4 Jun 2024

Reform group to look at four-year terms for local government

8:08 am on 4 June 2024
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Photo: RNZ

A former National MP has been tasked with overseeing a new group to explore local government electoral system reforms, including the implementation of four-year terms, and ways to increase voter turnout - including moving on from postal voting.

Nelson mayor Nick Smith - who will chair the reform group - said he was concerned over the decline in voter participation.

While turn out for the general election was reasonably high - 80 percent - by international standards, local election turn out was a "real challenge" at about half that, Smith told Morning Report.

He said it wasn't helped by different councils running their own campaigns and operating different voting systems.

And the use of postal voting was "unsustainable".

"Post is in serious decline, we've got a significant number of households these days that don't even have letter box and do all of their business online."

With the coalition government considering four-year terms for the national parliament, it was important local elections remain synchronised, Smith said.

"If you're going to have a four year proposition for Parliament, need to align that with councils or you're going to get a real confusion between our local and central government elections."

Smith said he hoped a bi-partisan approach could be agreed to drive sensible change and ensure mayors and councillors can claim a mandate.

"In the time that I've been a publicly elected figure, those rates of voting have dropped by 25 percent, almost to the point where it's a threat to the mandate that mayors and councils have to speak for their communities," Smith told RNZ.

Local Government New Zealand president, Selwyn mayor Sam Broughton, said serious reform was needed.

"Currently, local elections are cumbersome and inefficient compared with the general election. We also feel there is too much time and money wasted by having short three-year terms.

"Local government does important work and makes long-term decisions on behalf of our communities. It's important we have a strong local democracy backing that, but we need to get the settings right."

LGNZ's view is to move to a four-year term. While Smith said there were disadvantages over the three-year term, he had some reservations.

"While I'm pretty supportive of shifting to a four-year term, of which I think there would be real benefits for local government, we also need to be very mindful that we do not want to be having Parliamentary and local elections at the same time.

"I think that would compromise the proper separation of powers between local and central government. But that will be one of the issues we'll need to explore as a electoral reform group."

The other members of the reform group are Whakatāne councillor Toni Boynton, Lower Hutt mayor Campbell Barry, Waipā mayor Susan O'Regan, and Gisborne mayor Rehette Stoltz.

Smith said the broad political allegiances of the group was deliberate (Smith is a former National MP, whereas both Barry and Boynton were Labour-affiliated), as bipartisanship was essential to achieve reform.

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