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Friday, August 26, 2022

Point of Order: The PM is an unambiguous champion of all Kiwis having votes of equal weight? Not if the Treaty is tossed in to perplex her



The Prime Minister failed to unambiguously champion the democratic ideal that all citizens should have equal rights as citizens, when she was questioned on Q + A a few weeks ago.

She flunked the test again in Parliament this week.

On Tuesday, ACT leader David Seymour asked:

Does she stand by Minister Willie Jackson’s statement that “‘one person one vote’ is but one value within … [democracy], not the only value.”, and, if so, what does she say to Victoria University professor of political science Jack Vowles, who wrote in reply to Minister Jackson that “everyone having a vote or votes of equal weight to elect those who represent them is not just one value [of democracy], it is a foundational principle. As such, it is recognised in the Bill of Rights”?

Here was an opportunity to assure the public she believes in a liberal democracy of the sort with which Kiwis are familiar. One person, one vote – that sort of thing.

Jacinda Ardern simply had to acknowledge she agreed with Jack Vowles.

But that would be to disagree with influential members of Labour’s Māori caucus who advocate the “tweaking” of democracy and/or other forms of distorting it.

More critically, it would be to disagree that democracy must be subservient to the Treaty of Waitangi and to highly contentious ideas such as Treaty partnership and 50:50 co-governance.

On the other hand, the PM may be keen to continue to camouflage her belief that the Treaty indeed should over-ride the democratic principle that all citizens should have a vote or votes of equal value.

Whatever the reason, she ducked the critical question Seymour had put to her:

Rt Hon JACINDA ARDERN: I would say that I would support the regional representative bodies that are being proposed as part of the three waters and as have been supported by the local government representatives who themselves suggested that this is the right way to move forward for the entities. I would back that over the member’s own proposition, which is essentially the ability for foreign-owned corporate boards.

We did not receive a press statement from ACT in reaction to what the PM said in Parliament, but in the aftermath of the Jack Tame interview late in July Seymour did issue a statement to observe:

“Speaking to Jack Tame this morning on Q+A, Jacinda Ardern couldn’t even answer whether her co-governance regime was undermining the fundamental right of one-person one-vote,” says ACT Leader David Seymour.

“It is chilling to hear Jacinda Ardern describe such an important question as ‘overly simplistic’. The idea that one person should have one vote, and every human being is born alike in dignity isn’t one that should be so difficult to answer for anyone who believes in a functioning liberal democracy.

“This is why ACT has called for a referendum, so we can have meaningful debate and all New Zealanders can have their say. We’re the only political party not afraid of having an honest conversation on issues like this.”

At the time the press statement was released, ACT’s petition for a referendum on co-governance had been signed over 25,000 times since it was launched in March this year.

Seymour insisted:

“It is clear that Kiwis want to have this conversation. Co-governance is now everywhere but it has never been openly discussed or debated.”

Nobody in Government had ever asked whether the public wanted co-governance, Seymour said. There was just an assumption that there should be two sets of political rights – but:

“No society in history has succeeded by having different political rights based on birth. Many New Zealanders came here to escape class and caste and apartheid.

“All of the good political movements of the past four hundred years have been about ending discrimination on the basis of race, religion, sex and sexuality to treat each person with the same dignity. We are the first country in history that’s achieved equal rights and has division as its official policy. It’s nuts.”

Seymour said it was time for honest and bold conversations.

“New Zealanders are up for it and ACT will keep leading the debate.”

Alas, ACT does not seem to have followed up this week when the PM again failed to uphold the principle of equal rights for all citizens.

Point of Order is a blog focused on politics and the economy run by veteran newspaper reporters Bob Edlin and Ian Templeton

6 comments:

Robert Arthur said...

NZ may be ready for open debate, but certainly not the msm. Few citizens apart from the maori elite would have a clear notion of current developments.

Anonymous said...

People don't think ahead do they? People say " oh well it's just a few unelected officials, what damage could they do?
Except when their goal of 50% or higher co- governance is achieved and people who cannot be removed from govt suddenly start telling home owners to give their private land back etc. They would have the power to change laws with no way to vote them out.

Anonymous said...

Amazing, a PM who can't support and defend the Democratic system that put her in the job.
Just think about that for a moment, she is NOT for Democracy. Our Prime Minister wants Apartheid.

Janine said...

When you have Arderns attack dogs, aka most of our MSM, vilifying anyone who has an opposing opinion to her she doesn't really need to do anything but sit back and watch. This week we saw a terrible erosion of our democracy. Chantelle Bakers facebook page gone, other commenters becoming extremely hard to access. Avi Yemini being denied access to New Zealand, Brian Tamaki being put down by the media even though his protest was pretty peaceful.
Even if people do not agree with all these peoples views, they should be pretty alarmed regarding at what's happening to free speech. Is this the "disinformation project" in action?
A vote for Matt King in Northland would make Democracy NZ "kingmaker" in the next government in support of National and ACT,as according to the latest Taxpayer Union poll, those two can't do it alone. Worth considering people.

Anonymous said...

The way the authoritarian Labour Party's leader is going, she & her bros will have totally destroyed our democracy by election time & voting will be pointless.

Geoff. said...

Haven't we seen this in many other country's before, communists using the freedoms afforded by democracy to destroy it.

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