The Northern Advocate

Is it time we made voting mandatory in New Zealand?

- Marcus Roberts Marcus Roberts

According to British judge and cabinet minister Baron Moulton, there are three types of human action. There is action that is regulated by the law. There is action governed by our unfettered free choice.

But there is also a middle ground of actions subject to duty, personal consciousn­ess, manners and “good form”.

This middle ground is when we do things because we feel we ought to. It encompasse­s all the right actions that no one will force you to do … except yourself.

According to Lord Moulton, a genuine test of civilizati­onal greatness is whether we can trust people to follow their self-imposed laws rather than those imposed upon them. We should cherish this middle ground.

Moulton’s thoughts are especially relevant given the low turnout of voters in the recent local body elections. How might we fix such civic disengagem­ent?

One answer is to make voting in New Zealand legally mandatory; to remove it from the “middle ground” of actions that one ought to do.

Although such a move would be “radical” for New Zealand, around 15 per cent of the world’s democracie­s have some form of mandatory voting. Australia has had compulsory voting since 1924. If you fail to vote in Australia, you receive a fine in the mail of AU$20, which will escalate to over AU$200 and a visit to court if you don’t pay.

Thanks to the secret ballot, mandatory voting doesn’t mean you actually need to vote for any party or politician – you can cast an “informal” ballot by leaving it blank or spoiling it in some way.

Mandatory voting means mandatory turning up at the voting booth. In the last Australian election, around 5 per cent of all votes cast were “informal”.

Does it work in increasing turnout? When Australia introduced mandatory voting, the turnout jumped from under 60 per cent to over 90 per cent. Each Federal election since then has seen a turnout of over 90 per cent - the one exception was in 2022 when the number of people who voted for the House of Representa­tives was 89.82 per cent.

This turnout is higher than in New Zealand’s general elections which have tended to fluctuate between 70 and 85 per cent. It is much higher than our local body elections which struggle to hit a 40 per cent turnout.

But even if compulsory voting solves our low turnout troubles, it leaves more profound questions unanswered.

Why is it that most people do not feel that they should vote in local elections?

Is it that they have so little informatio­n about their local candidates? Would more open party affiliatio­n for councillor­s and mayors solve this?

Why do people think that voting won’t make a discernibl­e difference? Is disengagem­ent a legitimate democratic response?

For many New Zealanders, there is currently no incentive to turn out to vote. Mandatory voting addresses the symptom but will leave the root causes untreated.

We must understand and fix these root causes so that turnout does not fall to the point where democratic legitimacy is lost.

History 1714

Georg Ludwig von Hannover is crowned as Britain's King George I at Westminste­r Abbey.

The US Senate ratifies the Louisiana Purchase.

Communist forces end their Long March at Yan'an, in Shaanxi, China, bringing Mao Zedong to prominence.

In NZ, the Equal Pay Act, aiming to end the gender pay gap in the private sector, passes into law.

78 people are killed when a Norwegian tanker rams a commuter ferry on the Mississipp­i River near New Orleans.

Three members of the rock group Lynyrd Skynyrd, including lead singer Ronnie Van Zant, are killed when a chartered plane crashes in Mississipp­i.

Billions of dollars are wiped off the value of NZ shares as the shockwaves of a sharp drop in New York’s Wall Street stockmarke­t ripple around the world.

Moammar Gadhafi, 69, Libya’s dictator for 42 years, is killed as revolution­ary fighters overwhelm his hometown of Sirte two months after his regime falls.

Saudi Arabia claims journalist Jamal Khashoggi was killed in Saudi Arabia’s consulate in Istanbul during a “fistfight”.

Mandatory voting means mandatory turning up at the voting booth.

1803 1935 1972 1976 1977 1987 2011 2018 Birthdays

● Actor Viggo Mortensen is 64

● US Vice

President Kamala Harris is 58

● Rock musician Jim Sonefeld (Hootie & The Blowfish) is 58

● Rapper Snoop Dogg is 51

● Singer Dannii Minogue is 51

Quiz Answers 1.

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Photo / Michael Cunningham New Zealand’s local body elections struggle to hit a 40 per cent voter turnout.
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