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Dr Muriel Newman
Contact Muriel:
Email: muriel@nzcpr.com
Phone 09 4343 836
or 021 800 111
PO Box 984, Whangarei
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13
September 2009
Does
NZ Need an Upper House?
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The
The Prime Minister has announced that the Government is
planning to hold the long-awaited referendum on our MMP
(Mixed Member Proportional) electoral system before or
at the same time as the 2011 general election. This was
a National Party election promise based on the widely
held view that
voters
were going to be given a
chance to review MMP after a suitable trial period.
In spite of the perception that another referendum was
going to be held, what the 1993 Electoral Act
- under which MMP was
established
-
actually provided for was a review by a
Select Committee of Parliament before June 2002.
However, in setting up the
review
committee in April 2000, then
Prime Minister Helen Clark gave clear instructions that
the
committee
was only to make recommendations if they
were based on
unanimous or
near unanimous decisions. As could have been
predicted, the Committee was unable to agree on whether
another referendum on MMP
was called for!
While MMP has undoubtedly delivered greater
representation of minority groups into Parliament than
FPP (First Past the Post), many people have become
increasingly concerned that this has come at the expense
of democracy.
Under MMP, while the 70 MPs elected to represent the 63
general seats and 7 Maori seats,
are directly accountable to voters,
there are
50
List MPs who are accountable only to their party bosses.
This
can lead to the bizarre situation where an MP, who has effectively been “sacked”
by their electorate, can reappear in Parliament as a
List Member, instead of being tossed out.
The
crucial
question, however,
is what should replace
MMP
if voters agree that it is time for a change? Do we want to go back to
FPP or
should
we look at
other options?
There is no doubt, that during times when highly
contentious laws have been marching their way through
the House, the merit of having an Upper House to act as
a watchdog on Parliament has
sprung to mind. New
Zealand, of course, used to have an Upper House of
Parliament called the Legislative Council. Based on the
British House of Lords, it was intended to prevent
Parliament from passing laws too quickly. The
Legislative Council was established by the New Zealand
Constitution Act in 1852 in conjunction with the House
of Representatives. But while House of Representatives
MPs were elected,
members of the Legislative Council were
appointed by
the Crown. This left the Upper House vulnerable to
“capture” by political parties, but rather than
reforming the system so that members of the Upper House
were elected
rather than appointed, in 1951
it was dissolved.
An Upper House of Parliament that
is extremely effective
as
a “house of review and a powerful check on the
government of the day” is the Australian Senate. With an
equal number of representatives from each Australian
State, the Senate ensures that the views of less
populous regions of Australia are not neglected.
Further, the system of voting makes it easier for
independents and candidates from smaller parties to be
elected, as well as ensuring that no votes are wasted.[1]
Senators are elected using
proportional
representation voting, which is designed to elect
several candidates in each state, each of whom has
obtained a number of votes equal to or exceeding a
specified quota. The quota is determined by dividing the
total number of votes by one more than the number of
candidates to be elected, and adding one to the result.
For example, if the total of votes in a state at an
election for six senators is 700,000, the quota is
100,001. Thus, a candidate would need to win at least
100,001 votes to be elected.
Candidates, who receive votes in excess of the quota,
have their surplus votes distributed according to their
electors’ ranking of preferences. If all the positions
have not then been filled by candidates obtaining quotas
by this means, then the next preferences of the voters
for the least successful candidates are distributed,
until all vacancies are filled by candidates obtaining
quotas.
In comparison, the
preferential
voting system used for the Australian House of
Representatives is similar to STV (Single Transferable
Vote): if no candidate receives more than 50 per cent of
first preference votes, the next preferences of the
voters for the least successful candidates are
distributed until one candidate emerges with a majority
of votes.
Under
Australia’s voting system,
all Parliamentary
Representatives are elected by Australian voters, not
appointed by Party bosses. Further,
their system
ensures that all regions of the country
are well represented and
that
minor parties
and
independents
are able to be
elected. However, it is the watchdog role of the Senate
that
deserves
special consideration.
This week’s Guest Commentator is Australian Senator
Steve
Fielding. With a background in engineering and business
- including a three year stint working in New Zealand –
Senator Fielding was one of the Senators responsible for
defeating the Rudd Government’s Emissions Trading
Scheme. In his article “Who Holds the New Zealand
Government to Account?” Senator Fielding explains what
happened:
“One of the most significant pieces of legislation I
have voted on to date is the government’s emissions
trading scheme (ETS), introduced last month to reduce
Australia’s carbon dioxide emissions. What the ETS
really is, is a multi-billion dollar tax on businesses
and on Australian working families. This tax will need
to be paid by someone and it will be millions of
ordinary Australians who will end up footing the bill.
It will hurt industries across the entire economy and
lead to thousands of hard-working Australians losing
their jobs in the middle of a global recession. And all
of this could occur because of policy being rushed
through parliament before we know what the rest of the
world is doing at Copenhagen later this year. I also
have concerns about what is actually driving climate
change.
“You see, until recently I like most people simply
accepted without question the notion that climate change
was a result of increased carbon dioxide emissions. That
was until somebody asked me a question I could not
answer. When I was told that carbon dioxide emissions
have gone up rapidly since 1995 but global temperatures
have not increased as predicted, I was left dumbfounded.
How could I, as a Federal Senator, vote for legislation
that will carry with it such a high price yet not answer
such a simple question?
“I met with the government and asked them three simple
questions that I believe went to the heart of the
climate change debate. Three questions which I believed
needed to be answered if they expected me to vote in
support of their legislation. Three questions which
remain unanswered to a satisfactory level”.
The three questions Stephen asked are firstly, is it the
case that CO2 increased by 5 percent since
1998 whilst global temperature cooled over the same
period? If so, why did the temperature not increase; and
how can human emissions be to blame for dangerous levels
of warming? Secondly, is it the case that the rate and
magnitude of warming between 1979 and 1998 was not
unusual in either rate or magnitude as compared with
warmings that have occurred earlier in the Earth’s
history? If so, why is it perceived to have been caused
by human CO2 emissions; and, in any event,
why is warming a problem if the Earth has experienced
similar warmings in the past? And thirdly, is it the
case that all GCM computer models projected a steady
increase in temperature for the period 1990-2008,
whereas in fact there were only 8 years of warming were
followed by 10 years of stasis and cooling? If so, why
is it assumed that long-term climate projections by the
same models are suitable as a basis for public policy
making?[2]
In his article Senator Fielding explains that since the
government could not answer these questions
satisfactorily – and nor would Al Gore when he visited
Australia in July – then
there
was no justification for introducing an ETS,
which he believes is “the biggest economic decision” in
Australia’s history. He therefore voted against the
climate change bill and will continue to fight it when
it is re-introduced later this year. To read Senator
Fielding’s article, click here
>>>
Given that the National Party
also
intends to push through
their Emissions Trading legislation before the United
Nations global warming meeting in Copenhagen in
December, don’t
we need
an Upper House to
protect us from such recklessness? After all, as each
day goes by more and more doubts emerge about the
pseudo-science published by the United Nations upon
which New Zealand’s future now rests - given the
National Party’s blind reliance on their propaganda.
Further,
where is the pressure on the National Party to produce
their promised “high quality, quantified, regulatory
impact analysis”, which should have been used to clearly
spell out the full costs of their proposed multi-billion
tax on business and families -
especially as it
will cause many
thousands of hard working New Zealanders to lose their
jobs.
Even the Wall Street Journal is incredulous about what
is going on in New Zealand describing the recent Select
Committee report on the Emissions Trading Scheme as
“green PR gone wild”. In their article “New Zealand’s
cap-and-trade rationale is a bunch of hot air”, they
accuse the government of not only failing to “question
the disputed United Nations climate-change assumptions”,
but
of
also failing to “explain the cost to the average
Kiwi of taxing every corner of the economy”. They
conclude
their article
by saying that rather than adopting ideas that
will make the country poorer, John Key should be
focusing on “encouraging strong economic growth to
support a vibrant, entrepreneurial society”.[3]
The point is that emissions trading schemes are so
complex that most New Zealanders are not aware of the
dreadful damage that it
will inflict on the country, and without an Upper House of
Parliament to protect us from such bad legislation, we
are like lambs to the slaughter. In light of that, as we
look
towards the proposed referendum on MMP, maybe we
should be advocating the option of re-installing New
Zealand’s Upper House of Parliament. If we increased the
number of general electorate seats from 63 to say 70,
and had an Upper House of 29 Members elected regionally
under a proportional voting system like they do in
Australia, then, at the same time, we could reduce the
number of MPs back to the more reasonable number of 99!
This
week’s poll asks: Do you see merit in exploring
the idea of an Upper House of Parliament for New Zealand as an
option for the proposed referendum on our voting system?
Go
to poll >>>
FOOTNOTES:
1.
Australian Parliament, Senate
Briefs
2.Questions,
response and analysis
3.Wall Street Journal, Kiwi
Carbon Haze
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