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1.
Size of Parliament
(1.a)
Should the number of MPs stay the same,
increase or decrease?
Nominally
120 MPs but currently 121 because of the
overhang created when a party wins more
electorate seats than their party vote
entitles them to (in this case the Maori
Party). Margaret Robinson's 1999
Citizens’ Initiated Referendum showed
that 81.5 percent of New Zealanders wanted
the number of MPs reduced to 99.
2.
The length of the term of Parliament and
whether or not the term should be fixed
(2.a)
Should the parliamentary term stay at 3
years or increase to 4 years?
Those
in power would want longer terms and those
out, shorter. The question is how long
would you be willing to put up with a
clueless government gone rogue. With no
Upper House nor Citizens’ Veto of
unacceptable legislation, a shorter term
and more frequent elections are seen as
the only way of holding the government to
account. More details HERE
(2.b)
Should the election date stay flexible or
be fixed?
Currently,
the Prime Minister may set date for
his/her party’s advantage. A fixed date
would increase electioneering and lobbying
by vested interest groups and give more
power to the opposition.
3.
Size and number of electorates, including
changing the method for calculating size
(3.a)
Should the number of electorate stay the
same?
Currently
there are 63 general electorate seats and
7 Maori seats, with 50 list seats to make
up 120 MPs. As the population grows and
the number of electorate seats increases,
the number of list seats reduce.
(3.b)
Should the method of calculating the size
of electorates be changed?
The
process for deciding the number and size
of electorates is based on the South
Island always having 16 electorates. After
each five-yearly census, the
Representation Commission divides the
number of people living in the South
Island by 16, to get the “population
quota.” the Commission then divides the
Maori electoral population and North
Island electoral population by the South
Island population quota. This calculation
results in the number of North Island and
Maori electorates.
4.
Electoral integrity legislation
(4.a)
Should electoral integrity legislation be
re-introduced?
“Party
hopping” laws prevent MPs leaving a
party and distorting the proportionality
of Parliament. Their seat is declared
vacant and they are forced to quit. Such a
law was enacted in New Zealand in 2001 but
it had a sunset clause and expired in
2005. A select committee was not convinced
that replacement legislation was
necessary.
5.
Maori representation, including Māori
Electoral Option, Maori electoral
participation, Maori seats in Parliament
and local government:
(5.a)
Should the Maori electoral option
(separate Maori roll) be retained or
abolished?
The
Maori electoral option gives New
Zealanders of Maori descent the
opportunity to choose whether they want to
be on the Maori electoral roll or the
general electoral roll when they vote in
the next two general elections. If New
Zealanders want equality under the law
with no race-based preferment and one
electoral roll, the Maori Electoral option
should be abolished.
(5.b)
Should the parliamentary Maori seats be
retained or abolished?
Four
Maori seats were established as a
temporary measure back in 1867. They
should have been abolished in 1893, when
universal suffrage extended voting rights
to all New Zealanders. The 1987 Royal
Commission on the Electoral System
recommended they be abolished if MMP was
introduced, but through strong advocacy
they were retained. There are now 7 Maori
seats, and during the last Parliament they
were responsible for the 2 MP overhang and
in this Parliament, an overhang of 1 MP.
In the last Parliament there were 23 Maori
MPs or 19% - the Maori seats led to an
overrepresentation of Maori MPs. It is
time for the Maori seats to be abolished
as New Zealand moves towards a single
electoral franchise. The Maori Party wants
the Maori parliamentary seats to be
entrenched in law, and, like the Afrikaner
Nationalists in apartheid South Africa,
wants every New Zealander classified by
ethnicity, with all 18-year-olds of even
remotely Maori descent placed
automatically on to the Maori electoral
roll so as to increase it. More details HERE
(5.c)
Should local government Maori seats be
retained or abolished?
Separate
Maori representation was established by
legislation in 2001 at Environment Bay of
Plenty. In 2009, central government
imposed a Maori statutory board on the new
Auckland City Council. In 2011, Human
Rights Commissioner Joris De Bres wrote to
local government asking councils to
consider setting up Maori seats. Nelson
and Wairoa district councils polled
ratepayers on the issue - the proposal was
defeated. The Waikato Regional Council
voted to introduce Maori seats – it did
not seek a mandate from ratepayers. There
is little public support for local body
Maori seats – since Maori are seen to be
able to get elected on their own account.
The Maori seats should be abolished.
6.
The role of the Treaty of Waitangi within
our constitutional arrangements
(6.a)
Should the Treaty
of Waitangi have
a more central role in our constitutional
arrangements?
If
Treaty principles were enshrined in a new
written constitution, it would be a death
blow to democracy as we know it. Unelected
judges could use it to argue why the law
should grant special privileges to members
of the ‘Maori race’, and why any law
that does not do so is defective. Even if
judges should dare to decide against Maori
favouritism, the threat of challenge is
always there. It would create a
two-tiered society – a Maori elite, and
non-Maori New Zealanders as second class
citizens. More details HERE
7.
Bill of Rights issues (for example, property
rights, entrenchment)
(7.a)
Should the protection
of property rights be
included in Bill
of Rights?
The
New Zealand Bill of Rights Act 1990 is a
statute of the Parliament of New Zealand
setting out the rights and fundamental
freedoms of anyone subject to New Zealand
law. Many people would like to see private
property rights awarded the added
protection of being included in the Bill
of Rights.
(7.b)
Should the Bill of Rights be entrenched?
The
Electoral Act is the only New Zealand
statute containing entrenched provisions,
which means that it can only be changed
through a 75% vote in Parliament or a
majority vote in a public referendum. The
argument is that the Bill of Rights does
not need to be entrenched since by
convention no government would change such
a law without wide parliamentary support.
8.
Written constitution
(8.a)
Should New Zealand retain our present
flexible constitutional arrangements with
the ultimate law-making power held by
elected Members of Parliament, or should a
new written constitution, which gives the
ultimate law-making power to judges, be
introduced?
A
written constitution is framed by an
elected representative, is promulgated on
a specific date in history, and is
regarded as superior law with unelected
judges becoming the gatekeepers, usurping
parliamentary democracy. New Zealand’s
present constitutional arrangements
consist of written statutes, conventions
and common law rights, which give our
elected Members of Parliament the ultimate
law-making power. The main question is
whether we want unelected judges or
elected MPs having the last say on the
laws of New Zealand – if we want to
retain parliamentary sovereignty, a
“written” constitution should be
avoided at all costs.
9.
Any other comments
(9.a)
Should
the
DECLARATION OF EQUALITY be enacted by
Parliament?
The
Declaration of Equality states that:
"We New Zealanders of all backgrounds, having founded and developed our society in equality,
fairness, and comradeship, oppose any laws which establish or promote racial distinction or division.
1 We reject references to the Treaty of Waitangi or its principles in any constitutional document.
2 We ask that such references be removed from all existing legislation.
3 We ask that race-based Parliamentary seats be abolished.
4 We ask that race-based representation on local bodies be abolished.
5 We ask that the Waitangi Tribunal be abolished.
Therefore in the interests of New Zealand we call on the members of the House
of Representatives to implement the principles of this Declaration of Equality to
ensure that there is one law for all."
The
on-line Declaration of Equality and more
details can be found HERE
(9.b)
Should
constitutional change be dictated by MPs
or subjected to a public referendum?
The
only legitimate democratic way to enact
major constitutional change is through a
public referendum process. Any attempts by
MPs to change the constitution by way of a
parliamentary vote should be regarded as
illegitimate and should be opposed by all
citizens. More details HERE
(9.c)
Other issues - such as should
we become a republic?
This
issue has been excluded from the Terms of
Reference for the constitutional review.
However, a republic is a state in which
supreme power is held by the people and
their elected representatives, and which
has an elected or nominated president. In
many respects, NZ is a defacto republic
with the governor-general functioning as a
nominated president. The trappings of a
constitutional monarchy (such as reference
to the Crown, and the Queen as head of
state) persist but have little actual
effect...
Visit
the New Zealand Centre for Political
Research homepage at www.nzcpr.com
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