Manawatu Standard

Voters against separate M¯aori wards by more than three-to-one majority

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Voters in Manawatu¯ District have come out more than three to one in opposition to creating separate Ma¯ ori wards for council.

Results from a binding poll came in yesterday afternoon, with 7062 voting against, and 2038 in favour.

Some 43 per cent of electors cast a vote, with 18 votes counted as blank and one ‘‘informal’’.

Councillor Andrew Quarrie, who helped drive a petition in favour of a poll, said the result was a win for the community.

The council in November voted 6-4 in favour of having one or more Ma¯ ori wards at the next local government elections in 2019, although the decision was challenged earlier this year when more than 5 per cent of voters demanded a poll.

The decision was met with praise from some councillor­s at the time, who said it would enable the council to uphold its Treaty of Waitangi obligation­s, but drew criticism from others,

who said it was unnecessar­y.

Quarrie wasn’t surprised by the result, which he said was a vote of no confidence in Local Government New Zealand, the Manawatu¯ District Council and the direction it was headed.

‘‘Council should focus on its core responsibi­lities and leave social engineerin­g alone.

‘‘If Ma¯ ori wish to be on council I welcome them to stand as everyone else does, and welcome their contributi­on.’’

Quarrie said Ma¯ori wards would have created a division and, while both sides wanted the best outcomes for Ma¯ ori, they had different ways of going about it.

Councillor­s were elected to represent the interests of the entire district, not any one group, he said, and the council had shown willingnes­s to consult and co-operate with iwi, so a Ma¯ ori ward was unnecessar­y.

Pro-ward councillor Hilary Humphrey said Ma¯ori wards aligned with the principles establishe­d by the Treaty of Waitangi – those of partnershi­p, protection and participat­ion.

She respected the democratic process, but remained ‘‘forever an optimist’’ there would one day be greater diversity around the council table.

Palmerston North’s poll on the same issue closes at noon on Saturday. Results are expected by 7.30pm.

‘‘If Ma¯ori wish to be on council I welcome them to stand as everyone else does, and welcome their contributi­on.’’ Councillor Andrew Quarrie

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