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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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1
August 2011
Maori
Seat Increase Undermines MMP Referendum
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As
a representative democracy New Zealand’s system of
government is supposed to be ‘of the people, by the people,
for the people’. So why do our ruling parties go to such
great lengths to prevent the public from having a proper say
on how we are being governed? With an election just around the
corner, isn’t it time that voters collectively demanded the
right to hold governments to account?
This question should be at the forefront of voters’ minds
when they realise that the National government - like the
Labour Government before them - has gerrymandered the
forthcoming referendum on the voting system in favour of MMP.
They have done this by not only proposing that if MMP wins the
referendum a future review will be held to ‘fix’ any
problems, but more importantly, by ensuring that every voting
option except MMP will increase the number of race-based Maori
seats - from the present number of 7 to between 9 and 12 or
13! In other words, they have implanted a poison pill that
they know will be unacceptable to most voters in each
alternative to MMP. But more on that later.
When New Zealanders voted for MMP back in 1993, most people
believed that a follow-up referendum was going to be held
after two elections to enable voters to decide whether MMP was
worth keeping. However, instead of a second referendum, Jim
Bolger’s National government legislated for a select
committee review instead! A special
committee was to be set up “as
soon as practicable after 1 April 2000” to report on whether
“there
should be a further referendum on changes to the electoral
system, and, if so, the nature of the proposals to be put to
voters and the timing of such a referendum.”[1]
But coalition politics got in the way. Prime Minister Helen
Clark manipulated the
review
by requiring that the special committee’s decision had to be
“unanimous or
near-unanimous”.
With parties deeply divided over the benefits or otherwise of
MMP, the chance of an agreement was remote and no referendum
was ever scheduled.
While MPs couldn’t agree on a second referendum, the public
had no such trouble: a
UMR poll commissioned by the Committee at the time showed that
76 percent were in
favour of a binding referendum to decide whether to keep MMP
or not. The poll showed that 52 percent of people believed
MMP
had given minor parties too much power, 61 percent thought
that list MPs are not accountable to voters, and 52 percent
believed that MMP prevented governments from making hard
decisions.
The reality is that National short-changed the public in 1993
by opting for a review of the electoral system instead of a
referendum. It therefore appeared that their 2008 campaign
promise to “Hold a binding referendum on MMP by no later
than 2011” was a genuine attempt to ‘put things right’.
At first glance the referendum to be held in conjunction with
the general election on November 26th does appear
to be giving voters a fair choice over whether they want to
keep MMP or change to an alternative voting system. But when
you look into the detail, you find manipulation even more
outrageous than Helen Clark’s Select Committee fiasco a
decade ago. Instead of being presented with a clear and
objective choice over whether we want to keep MMP or change to
one of the other voting systems offered in the 1992 referendum
(First Past the Post, Preferential Voting, Single Transferable
Vote, or Supplementary Member) National has overlaid the
politics of division and separatism over the whole referendum
process.
In the same way that National put the demands of the Maori
sovereignty movement for the foreshore and seabed ahead of the
ownership rights of New Zealand citizens, it is now doing it
again with the MMP referendum - putting the demands of the
Maori Party ahead of the rights of the voting public to be
given a fair go. The cause of the debacle is National’s
Confidence and Supply Agreement with the Maori Party, which
states “there will
not be a question about the future of the Maori seats in the
referendum on MMP.”[2] As a result, Schedule 2 of the
Electoral Referendum Act 2010 contains the following
provision: “The
principles for determining the number of members of Parliament
who represent Maori electorates will not change.”
In considering the MMP referendum, there are two ways to
interpret Maori representation in our Parliament. The first is
to look at it from the point of view that Maori hold 7 seats
in our 120 seat Parliament. That means that there should be 7
Maori seats in any new Parliament irrespective of which voting
system is used.
The second way is to look at it is from an electorate seat
perspective. Under our present MMP system, Maori hold 7
electorate seats out of the total of 70 electorate seats –
10 percent – with the other 50 seats made up from party
lists. Using this 10 percent figure to determine the number of
Maori seats, each of the alternative voting options specified
in the referendum, will bring about a dramatic increase in the
number, since each of the alternative voting systems has
more electorate seats than MMP.
Under First Past the Post Parliament would be made up of 120
electorate seats, with 10 percent of them race-based – that
is 12 Maori seats. It is the same for the Preferential Voting
system where there would be 120 electorate seats - again there
would be 12 Maori seats. Under the Single Transferable Voting
system Parliament would consist of only electorate seats, but
instead of 120 separate electorates, there would be 24
to 30 electorates, each with 3 to 7 MPs. That would mean
around 4 Maori electorates with a total of 12 Maori MPs.
The
Supplementary Member Voting system, like MMP, consists of
electorate and list seats - 90 electorate seats and 30 list
seats. As a result, 10 percent of the 90 electorate seats
would result in 9 Maori seats.
The next Maori electoral option is scheduled for 2013. If it
results in the number of voters on the Maori roll increasing
to produce the equivalent of 8 Maori seats under the present
system, then by the time the next referendum comes around in
2014 - if the country has voted for a change from MMP - the
number of Maori seats under the alternative voting system
would have risen to between 10 and 13 depending on which
option the country has chosen.
Strangely, this information about the number of Maori seats is
not shown in the Schedule 2 description of voting system that
has been included in the Electoral Referendum Act to inform
voters. Nor can it be found in the explanations of the voting
options on the Electoral Commission’s main website. The only
way to find it is to click on the five voting options on the
special referendum website at www.referendum.org.nz
and then click on the ‘read more’ options that are hidden
at the end of each voting summary. If the government had
purposely wanted to hide this information from the New Zealand
public, then they couldn’t have done a better job!
What is so bizarre about all of this is that the 1986 Royal
Commission on the Electoral System recommended that the Maori
seats, the Maori roll and the Maori electoral option should
all be abolished if MMP was introduced. They predicted that
Maori would be adequately represented through general and list
seats, making race-based provisions unnecessary. That has
indeed occurred, but instead of letting the public decide
whether race based seats still have a place in a modern
democracy, National appears determined to take the country
backwards towards greater race-based representation.
To be fair, if MMP loses the referendum vote and another
voting system wins, then the final detail of the new electoral
system - including the number of Maori seats - could be
changed when the legislation for the next referendum is
drafted by the next Parliament, but as things stand, any
significant change would be highly unlikely.
That means that if we change the voting system away from MMP,
race-based representation will be increased, not because the
New Zealand public wants more racial division thrust upon us
– in fact the desire to abolish race-based seats is probably
stronger now than it has ever been - but because sleazy
coalition deals are forcing unacceptable changes onto the
country that citizens are powerless to reject.
I asked this week’s NZCPR Guest Commentator Steve Baron, who
has been a leader in the fight for greater democratic rights
for New Zealanders, to share his experience of the battle for
direct democracy, and to provide suggestions on what we need
to do to constrain government when it goes off the rails –
as National has clearly done with the privatisation of the
foreshore and seabed and the forthcoming referendum:
“One
direct democracy tool that deserves special mention and
consideration to put checks and balances on parliament is the
Veto (Facultative) referendum. When new laws, or changes to
laws have been passed by parliament, citizens can subject them
to a referendum if the required number of signatures can be
collected in the prescribed amount of time, usually ninety to
one hundred days. The new law or change to an old law only
becomes effective if the majority of the votes in the
referendum were in favour of it. It is worth noting that of
the more than 2,200 laws passed by the Swiss parliament since
1874, only 7 percent have been subjected to a Veto referendum.
The Swiss people are therefore happy with 93 percent of what
their government wants to do—but not always! For me
personally, I will always trust the collective wisdom of 3
million voters over the collective wisdom of 121 Members of
Parliament.” To read Steve’s article click here>>>.
As
the recidivist manipulation of the voting referendum
demonstrates, New Zealanders have no checks and balances to
protect our rights when governments go off the rails. It is
time that the public demanded the power to correct the
situation. When Labour was the government we had no means to
overturn the smacking law - even though most knew it would not
stop child abuse but would undermine the rights of parents and
their ability to raise their children well.
Now under National’s term in government on top of having to
suffer the ignominy of our foreshore and seabed being given to
the separatists, there is now this new threat to our
democratic process that goes to the very core of the voting
system itself.
It is long past time for New Zealanders to regain control of
their democracy. Helping with our Citizens Initiated
Referendum to restore Crown ownership of the foreshore and
seabed is something that each and every one of you can do to
help show that we will not put up with being trampled on. But
in addition we need to put pressure on candidates and
political parties to pledge to introduce binding referenda –
especially the right of Veto – so that citizen democracy in
the future will be much stronger than it is today.
This
week’s poll asks:
If
a political party promised to amend the law to make a Veto
Referendum binding,
would that make you more likely to vote for them, less likely,
or make no difference? Click here for poll >>>
Footnotes:
1.Muriel
Newman, MMP
Referendum
2.
Cabinet, Referenda
on Mixed Member Proportional Voting System
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