Otago Daily Times

Electoral processes for review

- GRANT MILLER grant.miller@odt.co.nz

THE best ways of partnering with Maori and whether councillor­s should be elected from separate areas will be part of a Dunedin City Council review next year.

The review of the ways voters are represente­d will be carried out by an independen­t panel.

As well as considerat­ion of whether there should be a specific ward for Maori representa­tion and whether the council should stick with electing each councillor from votes throughout the city, and community boards will be debated.

The council’s most recent review was in 2015 — when electing councillor­s from separate areas was replaced by citywide voting — and the next review has to happen in 2021.

It will affect what the 2022 and 2025 elections will look like.

The independen­t panel’s recommenda­tions will be debated by councillor­s next year and a final proposal can be appealed by members of the public to the Local Government Commission.

Debate about Maori wards has sometimes resulted in acrimony.

Cr Marie Laufiso said she admired the stance of former New Plymouth mayor Andrew Judd, whose one term was notable for backing Maori wards in 2014 and the public backlash that followed.

The decision of Mr Judd’s council to establish a separate Maori ward was overturned after a petition resulted in a referendum that delivered an emphatic verdict against the council.

Maori representa­tion is treated differentl­y under the law than other representa­tion matters but Local Government Minister Nanaia Mahuta has said changing this is a priority.

Ms Mahuta said this ‘‘anomaly’’ had held back widespread Maori representa­tion.

The timetable for changing the law is not yet known but it could mean that, if the Dunedin council favoured a separate Maori ward, a referendum could not be used to overturn that.

In the South, Ngai Tahu has been cautious about advocating Maori wards.

Maori have sometimes preferred other ways of partnering with local government, such as involvemen­t in committees.

Dunedin City Council’s Maori Participat­ion Working Party was establishe­d in 2005 as an informal advisory group to foster Maori participat­ion.

Former Local Government New Zealand president Dave Cull said the law applying to Maori wards was discrimina­tory.

Dunedin Mayor Aaron Hawkins said changing it was overdue.

Both suggested, however, that this did not necessaril­y mean a separate Maori ward was the best way forward for Dunedin.

Otakou senior leader Edward Ellison said referendum­s in other parts of New Zealand had not been constructi­ve.

Cr Sophie Barker said citywide voting had appeared to contribute to increased diversity around the council table.

The council needed to have a strategy for how it would work in partnershi­p with Maori, she said.

Cr Doug Hall said he did not favour a separate Maori ward.

Maori representa­tion is treated differentl­y under

the law than other representa­tion matters but Local Government Minister Nanaia Mahuta has said changing this

is a priority

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand