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Segregated Voting Looms for 19 Soft-Touch Councils

Maori Wards


Hobson’s Pledge Trust


Since February 1, when referenda on Maori wards were outlawed by the Labour Government, 19 councils have outed themselves as soft touches by considering or resolving to establish segregated voting via Maori wards or constituencies for next year’s local body elections.

They are the Hamilton, Invercargill, Palmerston North, Tauranga, and Wellington City councils, the Horowhenua, Kaipara, New Plymouth, Ruapehu, Gisborne, Whangarei, Taupo, South Taranaki, Waipa, and Whakatane district councils, and the Hawke’s Bay, Horizons (Palmerston North), Northland and Taranaki regional councils.

These councils want to follow Environment Bay of Plenty, the Waikato Regional Council and the Wairoa District council in separate voting although 56 of New Zealand’s 78 local authorities have no plans to go down this path.

Nine of those councils simply ignored the signatures of their ratepayers who petitioned for the right to vote on the matter, which was permitted under the Local Electoral Act 2001 until February 1.

Bearing in mind that signatures collected n New Plymouth are not included, those received compared with those required were:

Received         Required

Northern Regional Council      8703                6027

Whangarei District Council      5133               3080

Kaipara District Council           1376               790

Tauranga City Council              6000              4742

Taupo District Council              1756               1241

South Taranaki District Council  903                847

Ruapehu District Council           551                385

Gisborne District Council           792               1625

New Plymouth District Council   Not available   2874

TOTAL                                    25,214          21,611

Mistrusting their constituents, a number of these councils had asked central government to remove the right to petition for referenda.

Hamilton councillors initially voted against Maori wards but after bullying from the local iwi, Waikato-Tainui, according to deputy mayor Geoff Taylor, the council will re-vote the issue on Thursday.

Councils try to justify racially segregated voting on local councils as giving effect to Section 4 of the Local Government Act 2002, guaranteeing a seat “for Maori” at the top table, reflecting the Treaty of Waitangi, and increasing Maori participation in local government.

However, the Local Government Act 2002 does not require Maori wards, Maori representation on local government overall is already proportional to population percentage, and there is absolutely nothing in the Treaty about voting arrangements.

No council proposing Maori wards has ever given voting turnout figures for the three councils with Maori wards because if they did, they would have to show that turnout continues to lag.

For instance, overall turnout in the most recent election at the Bay of Plenty Regional Council, which has had Maori constituencies since 2001, was 43.2 percent, but turnout for Maori roll voters was 35 percent.

The Kohi Maori constituency, where the Maori population is 18,500, returned only 4037 votes; the Mauao constituency, population 19,850, returned 2716 votes; and the Okurei constituency, population 18,300, had only one candidate so there was no vote.

Be aware, the establishment of Maori wards and constituencies in local government is a key goal of the Maori sovereignty movement.

It features on page 46 of He Puapua, which is the guiding document to implement in New Zealand the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples that Maori Party co-leader Pita Sharples signed New Zealand up to in 2010.

What can you do? Those who live in Hamilton can attend the council meeting on Thursday to protest noisily. Please email Geoff Lewis: geoff.lewis365@gmail.com or phone him at 027 3255 654 to find out the time to meet.

The Hawke’s Bay Regional Council has called for submissions. Submissions may be made by going to https://www.consultations.nz/hbrc/establishing-maori-constituencies-for-hawkes-bay-regional-council and pressing the “Make a submission” button. The deadline for submissions is 4pm on Thursday, April 22.

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