
Changes to electoral law will disenfranchise thousands – and may not save any time
Justice minister Paul Goldsmith yesterday unveiled the government's proposals to change electoral law in time for the 2026 election through an Electoral Amendment Bill introduced into the House.
Some of these changes, such as once again removing the right to vote from all sentenced prisoners while they remain behind bars, had already been announced. I've had my say on this particular issue already and won't bore you with it again. Let's just say I'm not supportive of what the government wants to do here.
The big, and quite unexpected, announcement was that anyone not enrolled to vote once advance voting starts (a period that will be set in law as beginning 12 days before polling day) will no longer be able to cast a vote at all. And people who are enrolled, but are enrolled in the wrong electorate, will only be able to cast a party vote. This proposed prohibition on enrolling and voting on the same day is necessary, Goldsmith claimed, to prevent the vote-counting process from blowing out past the current 20-day timeframe and so enable a speedy declaration of final election results.
What the problem is, and why this proposed solution is so radical in the New Zealand context, requires a bit of unpacking. So stick with me as we take a quick tour through how voter enrolment and vote processing works in our system.
Let's start with if you have correctly enrolled to vote (i.e. at the place where you reside in terms of electoral rules) before the printed electoral rolls are produced for the election. In this case you simply rock up to any polling station in your electorate, have your name physically crossed off the printed electoral roll, and get given an 'ordinary' ballot. You then mark this and put it in the ballot box, before walking away full of self-satisfaction at having completed your civic duty.
However, if for some reason your name is not on the printed electoral roll for the electorate you are voting in, then you will have to cast a 'special' vote. This may be for a whole bunch of reasons. Somehow your name may have been left off the printed electoral roll, despite your being correctly enrolled. You may be voting outside the electorate you correctly are enrolled in because you are travelling for business, or are attending university in another city, or similar. Your name may be on the 'unpublished' electoral roll because of personal safety fears. You may have enrolled to vote after the printed roll was produced (but before voting begins). You may be enrolled but have moved residence and forgotten to update your enrolment details. Or, you may not actually be enrolled to vote at all when you turn up at the polling place.
In any of these cases, you first have to fill out a 'special vote declaration' before receiving and casting a ballot. These special votes and declarations get set aside and only are counted after the declaration has been processed by electoral officials. If a voter was enrolled but subsequently has changed their residence, then their declaration is used to update their enrolment to their new electorate (thereby allowing their electorate vote to count). And if a voter was not enrolled at all, their declaration is used to enrol them (thereby allowing both their electorate and party votes to count).
Processing special votes is much more time-consuming than is the case for counting and checking ordinary votes – it takes something like 10 times longer, according to the Electoral Commission. And the number of special votes has increased a lot; in 2023, some 602,000 votes cast were special votes, or about 20.9% of all votes. The increase means that more time is required post-election before a final election result (which includes special vote totals) can be announced.
It is this pushing out of the final result that has Goldsmith so upset. And, to be fair, it is a real potential problem (one that can be expected to get worse over time if nothing is done). Which is why the Electoral Commission and Ministry of Justice officials suggested a range of changes to law and practice in response. Some of these suggestions – allowing for automatic updating of a voter's enrolment details using government data, etc – have been included in the bill. That's a good thing, which can in itself be expected to ease the numbers of people having to cast special votes in the future.
However, the government also has chosen to do something that no one involved in electoral law policy advised – removed the ability for 'same day' enrolment and voting. I'll explain why this is just a bad thing to do in itself, before moving on to speculate on why it might not even be that effective at achieving what the government says it wants.
In terms of why this is bad policy, we need to understand the general principle on which New Zealand elections operate. Voting generally is considered to be 'A Good Thing' which ought to be made as easy and accessible as possible. So, we continue to provide a huge number of polling places across the country (including in rural areas where only a handful of votes result). We allow people to cast their votes at any polling place anywhere in the country for pretty much any reason (even if this results in their casting a special vote). We do not have any voter ID rules in place, relying instead on after-the-fact roll checks to pick up any double-voting issues. And we always have allowed people to enrol and vote on the same day right up to the day before election day itself (with this approach then extended to election day itself in 2020).
Therefore, on its face an approach that says 'unless your enrolment details are correct some 13 days before election day, you won't get to vote' flies in the face of our electoral traditions. And the consequences of the change are all too predictable. As noted by officials during the bill's development, some 300,000 to 350,000 special votes in 2023 were cast because the voter had either failed to update their enrolment details or were not enrolled at all. Those voters are most likely to be younger, and come from areas with high Māori, Asian and Pacific communities.
In other words, they are what David Seymour thinks of as ' dropkicks ' – people apparently so unworthy of our respect that we should have no qualms about locking them out of the democratic process. The fact that this cohort is more likely to vote for left-of-centre parties (which invariably increase their share of the vote after special votes are counted) no doubt colours this assessment. Meaning that we have a right-of-centre coalition government championing a law change that was not recommended to them as a solution, which goes against the traditional grain of our electoral laws, and which will predominantly disenfranchise individuals prone to supporting their political opponents. It is a good thing I am not conspiratorially minded otherwise some grim conclusions might be drawn.
Furthermore, it is not entirely obvious that Goldsmith's proposed changes will be effective in solving the underlying problem of delayed election results. We might start by noting that while his announcement of the changes complained that '[t]he final vote count used to take two weeks, last election it took three', the accompanying bill will not change this timetable. So, apparently the government is at least resignedly accepting of a 20-day wait for final election results.
Whether that 20-day timeframe can accommodate the necessary vote processing and counting, even with the government's proposed changes, is still questionable. Because the government is not removing the general availability of special votes. Voters can still cast these if they are outside their electorate, or enrol after the printed roll is produced (but before voting begins), or are on the unpublished roll, and so on. The government instead is removing the right to enrol, or change enrolment details, after voting begins. And because being correctly enrolled is a precondition to casting a valid vote, this therefore will work to invalidate the special vote of someone who is not enrolled after it has been cast.
What this means in practice is that anyone not enrolled when voting begins can still wander into a polling place, fill out a special vote declaration, receive a ballot paper and cast what they think is a vote. Electoral officials will then still need to process the declaration in order to work out that the individual isn't actually enrolled to vote anywhere. Only then will the vote be discarded from the vote count – all that changes is that the electoral roll is not updated to include their details (so their vote remains in the count).
Equally, if you are enrolled but have changed residence without updating your details you can fill out a special vote declaration and cast a vote. The electoral officials will then process your declaration in order to work out that although you have enrolled to vote (and so can cast a party vote), you did so in the wrong electorate (so they cannot count your electorate vote). Again, this may save some time, or it may just create more complexity.
Of course, what the government says it wants is for people to correctly enrol in their proper electorate before voting starts so that they can cast an ordinary vote. And I have no doubt that there will be a huge push by both the Electoral Commission and political parties of the left (plus affiliated civil-society groups) to get this message out. Which may in and of itself ameliorate the worst possible impacts of this proposed law change.
But people are, by-and-large, not reliably rational actors. The intricacies of electoral law and the technical requirements to participate are not something that sit at the minds of many (probably most) individuals. In fact, the only time many (probably most) concern themselves with elections is when they really need to – at the point they make their way to the polling place to take part in choosing who will govern the country for the next three years.
The government's proposed law change risks cancelling the efforts of some thousands, or even tens-of-thousands, of people who have shown a willingness to engage in that practice. It does so because the government does not want to spend the time and resources to fully modernise the law and processes surrounding our electoral rolls. And it reverses a long-standing approach to how our electoral system should operate. It really makes you wonder who are the real dropkicks in this story?

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


NZ Herald
8 hours ago
- NZ Herald
NZ's infrastructure challenge: From planning to delivery
The suite of policies, legislative reforms and delivery agencies now in place or emerging has laid the groundwork for a more strategic and responsive approach to our infrastructure needs. But policy is only the beginning. The Government – in fact both sides of the House – have heard the cry for a credible infrastructure pipeline and there have been lots of announcements. New Zealand's first Health Infrastructure Plan was released in April. The Draft National Infrastructure Plan, released for consultation last month, provides a long-term roadmap for investment, identifying priority areas and systemic gaps. City and Regional Deal discussions are underway with Auckland, Western Bay of Plenty and Otago Central Lakes, with the first deal to be agreed by the end of this year. The Government has also announced plans for major infrastructure projects, including 17 Roads of National Significance. There is also – rightly – a growing recognition of the need to make the most of what we have got and to invest in asset maintenance and renewal. Government is now talking about the need for asset management plans – and we should all be loudly supporting this. We need to make asset maintenance as sexy – if not sexier – than the big new projects. We must prioritise our infrastructure spend on looking after what we already have so that each of us can drop our kids off to warm, dry classrooms, driving on pothole-free roads (not flooded by water from leaky pipes) and have access to well-maintained hospitals. This is just as important as the big new projects and political announcements on long-term programmes to look after our assets should be celebrated. Sarah Sinclair. Photo / Supplied Government is now talking about the need for asset management plans – and we should all be loudly supporting this. We need to make asset maintenance as sexy – if not sexier – than the big new projects. Sarah Sinclair These developments mark a significant shift toward a more co-ordinated and proactive infrastructure system. But they are not, in themselves, sufficient to guarantee delivery. In June, MinterEllisonRuddWatts hosted Adrian Dwyer, chief executive of Infrastructure Partnerships Australia, along with other representatives from the construction and infrastructure sector in Australia. We heard that there is an opportunity right now to capitalise on the outgoing tide of infrastructure investment in the Australian transport sector to redirect skill and delivery capability to New Zealand. We have a window of opportunity to attract the capability and capacity of the Australian market but we need to move fast. So, what's required to move from planning to delivery? The focus must be on translating our project pipeline into execution getting projects off the drawing board and into the ground and on locking in asset maintenance and renewal programmes that make the most of what we already have - and both need to happen quickly. To achieve delivery momentum on infrastructure projects we need to focus on certainty and collaboration: Certainty to give the necessary confidence ... Of pipeline: There is no doubt that the sector needs a stable. long-term reliable pipeline with political consensus. We have heard from Australian sector participants that it is pipeline and political credibility that enables the market to plan and resource. Investors just need to know what is coming in the next five years and that they are 'real' projects. This should include the new capital projects as well as long-term asset maintenance and renewal programmes – so the whole supply chain can confidently invest in people, equipment, technology and other resources. Of funding: the credibility of the pipeline relies heavily on funding certainty - longer-term funding certainty is needed for projects and long-term maintenance programmes so businesses can invest in capability, technology and resources. And if we are serious about encouraging the private sector to bring ideas, then showing the pathway to how market-led proposals (previously known as unsolicited bids) are able to be funded – and how new funding tools will be used - would really show a commitment to encouraging innovative solutions. This requires a frank discussion of how, as a nation, we are prepared to pay. We can't announce projects without being clear as to how we are going to pay for them. There's no particular magic to this: we have to pay for the infrastructure we need, so what is the best and fairest way to do this? Is it through user charges, tolls, land sales, asset sales, targeted rates, levies, normal rates or national taxes? The chances are it will be a mix of these in a way that reflects the value to our communities and the benefits that infrastructure brings both directly and indirectly. Of regulation: For infrastructure delivery, regulatory certainty is essential. Investors and developers need to know what rules apply, how long approvals will take, and what conditions will be imposed. This circles back to bipartisan support as we need to achieve a degree of certainty that legislation will not be overturned every three years. Of risk: Projects can falter because of complex, risk-heavy procurements. One key lesson from Australia is that sustainable contractual frameworks and appropriate risk allocation attracts the market. Similarly, de-risking early has contributed to Canada's success. Collaboration Between political parties: Industry participants have long been calling for a bipartisan approach to infrastructure delivery. There are encouraging green shoots from both sides of the House as politicians appear to recognise this as a roadblock to attracting private investment (with their experience and resources), but more concrete agreement is required in the form of a finalised long-term infrastructure plans and announcements. Between central and local government: We also need better collaboration between central and local government. Regional deals are an opportunity to achieve consensus on infrastructure priorities and funding tools that will provide local benefits. Transparent criteria and public engagement will be key to building trust in these decisions. With the private sector and iwi: Attracting private capital (and most notably the experience and capability it brings) is simply essential to addressing New Zealand's infrastructure deficit. We need a fundamental mind shift towards embracing private capital, whether it be international or local. And let's think about how private capital can play a part in bundled long-term maintenance programmes as well as the big new projects. We need to leverage the capabilities and resources required to fulfil our infrastructure vision. In many cases, those will come from overseas (and that's okay). We must also build on the growing recognition of iwi as sophisticated investment partners who offer a strategic advantage and a quadruple bottom-line approach that has the long-term health and wellbeing of our country and communities at the heart of their investment decisions. With communities: Infrastructure projects do not exist in a vacuum. They are there to serve communities. Public engagement is not just a legal requirement — it's a strategic necessity. Community engagement and education will help accelerate our infrastructure build. We need to get the public on board with infrastructure spend and the need to invest in asset maintenance, moving from a fixation on upfront cost to a focus on long-term gain. Articulating and quantifying the social return of infrastructure will help with this. In procurement: New Zealand needs to be open to more collaborative procurement models. A more interactive and flexible procurement process has been a key enabler in maximising value and delivering outcomes in both Australia and Canada. From vision to reality New Zealand has made impressive strides in reforming its infrastructure system. The policy settings are sound, the institutions are evolving, and the appetite for delivery is strong. But the journey from vision to reality requires more than good intentions. We need to act now, with certainty and collaboration, to enable New Zealanders to live, work, and thrive. If we get the delivery right, the benefits will be felt for generations. MinterEllisonRuddWatts is an advertising sponsor of the Herald's Infrastructure report.


Scoop
17 hours ago
- Scoop
Rats And Mice To Sort Out: Parliament's Tiny Laws
, Editor: The House The bills Parliament considers that are heavily reported by the media are generally the most contentious, the most impactful or the most far-reaching, with special emphasis on the most contentious. Bills that generate little animosity get little attention. Bills that will have scant impact receive scant love. And bills with a geographical reach that is negligible, get about that much coverage. As a result, it is easy to assume that all the things Parliament does are big and important. But sometimes Parliament manages the triple-whammy - a bill that everyone agrees on, which has negligible impact, and is also incredibly specific. So let's break with tradition look at it. This is especially true of two less common types of law: the unusual 'local bills' and the rare, and highly specific 'private bills'. These bills can be brought to the House for debate by any MP and each has a very specific impact. Local bills have a geographically specific impact, while private bills deal with a specific thing, an organisation, group, trust, charity, church, or even a specific person. The topics can be so unlikely that they might be accidentally mistaken for a lacklustre political spoof. On Wednesday for example, the House spent more than an hour on third reading speeches for a bill with an encompassing name - the Auckland Harbour Board and Takapuna Borough Council Empowering Act Amendment Bill, but that affected just one single building. It was not riveting stuff. The MP in charge was National's Simon Watts, who-whether intended ironically or not-rather grandly announced, "This is a moment we have all been waiting for". The bill had an admirable purpose - fixing an issue with the ongoing costs and rental income for a community asset; but why did such a local issue need to be debated and passed by the House? It was a fault of history. As always, history has a lot to answer for. Heritage drafting meets modern needs The background for many modern local and private bills is very similar - fixing problems caused by historic legal drafting. Local organisations (including local government ones), are sometimes brought into being, empowered, or had constitutions enacted under specific legislation, written and passed by Parliament just for them. That includes many things like clubs, churches, amenities, and charities. Even patches of land or parks. That kind of empowering legislation used to be more common many decades ago, but does still happen. Unfortunately drafters are not prophetic seers, and the very specific rules and purposes included in these old laws inevitably cause issues over time. Now, when such an organisation wants to act outside its early restrictions they need Parliament to amend the original law. Let's consider this week's example. The 1923 Harbour Board etcetera law in question included stipulations for the use of a waterside property. Community activities like swimming and watersports were allowed but private gain was specifically outlawed. Just three years later, it became the Takapuna Boating Club but has since fallen into disrepair because it isn't able to raise money, for example from a café, to help cover maintenance costs. And so a new bill was required to carefully loosen those constraints. As Simon Watts noted during the debate: "It is important that while we preserve the community purpose, we don't pass a law that ends up being too restrictive in the future, meaning that another North Shore MP in a hundred years from now will have to come back and lament on the old laws that we're doing right now." That may all seem bizarrely specific and trivial, but it is, sadly, not unusual. Many local (and especially private) bills only exist to fix archaic legislation. In doing so they offer MPs a debate that is refreshingly amicable and without the usual layers of import and consequence. With so little at stake Parliament can be almost fun. Debating everything and very little This debate had MPs reminiscing about beach days, eulogising Sir Peter Blake and talking of plans to play Mahjong at the club. Simon Watts revealed his caucus referred to the bill as the "Takapuna Ice Cream Bill". Cameron Brewer suggested the bill's sponsor would get a weekend ticker tape parade through Takapuna's shopping thoroughfare. There were many oddities, but the highlight may have been ACT MP Simon Court enthusing like an awestruck fan over a dreamy possibility. "I would suggest to the member Mr Steve Abel, who spoke before, that on top of mahjong, there might even be a venue where he might be able to play some of his famous songs that he composed when he was a famous New Zealand folk singer." In the Speaker's chair, National's Barbara Kuriger chortled, "One never knows where one's endorsements might come from". The slightly breathless nature of the debate was helped along by the fact that National Party MPs seemed keen to make it last as long as possible, because they weren't in favour of some member's bills due to be debated afterwards. Governing party MPs get very little exercise in extemporising in the House about so very little. For example, Cameron Brewer's speech seemed to dawdle over every topic he could think of vaguely connected with the locality, including ice cream, cafés, local magazines and long-past America's Cups. He was not alone in the approach. When he finally concluded, Labour's Phil Twyford took the next call: "Well, the member Cameron Brewer did well to remain on his feet for nine minutes and 48 seconds, but it came at a terrible human cost. Those of us in the House this afternoon - we're the living evidence of that."


Otago Daily Times
3 days ago
- Otago Daily Times
Leary dignified as sun sets on her Bill — and gains unlikely fan
Ingrid Leary. Photo: RNZ Taieri Labour MP Ingrid Leary is proud of her Dutch heritage. On Wednesday she must have had a feeling akin to that which the Netherlands rugby team might have if it were ever to line up against the All Blacks ... knowing that you have to run out on the field but that you are going to get absolutely pummelled. At which point, you either fold up or fight your darndest — and Leary opted for the latter. Back on July 16, during the most recent Members' Day, the House managed to sneak in the first couple of speeches on Leary's Property Law (Sunset Clauses) Amendment Bill. This Bill, if passed (spoiler alert ... things did not go well for Leary) would have amended the Property Law Act so that house buyers would have to give their consent if vendors wanted to rescind their sale and purchase agreement under a sunset clause. Despite it being a well-intentioned and arguably sensible layer of added protection for people buying homes off the plans, it become all too apparent that all three governing parties were going to vote against it. But things were not all doom and gloom for Leary. As well as the sunset clauses Bill, Leary also has the Retirement Villages (Fairer Repayments) Amendment Bill in the Members' Bill ballot, which — if drawn and enacted — would require retirement villages to greatly accelerate the timeframe to repay residents or their families any money owed to them if the resident moved to higher care levels or died. This proposed law change is not a million miles away from what the government is eventually going to do in this space anyway ... and the reason why we know that the government is likely to enact a law like Leary's in the future is because last week someone leaked One News a recording of Tauranga National MP Sam Uffindell speaking at an unspecified time and place in a manner which seemed to endorse Leary's endeavours in this space. "Ingrid Leary ... has quite cunningly put forward a members' Bill which would address some of this. And she's savvy enough to have garnered up a lot of attention around retirement villages," Uffindell said. "And so that's in the pipeline as well. We need to arrest or take the key parts out of that [which] are workable and make sure we build that into something." Uffindell then revealed — over pizza and Pepsi Max — that Prime Minister Christopher Luxon had raised issues concerning retirement villages with a group of backbench MPs, including himself. He further offered some electoral spice to the mix by adding: "Importantly, it needs to go through the House before the end of this term, because if it hasn't, we're going to have a whole bunch of disgruntled people and retirement villages who all vote and all talk to each other about it. Who will go, 'oh, National hasn't actually delivered and Labour was going to do this'." Oh dear. And just to add hot sauce to an already piquant piece of audio, One News asked Uffindell, and the PM, about his backbencher's reckons the other Thursday, while Luxon was on a visit to Tauranga. Back to this Wednesday, when a somewhat embarrassed government made little effort to defend itself for not backing Leary's sunset clauses Bill, National sending out first-term backbenchers Rima Nakhle and Hamish Campbell to take up 10 minutes of our lives that no-one is ever getting back in speaking on the Bill. Nakhle did at least say that she understood that Leary was trying to protect consumers from bad-faith developers, before taking a wide tangent to extol the natural beauties of her Takanini electorate; but who knows what Campbell was on about in a, frankly, incoherent offering which had very little to do with Leary's Bill — or anything else. Labour, knowing it was beat, opted to make the most of it and have some fun with the government's discomfiture on the subject of Leary's other Members' Bill. "This Bill introduced by Ingrid Leary, who I want to actually acknowledge — she's doing tremendous work in this area," Labour Housing spokesman Kieran McAnulty extolled. "She's doing tremendous work in the area of retirement villages. Sam Uffindell is a fan. Sam Uffindell recognises that Ingrid Leary is doing tremendous work. "I think deep down, Sam Uffindell recognises that Ingrid Leary is doing tremendous work in the area of sunset causes. I have a suspicion that there are a few of them over there that deep down would actually quite like to support this Bill, but they've been whipped. They've been whipped and told that they cannot support this Bill." When the fall is all that's left it matters a great deal how one falls, and in her concluding speech Leary's buried her Bill with dignity. "It's been a real privilege to be able to have this reading on my Bill, and I want to acknowledge my late mother for her Leary luck in getting my Bill drawn. It's continuing even after her departure, so thanks very much, Mum," she said. "I can feel the sun setting on my sunset clauses Bill ... it's such a shame that the government members won't support it in its first reading, because if they had, I think they would find, actually, there would be many property developers who would support this Bill because they do not want to be tarnished by the reputation of a few bad apples. That's certainly been the experience in Australia, where their equivalent Bill was overwhelmingly supported ... That's, I'm sure, what would have happened here, but, sadly, we won't get that chance." Leary then put in a plug for her other Bill, stressing that yet again she was trying to protect the little guy or gal against the big players. "I note that this legislation has worked very well in Australia. I am going to let the sun set on it now — it's the last gasp — but don't worry, we've got the Retirement Villages (Fairer Repayments) Amendment Bill and you still have a chance to support that, National Party members." Well, at least Leary knows that she has one likely backer.