The Northland Age

We need to learn why voters don’t vote

- Richard Prebble

We were told postal voting was the way to increase voter turnout. It was not. Now we will be told internet voting is the answer. It will not be.

Any review has to consider the real reasons for non-participat­ion. Non-voting is a huge problem worldwide.

In America, party primaries favour extreme candidates. In the election there is often no rational candidate for an intelligen­t voter to support. Donald Trump’s endorsed candidates are so wacky the Republican­s are now predicted to fail to capture the senate.

In Britain, in the last election, the Conservati­ves won nearly 14 million votes. Liz Truss, the new Prime Minister, was the first choice of just 50 out of the 365 conservati­ve MPs — 81,326 Conservati­ve Party members, mostly old, white and reactionar­y, elected her. Truss claimed in the primary she would be a new Margaret Thatcher. She is implementi­ng spending policies that will have the Iron Lady turning in her grave.

Millions of Tory voters will stay at home next election.

Primaries invented to make elections more democratic make elections less democratic.

Here in New Zealand, Labour’s party primaries to select its leader have been failures. The members’ choice for the 2017 election was Andrew Little. The MPs were only able to elect Jacinda Ardern because there was no time to hold a primary.

The Green Party leadership selection method is even worse. The

party conference claims the right to select the leaders and also to remove them. A Green party conference could stage a coup and remove a future duly elected Green Prime Minister. This year the Green youth movement attempted to remove James Shaw. If every Green MP had not refused to stand the coup might have succeeded.

These primaries are a threat to parliament­ary democracy. Labour Party members and Green Party conference delegates have no democratic mandate.

Ardern could decide she has had enough and accept a United Nations job. A primary to select the new prime minister would destabilis­e the Government. Willie Jackson might win. Labour voters would stay home.

In local government the problem is the reverse: there is no candidate selection process. Any idiot can and does run for office. For mayor in Rotorua we had seven candidates. Our councillor­s are elected from

wards, six general, three Maori and one rural. We can predict the different constituen­cies will lead to dysfunctio­n.

I was one of the 42 per cent in Rotorua who voted. I confess I did not know who to vote for. Just one candidate put a pamphlet in my letter box. The material posted on social media was unreliable. The one meeting I attended told me little.

The 200-word candidate profiles were largely meaningles­s. Candidates told me how many children they had. One candidate said “I think”. Few said what the issues are. Fewer had solutions. Even fewer indicated they had any experience in managing a multi-million dollar enterprise.

In a real sense the mayoralty is a phoney contest. The mayor has just one vote. Tania Tapsell, our new mayor, will be discoverin­g whether the new councillor­s will support all or some or perhaps none of her policies.

Tauranga, our fifth biggest city, is governed by appointed commission­ers because successive mayors and councils were at loggerhead­s. Invercargi­ll is not the only council that has been at war with the mayor. My council has been at war with councillor­s taking legal action against each other. The reputation of our city has been trashed. Central government has dumped, with the council’s collusion, the country’s homeless into Rotorua’s motels.

A reason for the Three Waters reform is many councils are so dysfunctio­nal they cannot even agree to maintain the water pipes. Central government should have started its reforms by making councils democratic­ally accountabl­e.

Political parties serve a democratic purpose, they make manifesto politics possible.

Parties produce slates of candidates pledged to work together for agreed goals. It gives voters a meaningful choice. If mayors were elected by the councillor­s then local body candidates would have to form teams, agree on the leader and their policy priorities.

We could then in elections hold councillor­s to account.

Wayne Brown’s constituen­cy is so large only the wealthy can afford to stand, as Viv Beck discovered with her $353,000 campaign bill. The only other viable Auckland mayoral candidate is one backed by Labour’s electoral machine. How democratic is this?

The people who made an intelligen­t decision in the local body elections were the approximat­ely 60 per cent who did not vote. They knew they could not make an informed vote.

 ?? Photo / Jed Bradley ?? If mayors, such as Auckland’s Wayne Brown, were elected by councillor­s, candidates would have to agree on priorities.
Photo / Jed Bradley If mayors, such as Auckland’s Wayne Brown, were elected by councillor­s, candidates would have to agree on priorities.

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