There's plenty of discussion at the moment about both the failings of local authorities and the process for electing mayors and councillors in our regions. The various problems mean that the public are largely disengaged from the elections, driving voter turnout down, and reducing the public's trust and confidence in local politicians. We have a serious democratic deficit in the way that local politics works, and perhaps it's time to re-think local government and elections in this country.
Is there a problem with political party involvement in local government?
There is a very strong political culture in New Zealand against the involvement of the parliamentary political parties in local government. This negativity to candidates who stand on behalf of parties is reflected in today's news report about a businessperson running a campaign against Wellington mayoral candidate Justin Lester, with billboards and advertising that exclaim "Don't vote for a party political mayor. Keep Wellington independent" - see Matt Stewart's Who's behind Wellington's anti-Labour billboards?.
The campaigner, Graham Bloxham, says he had become "disenfranchised with the Labour Party meddling in a local election". Similarly, in Wellington's Hutt City, the incumbent mayor, together with nine "independent" candidates, has put out "a brochure urging voters to keep party politics out of Hutt City" - see Nicholas Boyack's: Mayor Ray Wallace leads charge against party politics.
But do political parties really degrade local government? According to Massey University's Andy Asquith and Andrew Cardow the electoral process would actually benefit from more party involvement: "Rather than hide behind the mask of independence, is it not time for serious candidates and the political parties they represent to take local elections seriously and stop treating local electors as mugs? Be honest. Say what you represent and, in the spirit of openness and transparency, be clear about who is supporting your candidacy" - see their Herald article, Mayoral candidates should show their real colours.
These academics blame the political parties for not being involved enough in local elections, and suggest that many "independent" candidates are, in fact, backed by parties anyhow. Noting that all 19 of the Auckland mayoral candidates are running as "independents", they say this is an insult to the public's intelligence.
It's certainly the case that party labels help voters understand the type of politicians they are voting for. The party names, colours, logos, etc all help give clues to what we are getting. To some extent the "tickets" that some candidates run on also play this role, and mean voters can more easily navigate the election campaigns, without having to trawl through masses of reportage or candidate statements. And this point is essentially reiterated by the Prime Minister, who explained how he is going to vote to Paul Henry - see: Not even John Key's going to read his election candidate booklet.
According to this, "John Key hinted to Paul Henry on Monday morning he'll just tick the candidates attached to the Auckland Future ticket." He's quote as saying: "If you're a centre-right voter, you can say Auckland Future's centre-right and if you like those people, you go vote for them."
But John Key's Auckland Future ticket has hardly been a resounding success so far. The project was an attempt to come up with a new centre-right organisation that would broadly represent the National Party in Auckland local government. Its failure is examined by Matthew Hooton in the latest Metro magazine in a column that is now online - see: Election 2016: Centre-right fiasco. Hooton is exasperated about the fact that although "Auckland is now overwhelmingly a National Party town" it's Labour Party people dominating the council due to the failure of National to set up a half-decent ticket.
Hooton says that the National Party has bureaucratically created Auckland Future in an entirely top-down method without organically allowing democracy to create a genuine rightwing platform: "However old-fashioned it may sound, the authority for a new political entity needs to be clearly seen as emerging from a convention floor rather than perceived edict from afar. A new movement should be formed and its name chosen by acclamation from the conference floor, a founding executive elected, a constitution drafted by a committee of trusted experts, an initial leader chosen, policy bitterly debated by members, candidates selected in brutal internal contests and a campaign designed for the times. Ironically, because these ancient truths weren't upheld, this year's centre-right effort has been run by pre-Pacman-era people in a post-Pokémon Go age."
Is there a problem with "tickets" in local elections?
Of course the various tickets and alliances themselves often create all sorts of problems, especially when candidates who campaign together claim to be "independent" - see the
Christchurch Star's Front row campaign under fire from opponents
. It seems that two incumbent councillors are wanting to have their cake and eat it too, and opponents are claiming this is misleading voters.