The Northland Age

Maori roll option launched

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If you’re a Maori voter and want to change which electoral roll you’re on, now is your chance.

The 2018 Maori Electoral Option, which gives voters the chance to choose between being on the Maori roll or the general roll, starts on Tuesday, April 3 and ends on Thursday August 2.

For Far North Maori voters, that means if you’re currently able to vote for candidates in the Northland electorate, you can choose to swap rolls and vote for Te Tai Tokerau candidates — or vice-versa. It will not affect which party you vote for.

Mandy Bohte, national manager of enrolment and community engagement for the Electoral Commission, said now was the time to choose.

“This is an important choice for Maori voters because it decides whether they will be on the Maori or general roll for the next two general elections.”

Currently, Maori Electoral Options are held after each fiveyearly Census.

The launch of the Maori Electoral Option was at the Te Tai Tokerau Kapa Haka Regionals at ASB Stadium, Whangarei, on Saturday.

If you are enrolled to vote and you said you were of New Zealand Maori descent when you enrolled, you will be sent a personalis­ed Maori Electoral Option pack in the mail.

The pack will come to you in the week starting April 3 and will be sent to the most recent address the Electoral Commission has.

If you want to change the electoral roll you are on, sign and date the letter you received and either scan or photograph it and upload it at maorioptio­n.org.nz, email it to maorioptio­n@elections.org.nz, or post it in the reply envelope provided in your pack.

If you do not want to change the electoral roll you are on, you do not need to do anything.

Four Maori seats were establishe­d in 1867 to give Maori a say in Parliament. In 1986 a Royal Commission on the electoral system recommende­d Maori seats be abolished should MMP be adopted. However, Maori fought for the seats and, before the first MMP election in 1996, the number of Maori seats were increased to five. Two more seats were added in 2002.

For more informatio­n, visit maorioptio­n.org.nz.

 ??  ?? DECISION TIME: Far North Maori voters can decide whether to go on the Te Tai Tokoerau Maori electoral roll or the Northland general roll.
DECISION TIME: Far North Maori voters can decide whether to go on the Te Tai Tokoerau Maori electoral roll or the Northland general roll.

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