Rotorua Daily Post

Voting law change on cards

Govt considers dropping election day enrolment

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Justice Minister Paul Goldsmith says few countries allow voters to enrol on election day, and New Zealand should consider changing the rules. A report by the auditor-general out this week found an unpreceden­ted number of special votes were cast in last year’s general election, leading to rushed final checks and mistakes.

“It’s really difficult to forecast how many special votes we would get,” chief electoral officer Karl Le Quesne told Morning Report yesterday.

“Normally, we’d look back at what the trend was in past elections, but 2020 was a really unusual election with the change in date. We had a lot more time to enrol people when the election date was shifted out.

“We did forecast there would be more special votes and enrolments during voting, but it turned out to be much higher than what we forecast.”

The 2020 election was delayed from September to October due to an outbreak of Covid-19 in Auckland.

That same year, the rules were changed to allow people to enrol to vote as late as election day, with then-justice minister Andrew Little saying about 19,000 voters were “disenfranc­hised” in 2017 due to their details not being up to date.

“Special votes in enrolments or enrolment updates while voting can take up to 10 times longer to process, and that’s what put us under so much pressure during the official count,” Le Quesne said.

None of the mistakes, once fixed, had any effect on the outcome in any electorate or the overall result.

Le Quesne said it was “a matter for Parliament to consider and decide” whether same-day enrolments should be canned, but it would make the Electoral Commission’s job easier without having to hire “a few hundred more people”.

Goldsmith told Morning Report: “There’s some basic, basic stuff that the auditor-general pointed out, so we’re obviously concerned about that, and I will be making my expectatio­ns absolutely clear to the Electoral Commission around performanc­e. So that’s absolutely the case.

“The broader question though is whether the design of the system, particular­ly with the same-day enrolments — enrolments on election day, which is . . . a new idea — is adding much more pressure to the system.

“And remember that they used to be [able to] count everything in two weeks. This time, they were in a mad rush to count it in three weeks.

“We were waiting and waiting and waiting and still mistakes were made. And so that’s the issue.”

Goldsmith said it already cost $227 million to run an election.

“Rather than, you know, just throw even more hundreds of millions at the problem, wouldn’t it be more sensible to ask, have we overcompli­cated? Have we made it too, too complicate­d? Can we simplify it in some way?”

Labour Party leader Chris Hipkins said the Electoral Commission should make sure the system ran smoothly and “taking away the right of thousands of people to vote” was not the answer.

“Thousands of people enrolled and voted on the day. If they’re saying they’ll stop that happening they’re basically saying that thousands of people won’t have their vote counted.”

He said the commission was given extra funding for 2023 but it was not at the same level as in 2020 to run an election in the midst of a global pandemic.

Special votes typically favour Labour, the Greens, and Te Pā ti Mā ori. Those parties commonly pick up seats in the final results compared to what was counted on the night, at the expense of National. For example, in 2023 the Greens picked up one extra seat and Te Pāti Māori two, while National lost two. In 2020, Labour and Te Pā ti Mā ori each picked up an extra seat, while National lost two.

Goldsmith said he would wait for the Electoral Commission’s own report and send it to select committee before the Government made any decisions. He said the Labour-led Government “didn’t try to be very bipartisan” when it made changes to voting enrolment.

“Look, we’ll work our way through it. What happens is I get the formal report, then it goes off to a select committee and then the Government makes decisions about whether it’s going to make any changes or not. And so there’ll be plenty of opportunit­y for people to have their say.”

 ?? Photo / Mark Mitchell ?? Justice Minister Paul Goldsmith.
Photo / Mark Mitchell Justice Minister Paul Goldsmith.

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