Cook Islands flagPolitics & Government Guide · Cook Islands

Politics & Government Guide in Cook Islands

Political system, governance structure, stability indicators, and democratic institutions

The Cook Islands operates as a parliamentary democracy in free association with New Zealand, with King Charles III as head of state represented by Sir Tom Marsters and Prime Minister Mark Brown of the Cook Islands Party leading the government since 2020. The unicameral Parliament, elected in 2022, features CIP with a majority alongside independents. The nation manages internal affairs independently while New Zealand handles defense and external relations.

Government Type

parliamentary democracy under constitutional monarchy in free association with New Zealand

Legal System

common law system derived from English law

Head of State

King Charles III(since 2022)

Head of Government

Prime Minister Mark Brown(Cook Islands Party)since 2020

Legislature

Type:unicameral
Upper House:House of Ariki (24 seats)
Lower House:Parliament (24 seats)

Major Political Parties

Cook Islands Party(CIP)

centre-right

12 seats
Democratic Party(Demo)

centre-left

5 seats
Cook Islands United Party(United)

unknown

3 seats

Voting Rights

full adult suffrage; registration compulsory, voting voluntary; Cook Islanders hold New Zealand citizenship

Recent Developments

  • General elections held on 1 August 2022; Cook Islands Party retained government with 12 seats
  • Parliament scheduled 42 sitting days for 2024 session starting 19 February
  • Prime Minister Mark Brown re-appointed on 11 August 2022 following election victory
  • Ratified Pacific Agreement on Closer Economic Relations Plus on 14 October 2020
Voting Age18
Suffrageuniversal at age 18
Constitution1965
islands15