After six years of the Labour’s lies, bullying and deceit, New Zealanders have overwhelmingly voted for change.
Labour’s party vote has been slashed from 50.1 percent in 2020 to 26.8 percent on the provisional figures. The party was decimated in the electorates losing 28 of their 45 seats. With 17 constituencies and 17 list seats, they now have only 34 seats in Parliament down from 65 in 2020.
Labour’s party vote has been slashed from 50.1 percent in 2020 to 26.8 percent on the provisional figures. The party was decimated in the electorates losing 28 of their 45 seats. With 17 constituencies and 17 list seats, they now have only 34 seats in Parliament down from 65 in 2020.
With voter turnout falling to an estimated 78.4 percent from 82.2 percent in 2020, it appears many disillusioned Labour supporters stayed at home.
The Green Party scooped up other disgruntled Labour voters to win 10.78 percent of the party vote, up from 7.9 percent in 2020. As a result, they will have 14 seats in Parliament - up from 10 - including three electorate seats, up from one.
The Maori Party scored major victories in the Maori electorates, winning four out of the seven Maori seats, up from one in the last Parliament. With 2.6 percent of the party vote - more than double their 1.2 percent 2020 result - the Maori Party is only entitled to three Parliamentary seats. As a result, their fourth has created a one-seat overhang in Parliament.
This week’s NZCPR Guest is political commentator and former local body councillor Frank Newman who shares his election analysis and explains the significance of the Maori seat result:
“The biggest talking point of the election is the battle for control of the Maori seats.
“That fight was vividly expressed in the seat of Hauraki-Waikato. Nanaia Mahuta has been defeated and without a list seat as a life-line, is out of Parliament. Mahuta held the seat for 27 years. She has been defeated by Hana-Rawhiti Maipi-Clarke who will be the youngest MP at 21. She represents the new generation of radical Maori that are now aggressively challenging their more conservative elders. The departure of Mahuta would be a cause for celebration if it were not for the fact that she is being replaced with a member of a party that is even more radical and anti-democratic.
“The losses are a massive blow for Labour. None of Labour’s Maori seats are safe from the Maori Party offensive. No doubt they will be looking for a clean sweep in 2026.
“Ironically, Labour has massively advanced the Maori agenda since 2020. The He Puapua blueprint for co-governance that Labour had concealed from the public prior to the 2020 election had been put into effect throughout the government service. That radical initiative was clearly not radical enough for the extremist Maori Party.”
Frank explains that thirty of the 121 MPs in the new 54th Parliament have Maori ancestry – that’s 25 percent: the Maori Party has 100 percent, New Zealand First 50 percent, the Greens 36 percent, ACT 27 percent, Labour 26 percent, and National has 10 percent.
“The obvious question is why we need the Maori seats at all when Maori are overrepresented in Parliament via the general seats. The argument for the abolition of the Maori seats in Parliament (and on local councils) is even more compelling if one accepts these seats have become vehicles for radical factions intent on undermining our democracy. The Maori Party only gained 2.6% of the vote despite Maori representing 17% of the general population so it cannot be said that they represent Maori or have a mandate to speak for or on behalf of Maori.”
Frank is right. Radicals have captured the Maori seats. New Zealanders need to ask if the Maori seats are helping Maori, or whether they are assisting subversive elements within our society to spread their divisive and destructive agenda. A referendum on the future of the Maori seats has surely now become a priority.
The election has delivered to New Zealand a new Prime Minister. Christopher Luxon will become the country’s forty-second PM. National’s election night party vote was 38.95 percent, up from 25.6 percent in 2020. They won 45 electorate seats - up from 23 in 2020 - and 5 list seats, giving them 50 seats in Parliament, up from 33 at the last election.
ACT has risen to its highest level yet, winning 9 percent of the party vote - up from 7.6 percent – entitling them to 11 MPs in Parliament, one more than in 2020. ACT also won two electorate seats this time around – Epsom and Tamaki, giving them a stronger base in Auckland.
New Zealand First was another election success story, winning back a place in Parliament, after being wiped out in 2020. They received 6.46 percent of the party vote, entitling them to 8 list MPs.
On election night Winston Peters indicated to Christopher Luxon that they were there to help.
The ‘wasted’ vote for the minor parties that failed to reach the 5 percent threshold, which amounted to 5.3 percent, was effectively reallocated to Parliamentary parties.
An estimated 567,000 special votes - 20.2 percent of total votes cast – won’t be counted until November 3rd. Since they include many students, who study away from home, these votes, which traditionally favour Labour and the Greens, could tip the balance in a number of tight electorate races.
Furthermore, thanks to the vagaries of electoral law the number of Parliamentary seats will increase to 122 when the Port Waikato by-election is held on the 25th of November.
As a result of these factors, National and ACT would need 62 seats in the 122 seat Parliament to govern alone. At the present time they hold 61 seats. While National is expected to win the by-election, in 2020, as a result of the special votes, they lost two seats. It therefore seems likely that National will bring New Zealand First within its coalition.
So what does all this mean?
New Zealanders categorically voted Labour out of government. So while their dreadful reign is over, the serious damage they have done to our democracy through their fixation with Maori privilege and their disregard for public sentiment, remains.
The Hipkins-Ardern Government, which has surely been the worst in our history, appeared blind to the anger they created. Jacinda Ardern, their greatest asset turned into their greatest liability. But by the time she - or more likely party strategists - realised they could not win with her as leader the damage had already been done.
Without a doubt, Chris Hipkins was given a hospital pass. The public had already lost trust in Labour by the time he took over. Voters had realised that while virtually none of their promised policies - like ending child poverty or building 100,000 homes – had been realised, a secret co-governance agenda that divided New Zealanders by race had instead been forced onto the country.
Since Labour could not campaign on their record, nor with any credibility on political promises given their six years of incumbency, their strategy was to attack. They hoped that by undermining the credibility of the alternative government, they might win by default.
Their relentless assault on National and its potential partners, not only drew attention away from their policy failures, but also from the extremism of their own “coalition of chaos” with the Greens and Maori Party.
And they had the media on their side.
In fact, the performance of much of the mainstream media throughout the campaign was appalling. Instead of scrutinising the government and holding them to account for their failure to deliver, they aggressively attacked the alternative government.
While we all know that the media as a whole is biased to the left – as indicated by journalists themselves in the latest World of Journalism study - what we saw during the campaign appeared to be manipulation against a change of government.
Whether this was in part due to the fact that Labour’s $55 million Public Interest Journalism Fund ran right through the election period - and is scheduled to continue throughout the first year of the new government, only ending in January 2026 - is not known. But since PIJF recipients are required to “Actively promote the principles of Partnership, Participation and Active Protection under Te Tiriti o Waitangi acknowledging Māori as a Te Tiriti partner”, the effect was to mute opposition to co-governance in the mainstream media, even though it had become a major election issue.
Reviewing this funding and its implications for the freedom of expression in New Zealand is just one of the many issues that will need to be addressed by Prime Minister Luxon and his team, since an independent and unbiased mainstream media is fundamental to the health of any democracy.
In fact, it will fascinating to assess whether the level of media scrutiny of the new government will be equivalent to what Labour was subjected to, or whether the bias against them that was evident during the campaign will continue. If it does, that will no doubt strengthen the independent media that has emerged over the last three years to fill the gap created by the failure of traditional media to provide balance.
In the run up to the election there was, of course, a great deal of interest in the polls. While some overestimated the votes of Labour and the Greens, and underestimated National, they all correctly identified a change in government.
So, what does the future hold?
The Labour Party has been decimated and will take time to refresh and rebuild. It’s a process that’s likely to span two terms of Parliament – the second, to bring in new talent.
The Greens have been strengthened but their gains were largely because Labour was punished so heavily. The problem the Greens now have is that they are no longer green – but radicals promoting an extremist woke agenda. Even their co-leader James Shaw, who likes to present himself as moderate and reasonable, is now showing his true colours by threatening violence if the new government tries to hold a referendum on the principles of the Treaty of Waitangi.
The President of the radicalised Maori Party also threatened violence if democracy prevails, and a referendum goes ahead.
Meanwhile, Australians have shown us that the democratic process can be used to stop government attempts to divide the country by race. Their Prime Minister’s plan to enshrine Aboriginal rights in their constitution was defeated last Saturday by 60 percent of the votes in The Voice referendum to 40 percent. It was also categorically rejected in all six states.
What New Zealanders now need to consider is that even though the most destructive government in our history has been defeated, they have left democracy in a parlous state. It has been undermined by the co-governance agenda driven by a radical cabal of Labour’s Maori MPs, led by members representing the Maori seats. Through their co-governance arrangements, Labour has given unelected and unaccountable representatives of multi-million-dollar tribal business corporations, power over our lives.
Not only should all such arrangements, throughout the public and private sectors, be disestablished as a matter of urgency, but democracy itself must be strengthened to ensure this can never happen again.
In light of the radicalisation of the Maori seats - and warning of the 1986 Royal Commission on the Electoral System that Maori would gain a disproportionate influence in an MMP Parliament if the Maori seats were not abolished - since every party forming the new government has, at one time or another, promised a referendum on the future of the Maori seats, isn’t it time it was now held?
With local body elections set for October 2025, a referendum asking the public whether or not Maori seats should be retained, should be held next year, so it can impact on those elections as well.
Democracy belongs to the people and these matters are too important for us not to have a say.
Kiwis do not want to be divided by race. Let’s hope our new government has the commitment and the courage to restore our democracy and rebuild our country so we can once again stand united and proud to call ourselves New Zealanders - first and foremost.
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THIS WEEK’S POLL ASKS:
*Would you like to see a referendum on abolishing the Maori seats in Parliament and Local Government held next year?
Dr Muriel Newman established the New Zealand Centre for Political Research as a public policy think tank in 2005 after nine years as a Member of Parliament. The NZCPR website is HERE. We also run this Breaking Views Blog and our NZCPR Facebook Group HERE.
5 comments:
Maori must be quite the most ungrateful race/trace race on this earth. As Sir Aparana Ngata observed, no other native race/trace race has been treated and fared so well. They show minimum gratitude for the enormous gains achieved by Graham, Finlayson, Key and co, nor even for their own parties (Little), despite the very many millions lavished. Helen Clark is one of very few mps who had them sussed but it took her a while.
Eventually it will dawn on Labour that they were defeated because the election gave the public, fed up with maorification, te reo, unfathomable names everywhere, propogandised syllabi, Treaty twisting, endless expensive obstructive consultation, endless race based favouritism, moves to total control via co governance, etc and were at last able to express themselves in confidence without fear of cancellation. (The meteing out of which maori have become expert.) Labour will then presumably be less encouraging of malignant maori mps, leaving them and their insurrectionist aims to Te Pati. Fine, provided race based maori electorate seat numbers are held. They represent an historic anachronism and as such there is no justification for maintaining, and certainly not for increasing over 19th Century numbers. Te Pati is somewhere for the blatant revolutionists to congregate and perform without pretence of greater public interest. Hopefully National will also learn to vet prospective mps carefully for any pro maori 5th column instincts. Ditto for appointments to govt departments, boards etc. Hopefully even RNZ will improve.
I was dismayed by the number of people I heard say that they were going to vote for ACT, but when Seymour had his little spat with Peters, they decided to flip to NZF. Do they not understand that NZ's prosperity over the the next 3 years, hopefully more, depends on policies not personalities. Have they forgotten the last time the electorate voted for someone with an empathetic smile, it'll will take a few parliaments to repair the damage done there. Have they forgotten who flipped after the 2017 election to hand Jacinda the wheel to steer a path on the road to Zimbabwe.
in response to Allan, very many were motivated as I outline above. By learning te reo, favouring co governace in local poltics, and other soothing vibes, Luxon pusheded very many toward Act and NZF, the latter possibly s better stating their case..
for the love of god i can't understand what ACT achieved by winning tamaki. brooke should have fought for CBD. she is the only one who could have beaten chloe - she's smart, young, pleasant, well-spoken, intelligent and doesn't shy away from a fight. plus she's a woman - people who hate greens but could not vote for national or the indian guy would have made the easier choice voting for brooke. kicking out chloe from cbd should have been far higher on nat+act agenda from day one. she has massacred cbd in the last 3 years and the bleeding will continue until every shop has shut down, every office has relocated, every apartment is filthy and every street stinks of urine and shit. my heart weeps for auckland - and i'm not even a kiwi :(
@Allan: Everyone can blame Peters for what he did in 2017. But it isn't fair to blame him for the 2020 outcome (when he was literally kicked out). That's a suicide pact NZ made with Ms Ardern. All the woke garbage started pouring out in the open after that. Democracy - as you sow, so you reap :(
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