Manawatu Standard

Political parties to discuss ‘dangerous’ water clause

- Thomas Manch

Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern says the Government will go to Parliament’s business committee to discuss a controvers­ial clause in its Three Waters bill that has been deemed ‘‘dangerous’’ by constituti­onal law experts.

Labour and Green MPs voted through a new clause into the Water Services Entities Bill in a late stage of its progress through the House, aimed at guaranteei­ng public ownership of water infrastruc­ture.

But the tweak to the prospectiv­e law caused outcry as it sought to ‘‘entrench’’ public ownership by mandating any future law change to require a 60% majority in Parliament, or a public referendum.

Such a super majority requiremen­t has traditiona­lly been reserved for constituti­onal matters in the Electoral Act.

‘‘We agree we do need to be cautious about the principle of entrenchme­nt. Our plan is to go back to the business committee, discuss where entrenchme­nt is used more broadly, and look to resolve the issue,’’ Ardern said yesterday afternoon.

Parliament’s business committee is a group of MPs from each political party, headed by Speaker Adrian Rurawhe, that determines how Parliament and its processes are run.

‘‘There have been those with a constituti­onal law background who have raised concerns around where entrenchme­nt is used,’’ Ardern said. ‘‘We still stand firm against the privatisat­ion of water assets, and I’d ask the other political parties to be clear on their view on that issue.’’

The Government had asked National to support entrenchme­nt of public ownership by way of a 75% majority threshold months ago. However, although National said it had no plans to sell off water assets, it declined the offer.

The 60% threshold was put forward by the Green Party as a supplement­ary order paper on Wednesday and, with the support of Local Government Minister Nanaia Mahuta, was voted for by Labour. Without the support of other parties, a 75% threshold could not be set, as Parliament’s rules only allow majority requiremen­ts to be set at the same level of support for them in Parliament.

The Three Waters reform will create four public entities to manage drinking water, wastewater and stormwater systems.

A group of eight constituti­onal legal experts had, at the weekend, written an open letter urging Labour to reconsider the ‘‘dangerous precedent’’ the entrenchme­nt may create.

 ?? ?? Jacinda Ardern
Jacinda Ardern

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