Horowhenua Chronicle

‘No referendum can overturn council’

-

LNo referendum can overturn a council decision on what wards we have. . . as a council we were 100 per cent in support of Māori wards

ocal government officials as well as elected members believe the Government is giving itself too much power and may be oversteppi­ng its boundaries when it comes to their plans to scrap Māori words via a binding referendum., which councils will have to pay for.

It may also be undemocrat­ic as councillor­s, elected by their communitie­s, have establishe­d these wards in response to public feedback. So: democracy all around.

Horowhenua’s Deputy Mayor David Allan did not mince words when asked for his view on this.

“No referendum can overturn a council decision on what wards we have,” said Allan.

“Nor can a referendum overturn the number of representa­tives we have, as long as we stay within the statistica­l limits.”

He said Māori Wards can only be overturned if you make it about race. “As a council we were 100 per cent in support of Māori wards and the public submission­s on this decision were overwhelmi­ngly in favour.”

He said the local district councillor­s treasure the input from their Mā ori ward colleagues. “At times they do challenge us, but their contributi­on to our decision-making process is huge and much appreciate­d.”

Claiming the establishm­ent of Māori wards as undemocrat­ic is untrue, he said. It is true that not every person in the district was personally asked for their opinion, but parliament­arians like ACT and NZ First do not do that either.

Councils present proposals to their communitie­s and allow for feedback, which they must take into considerat­ion.

ACT and NZ First are very much a minority in Parliament, but they seek to impose their views on the rest of us.

Councils did ask their communitie­s the way they always consult their communitie­s on decisions and used that feedback in their final decision. It allows for Māori, who are considered tangata whenua, to be heard.

Something that has not always been the case as they are still a minority easily drowned out by that majority. And that is where the tyranny of the majority silences all other voices, not just those from Māori ... again and again.

Local Government New Zealand’ Sam Broughton called the announceme­nt on a binding referendum a ‘complete overreach’.

“They are removing the local decision-making by mandating polls.

“Māori wards are the choice of the community’s elected members, based on feedback,” he said.

“ACT and NZ First present us with a skewed version of democracy. Claims that Māori wards and constituen­cies give Māori more votes than anyone else are wrong and politician­s should think carefully before inflaming those important conversati­ons with misinforma­tion,” he said.

He said LGNZ supported the changes to Māori wards in 2021 to make them consistent with other wards.

Only those on the Māori electoral roll can vote for Māori ward councillor­s, but equally only those who are on the Levin of Kerekere roll or any other ward’s roll can vote only in those wards.

 ?? ??
 ?? Photo / Nick Simmons ?? Local councillor­s are elected by their communitie­s and use consultati­on and feedback in their decision making. Everyone was in favour of Ma¯ ori wards, says Deputy Mayor David Allan (inset).
Photo / Nick Simmons Local councillor­s are elected by their communitie­s and use consultati­on and feedback in their decision making. Everyone was in favour of Ma¯ ori wards, says Deputy Mayor David Allan (inset).

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand