Dear Friend,
Last year I emailed you about the
radical proposals Nanaia Mahuta's ‘Review into the Future of Local
Government’ is proposing. While Ms Mahuta is no longer the Minister of
Local Government, the Panel is continuing its work
anyway! The proposals
include:
- Lowering the local voting age to
16 without a referendum.
- Bringing in unelected mana whenua appointees
for all of New Zealand's councils who would be given equal status and
voting rights as elected members, but unlike the
councillors, cannot be removed at the ballot box.
- Giving councils the power to
introduce ’new funding mechanism’ – new council taxes –
without a binding referendum.
- Removing the requirement for local
referenda before changing the voting system by imposing STV across the
country.
- Introducing randomly selected
‘citizens’
assemblies’ that you cannot vote out.
The Panel has the temerity to
say these proposals “strengthen democracy”, but advocates introducing
unelected mana whenua representatives onto councils and their
committees with the same status – and voting rights – as elected
councillors.
I'm
emailing all of our supporters asking them to take five minutes and
make a submission, before it is too late.
The consultation is called ‘He mata
whāriki he matawhānui’ and the public round of submissions close at
the end of this month. And while
Nanaia Mahuta is no longer the Minister of Local Government, she is
still in the Cabinet, and her hand picked Panel are continuing anyway.
We need to put a stop to this.
We have made it easy for you to have
your say on these radical proposals:
>>> www.ProtectLocalDemocracy.nz
<<<
Our position at the
Taxpayers’ Union is clear: The only people who should make
decisions on setting rates and how those rates should be spent, are
those who are directly accountable to ratepayers through the ballot
box.
These reforms would greatly undermine
local government in New Zealand, but they could just be the tip of the
iceberg. They are symptomatic of the current government’s approach to
local decision making. They have centralised health services and
polytechnics and are set on a programme of systemically stripping
powers from our councils. First it was water assets, now it is
planning and who knows what will be next?
Yes, councils can be wasteful and
inefficient, but they are far better than unelected centralised
bureaucracies that these proposals take us
towards.
Instead of dealing with the
real challenges facing local government like these, this Review sadly
focuses on yet more identity politics.
And have you noticed that the media has
said almost nothing about these recommendations? A Google search for
'He mata whāriki, he matawhānui' brings up five – yes, just five –
news articles on the consultation report.
That’s
why I’m asking you to make your voice heard by using our submission
tool.
Thank you for your
support.
|
Peter Williams Board
Member New Zealand Taxpayers’
Union
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PS. The Hipkins
Government has been dropping or halting unpopular policies left, right
and centre so we need to make sure that they know the strength of
feeling about these proposal too. It
just takes a couple of minutes to make your voice
heard.
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