The removal of a democratic right
We no longer can have a say on the manner in which our local
community is governed, on voting rights for local councils.
Until this year, separate representation by race has been allowed: Maori wards and constituencies establish areas where only those on the Maori Parliamentary electoral roll vote for the representatives. But ratepayers could
insist on a binding referendum when Maori wards were proposed. These are not wanted; significant majorities are opposed to Maori wards. Polls indicated 60% opposed in the Western
Bay of Plenty, 63% opposed in Palmerston North and 63% opposed in
Manawatu. When binding referenda were
held in five municipalities, all opposed race-based Maori wards; those voting
against were 80% of ratepayers in Kaikoua, 78% in Western Bay of Plenty, 77% in
Manawatu, 69% in Palmerston North and 56.4% in Whakatane.[1]
The public have since been shut out.
In February 2021,
Parliament passed a change in the law denying ratepayers the right to call for
any such referendum. The Local
Electoral (Maori Wards and Maori Constituencies) Amendment Bill[2]
amended the Local Electoral Act 2001 by removing provisions that previously allowed
binding polls in the decision to establish Maori wards or constituencies. It
removed the use of binding polls in decisions about whether a local district or
region should be divided into multiple Maori wards or constituencies.
The Bill noted that previous law had allowed “the decision
of an elected council to introduce a Maori ward to be overturned by a local
poll. Just 5 per cent of support is
needed for a poll to be demanded.” This
Government has refused to accept such direct democratic involvement, because
they don’t like or accept the opinion of the puobllic. “Polls have proven to be an almost
insurmountable barrier to councils trying to improve the democratic
representation of Maori interests. This
process is fundamentally unfair to Maori.”
Never mind that removal of a democratic right, which had been clearly
expressed on many occasions, is unfair to the rest of us, race-defined,
citizens.
The very existence of separate race-based (remember that in
New Zealand law, “a Maori is a member of the Maori race”) voting and
representation is divisive and in no way justified or acceptable.
Once done, is that separate representation of equal value, and fairly derived? The number of Maori wards is determined by multiplying the number of total members by the fraction of the Maori electoral population in the total electoral population. I understand that those on the Maori roll would then vote in the Maori wards. How fair that would be depends on how this particular, and important, measure of Maori, the Maori electoral population, is derived. This requires a study of the basic features of Maori seats in Parliament.
Unequal representation: Maori seats in Parliament
Special Maori seats in Parliament were introduced in 1867 as a temporary measure, for good reason. Maori were equal citizens but the right to
vote depended on property ownership.
Since few Maori held land as individuals, few had the vote. This (the number of seats compared with
population numbers) was less unfair than it might appear at first sight, since
the two peoples were living separately to a considerable extent, and Maori
continued the effective management of their own places. The number of seats was chosen to reflect the
part that Maori played in the formal economy at the time.
That is well and
truly in the past. Voting has long been
universal, by all adults, with no such requirement. The Royal Commission on the Electoral System
in 1985-6 gave considerable thought to the future of the Maori seats, and
concluded that the seats had not helped Maori. They would achieve better representation
through a proportional party-list system.
If the Mixed Member Proportional (MMP) system was adopted (as it was),
the Maori seats should be abolished. This
was for some time National Party policy.
But instead, the number of Maori seats was increased by a Labour
government.
When it gained power, National turned away from its stated policy. Both parties have ignored public sentiment
and refused a referendum on the Maori seats.
There has even been an effort to entrench Maori seats – a
provision that would make an end to separate voting rights difficult to pass;
overriding an entrenched clause may require a considerable majority or a
referendum, rather than the simple majority that set it up. However, that failed, being defeated on 10
December 2019.
We might think that the number of Maori seats would be straightforward,
based simply on the proportion of New Zealanders who are Maori, and who have
decided to be on the Maori roll rather than the General roll, so that every
vote would have equal value.
But no. The
distribution of general seats is based on the whole population, not on
registered voters. A similar approach is
followed for Maori wards. Both require
an estimate of a population to represent those on the Maori roll. The obvious number is then to use the Census
descent Maori population, but no, this has been doctored to produce a far
greater Maori population, and hence a much greater representation.
The first step is to calculate a revised estimate of Maori,
the ‘Maori descent electoral population’.[3] In the 2018 census, 625,600 responded that
they were Maori by ticking the Maori descent box. This number is then adjusted to take account
of possible Maori amongst those whose response for Maori descent was not ‘Yes’
or ‘No’ – those who did not tick a box for ethnicity (I am one of those, who
refuse to be categorised by race). That
adjustment is based on the 2013 Census, birth records or on a ‘within household
donor’ imputation (find the person of closest age in the usual residence and
copy their Maori descent response as long as the response is a Yes or No
value). All of that is based on the
assumption that many who decided not to tick the Maori descent box were
actually Maori, and should be counted as such, no matter what they chose to say
when faced with a Census form. This is
nonsense. There would be few, or none,
who would fail to acknowledge Maori ancestry in the Census but at the same time
have such a strong Maori identity as to wish to vote as Maori, in either a
separate seat or a separate ward.
The result is a considerable increase in the Maori number. The ‘Maori descent electoral population’ is
896,600, an increase of 43% over the Census count. The Statistics report tells us that this is an
increase from 16.4% of those who gave a response to the question of ethnicity
(not the whole population) to 19.1% of the New Zealand population. In terms of the whole population, the
increase in descent Maori is from 13.3% to 19.1%. It is not difficult to get confused in all
this play with numbers.
There are 240,273 Maori on the General electoral roll and
268,407 on the Maori electoral roll (2018 numbers). Thus, 52.8% of Maori are on the Maori
electoral roll. That is used to
calculate a ‘Maori electoral population’, a population number to use to
estimate the number of Maori seats. As a result, the Maori electoral population
used to determine the number of Maori electorates for the 2020 and 2023 general
elections is 473,077 (52.8% of the inflated ‘Maori descent electoral
population’). The number of Maori
electorates is calculated by dividing the Maori electoral population (473,077)
by the South Island quota (65,458) which results in 7 electorates. The number
of people required for each Maori electorate (or quota) is slightly higher than
the general electorates at 67,582.
This same arithmetic can be followed through using the
actual Census count of descent Maori, 625,600.
This would give five Maori seats, not seven.
I found it difficult to find the information used here, and
to figure out what was going on. My
research was considerably aided by the response to an information request from
H P Ross (January 20, 2020) to the Electoral Commission under the Official
Information Act: “Is the number of Maori representation seats determined by the
Maori population or those on the Maori Electoral Roll?”[4] The following table is from that response.
The conclusion of all this is clear. From further information given in that
response we learn that there are 47,022 electors for each General electorate
MP, and 34,825 electors for each Maori electorate MP. One Maori vote has 1.35 times the value of
a general vote (that of the rest of us), or 35% more.
This point is important, and is worth repeating. Some 52.8% of those who identified
themselves as Maori are on the Maori electoral roll. When applying that ratio to the population in
order to calculate a population number on which the number of Maori seats will
be based, the same measure, of those who identified themselves as Maori,
must be used. That is the actual Census
count of descent Maori, 625,600, and there should be five Maori seats, not
seven. (This, assuming that there should
be any Maori seats at all.) The
rejigging of numbers has been carried out, with the inclusion as Maori of some
who gave no ethnicity only, for an addition to provide the ‘Maori descent
electoral population’, but not to the electoral roll. The process is internally inconsistent.
This inequality would carry over to Maori wards, with the use of the same inflated measure of Maori, the ‘Maori descent electoral population’. And with the same difficulty in following what is going on.
The extraordinary power of the chosen 4% in Kapiti
We should be one people, voting together for central and
local government. There should be no place for separate Maori wards, and
no acceptance of unequal value to votes, based on race. The situation in Kapiti, where I live, is far
worse. Maori wards would give Maori separate representation, but with
each Maori vote having around 35% greater value. Then there might be 12
council places for non-Maori and two or three council places for Maori, who
make up 14% of the Kapiti population – according to information provided in the
recent Long Term Plan.
The Kapiti Coast District Council has decided, in
negotiations with the ‘mana whenua’, to not introduce Maori wards, but to keep
the current system, which is a ‘partnership’ between the two parties, council
(we vote for) and mana whenua (a select few).
This, the ‘mana whenua’, is not all Maori in the
district. It is the people of three iwi,
Ngati Toa, Te Atiawa and Ngati Raukawa, who are less than 30% of the 14% who
are Maori – less than 4.2% of the Kapiti population. Here I have no idea which ‘Maori’ is referred
to, those measured in the Census or the inflated measure, the ‘Maori descent
electoral population’.
Currently, those of the mana whenua have a double
power. Each has a vote in selecting the mayor and councillors, equal to
that of the rest of us. In addition, this small minority of around 4% of
the electorate act in partnership with council – and so have a considerably
greater power than all others. It is no wonder that these three iwi, this
highly privileged 4%, prefer to stick to the status quo.
What is the basis of this privilege? That their
ancestors came in the 1820s to attack, kill and drive off the then inhabitants
from their lands, before continuing to murderous raids on the South Island and
fighting bloody battles among themselves in 1834 and 1839.
This is wrong. It is a sad day when we must consider
ourselves as Maori or non-Maori, mana whenua or the other, instead of all
together as citizens and as ratepayers living in Kapiti.
The above comments are from a submission I made to the
Kapiti Coast District Council. I had
discovered the influence of the iwi
Consultation Group, Te Whakaminenga o Kapiti when I
saw that vehicles were driving across a valued Scientific Reserve, the sandspit
at the Waikanae River estuary. When I
became active, I found that most people were sympathetic to my call to obey the
law and protect that important environment, and it took effort to find where
the pressure was coming that resulted in inaction, as the authorities were sitting
back and allowing that vandalism to continue.
The clue was a comment by the Mayor in the Kapiti News: “In 2014 DoC officers attempting to enforce
the bylaw at the beach during whitebaiting season faced serious objections
including from local iwi members.” Yet
despite that identification of local Maori as major players in that thoughtless
behaviour, he continued with an all-too-common, imagined statement of trust,
that they had a special bond with the environment: “I’m confident, given the
strong iwi commitment as kaitiaki of the environment, they will continue to
partner with council, DoC and the police to protect those values.” On the contrary, when I spoke to that iwi committee,
they showed no concern for the sandspit and the birds that would wish to live
there undisturbed, but rather made claim to special rights, to drive across the
Scientific Reserve to fish for endangered whitebait.
The local iwi attitude and power were again evident when I made my oral presentation at an official hearing of the Kapiti Coast District Council. I thought I was addressing our Council, but (after my less than three minutes) I was faced by a strong, long, negative argument by a woman from the iwi group who was sitting at the long table with the mayor and councillors. Clearly, ‘partnership’ gives them a seat at the table, with a right to take a vigorous part in the debate and to berate any ratepayer with who might challenge their position.
Conclusion
This is part of much bigger, picture, with increasing inequality and racial separation, including changes in education, health, law and more. The full extent of this frightening transformation of New Zealand society can be seen in the recent report, “He Puapua: report on the working group on a plan to realise UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples in Aotearoa/New Zealand”.[5] There we find a projected dismantling of the basic features of society, from equality to domination by a select minority. “The vision is that, should Maori have the ability to exercise full authority over our lands, waters and natural resources, uphold our responsibilities as kaitiaki and implement indigenous solutions with resources and support to do so, Aotearoa will be a thriving country for all.” All power (full authority) to “members of the Maori race”? With respect, I dissent. What do you think? Should we do something?
REFERENCES:
[1] John Robinson, Dividing a nation: the return to
tikanga, 2019, second edition 2021, Tross Publishing
[2] https://legislation.govt.nz/bill/government/2021/0006/latest/LMS442033.html
[3] https://www.stats.govt.nz/assets/Uploads/Methods/Deriving-the-2018-Maori-descent-electoral-population/Deriving-the-2018-maori-descent-electoral-population.pdf
[4]
https://fyi.org.nz/request/12056-is-the-number-of-maori-representation-seats-determined-by-the-maori-population-or-those-on-the-maori-electoral-roll
[5] https://www.nzcpr.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/04/He-Puapua.pdf
Dr John Robinson is a research scientist, who has investigated a variety of topics,
including the social statistics of Maori. His recognition of fundamental
flaws in the interpretation of nineteenth century Maori demographics led him to
consider the history of those times in
several books.
2 comments:
What do you think? Should we do something?
ABSOLUTELY !!! BUT WHAT ??? The next election is too long to wait, This disgraceful Government will do all sorts of damage by then, We must act now.
If only we had a recall election in this country.
So much damage is being carried out by this divisive Government, and there are to many New Zealander oblivious to this deceitful government, or just to apathetic about what is occurring under their very noses,!
The question is asked what can we do. It’s a pity a signed petition of no confidence in this government presents to the Governor General , want sufficient to oust them.
The other is to rally and a organise a huge March on Parliament giving the PM a signed petition of the many facets of discontent in how she is treating 85 percent of the population.
But I guess a March is in the to hard Basket, but I feel that’s our only answer , one thing Maori are very good at is Marching.
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