Commission is reviewing afterthe election, which include 15 voting places with “data entry errors” and that an entire ballot box from the East Coast was missed.
This review was sparked after a Herald investigation highlighting the issue.