Te Pati Maori win easily - but how about that turnout?
It’s the worst piece of political punditry in the history of this Substack. Maybe in the history of blogging.
Your noble, but obviously ignorant, correspondent boldly predicted last Tuesday that Te Pati Maori had given up in the Tamaki Makaurau by-election because their candidate Oriini Kaipara was so hopeless she couldn’t possibly win against the experienced Labour List MP Peeni Henare.
The opposite happened. Ms Kaipara romped home with close to twice as many votes as Mr Henare. The three other candidates didn’t come within kui of getting their deposit back.
(Note the new word I just invented.)
The result is a reflection of the ever widening cultural and political gap between young urban Maori, especially in south and west Auckland, and the rest of the community. Te Pati Maori’s separatist agenda and arrogance towards the general public, as reflected in Ms Kaipara’s refusal to speak to reporters from the country’s largest news organisations after her win, will do nothing to endear them to non-Maori New Zealand.
Not that they care. Their agenda and rhetoric are dangerous but this by-election win will only empower them more.
One of their MPs, Takuta Ferris, brazenly broke electoral law with his social media post on election day wearing Te Pati Maori branded clothing and asking voters to make sure they went to the polling booth.
But nothing will happen. Nobody’s ever prosecuted for breaking election law.
But here’s the rub. After special votes are counted, it’s estimated only 11,998 votes will have been cast representing just 27.1 percent of the constituency’s enrolled voters.
By-elections are notorious for low turnouts, but this pathetically low level of interest makes the usual moribund local council turnouts look like an electoral stampede.
The great kiwi democratic machine set up 84 polling booths for the 12 days of advance voting and for polling day itself. Some didn’t attract many clients. Trinity Methodist Church Hall in Pakuranga had 8 votes cast and the Garden Room in Grafton just 6.
The busiest places were where voters went to shop. Glen Innes Pak’nSave collected 573 and Manukau Mall 779.
Despite the lefties and wokies insisting that all prisoners should be allowed to vote, those currently eligible from places of incarceration (with sentences of three years or less) didn’t show much interest. Two teams went to Auckland’s prisons during advance voting and on polling day itself.
Their total number of votes collected? Zero.
(To be fair, when a polling place has less than six votes recorded it’s listed as zero for privacy reasons, so a minuscule number of prisoners may have voted but we don’t know for sure.)
The question I’d love a definitive answer to is this: has there ever been a lower turnout (as a percentage of enrolled voters) in the history of New Zealand Parliamentary by-elections?
The answer would seem to be no. But since the MMP era began in 1996 we can be more definitive.
Another Maori electorate, Te Tai Hauauru ran it close in 2004 with a measly 27.85 percent bothering to cast a vote. But Tariana Turia, as the sitting MP who defected from Labour to the Maori Party, was always going to win in a landslide. She duly did with 92 percent of the votes cast. Tamaki Makaurau was supposed to be a genuine contest this time.
Every other by-election in the last three decades has attracted at least 30 percent of the enrolled voters. But this result has created a somewhat ludicrous reality whereby the new MP won with the support of just 14 percent of the enrolled voters. It’s hardly a ringing endorsement but what can you do?
The lack of voter interest in Maori electorates compared to the general seats, not just in by-elections but in General Elections as well, should be a catalyst to have a good long look at why we still have them.
In 2023, the turnout in the seven Maori seats was on average around ten percentage points below the general seats. So it’s not surprising there are more Maori MPs in general seats than in Maori electorates.
But like electoral law prosecutions, nothing will happen about the status of the Maori seats. By 2029 there might even be another one.
Yet Te Pati Maori co-leader Rawiri Waititi doesn't know history and can’t count either. His extraordinary statement after Kaipara’s win that “Māori hadn't had a fair shot at democracy since democracy was implemented in this country" is just poppycock. Maori men had the vote before women in the 19th century and the current Parliament has 27 percent of its MPs with Maori ancestry, considerably more than the percentage of the population descended from Maori.
The result for Labour is so bad you almost wonder if the Machiavellian campaign manger Willie Jackson wanted Kaipara to win, and encouraged Labour voters to do so in order that the Maori voters in Auckland would then have two MPs to represent them in Parliament.
But I don’t reckon even Willie could have pulled off something that underhand. In any event he says the result was tough to take, but they’ll try and do better next year.
Now we await Oriini Kaipara’s arrival at Parliament. Will she continue to wear that red beret, her tribute to South Africa’s communist political party the Economic Freedom Fighters and its leader Julius Malema, he of “shoot the Boer fame”?
Probably, but then what would this Substacker know?
Peter Williams was a writer and broadcaster for half a century. Now watching from the sidelines. Peter blogs regularly on Peter’s Substack - where this article was sourced.
(Note the new word I just invented.)
The result is a reflection of the ever widening cultural and political gap between young urban Maori, especially in south and west Auckland, and the rest of the community. Te Pati Maori’s separatist agenda and arrogance towards the general public, as reflected in Ms Kaipara’s refusal to speak to reporters from the country’s largest news organisations after her win, will do nothing to endear them to non-Maori New Zealand.
Not that they care. Their agenda and rhetoric are dangerous but this by-election win will only empower them more.
One of their MPs, Takuta Ferris, brazenly broke electoral law with his social media post on election day wearing Te Pati Maori branded clothing and asking voters to make sure they went to the polling booth.
But nothing will happen. Nobody’s ever prosecuted for breaking election law.
But here’s the rub. After special votes are counted, it’s estimated only 11,998 votes will have been cast representing just 27.1 percent of the constituency’s enrolled voters.
By-elections are notorious for low turnouts, but this pathetically low level of interest makes the usual moribund local council turnouts look like an electoral stampede.
The great kiwi democratic machine set up 84 polling booths for the 12 days of advance voting and for polling day itself. Some didn’t attract many clients. Trinity Methodist Church Hall in Pakuranga had 8 votes cast and the Garden Room in Grafton just 6.
The busiest places were where voters went to shop. Glen Innes Pak’nSave collected 573 and Manukau Mall 779.
Despite the lefties and wokies insisting that all prisoners should be allowed to vote, those currently eligible from places of incarceration (with sentences of three years or less) didn’t show much interest. Two teams went to Auckland’s prisons during advance voting and on polling day itself.
Their total number of votes collected? Zero.
(To be fair, when a polling place has less than six votes recorded it’s listed as zero for privacy reasons, so a minuscule number of prisoners may have voted but we don’t know for sure.)
The question I’d love a definitive answer to is this: has there ever been a lower turnout (as a percentage of enrolled voters) in the history of New Zealand Parliamentary by-elections?
The answer would seem to be no. But since the MMP era began in 1996 we can be more definitive.
Another Maori electorate, Te Tai Hauauru ran it close in 2004 with a measly 27.85 percent bothering to cast a vote. But Tariana Turia, as the sitting MP who defected from Labour to the Maori Party, was always going to win in a landslide. She duly did with 92 percent of the votes cast. Tamaki Makaurau was supposed to be a genuine contest this time.
Every other by-election in the last three decades has attracted at least 30 percent of the enrolled voters. But this result has created a somewhat ludicrous reality whereby the new MP won with the support of just 14 percent of the enrolled voters. It’s hardly a ringing endorsement but what can you do?
The lack of voter interest in Maori electorates compared to the general seats, not just in by-elections but in General Elections as well, should be a catalyst to have a good long look at why we still have them.
In 2023, the turnout in the seven Maori seats was on average around ten percentage points below the general seats. So it’s not surprising there are more Maori MPs in general seats than in Maori electorates.
But like electoral law prosecutions, nothing will happen about the status of the Maori seats. By 2029 there might even be another one.
Yet Te Pati Maori co-leader Rawiri Waititi doesn't know history and can’t count either. His extraordinary statement after Kaipara’s win that “Māori hadn't had a fair shot at democracy since democracy was implemented in this country" is just poppycock. Maori men had the vote before women in the 19th century and the current Parliament has 27 percent of its MPs with Maori ancestry, considerably more than the percentage of the population descended from Maori.
The result for Labour is so bad you almost wonder if the Machiavellian campaign manger Willie Jackson wanted Kaipara to win, and encouraged Labour voters to do so in order that the Maori voters in Auckland would then have two MPs to represent them in Parliament.
But I don’t reckon even Willie could have pulled off something that underhand. In any event he says the result was tough to take, but they’ll try and do better next year.
Now we await Oriini Kaipara’s arrival at Parliament. Will she continue to wear that red beret, her tribute to South Africa’s communist political party the Economic Freedom Fighters and its leader Julius Malema, he of “shoot the Boer fame”?
Probably, but then what would this Substacker know?
Peter Williams was a writer and broadcaster for half a century. Now watching from the sidelines. Peter blogs regularly on Peter’s Substack - where this article was sourced.
3 comments:
Once again an interesting insight to the "election" that never was.
My other concern, Peter is " the new word".
Sadly I can see the Australian High Commission, Wellington seeking to speak to the Hon Minister - Foreign Affairs - of The NZ Coalition Govt, Winston Peters = " to complain about the plagiarizing of an iconic Australian word -'cooee' (new NZ word Kui) and the use of same may be misconstrued, when used".
My Dictionary states -
"cooee" - is used to attract attention
"kui" - who gives a toss.
But will our Aussie Mates know the difference?
Personally I dont read much into the low turnout. Maori know that, whatever, they will get someone who acts primarily and unquestioning in maori self interests, directed ultimately by same minded external maori activists. And I guess any inclined to vote Labour saw themselves effectively voting for the next list mp, whose devotion to the extreme may not be seen as certain by all..
If the Tamaki Makaurau election was irrelvant as suggested by comments, then clearly so are the maori seats and should be abolished by simple majority in parliament , as the law allows.
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