Political Roundup: The High barriers to lowering the voting age

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Sixteen-year-olds aren’t about to get the right to vote anytime soon. Despite yesterday’s Supreme Court declaration that a voting age of 18 violates the Bill of Rights, there are still many barriers to get over before the voting age could be lowered.

In fact, as a best-case scenario, youth voting campaigners are now setting their sights on 2029 as the first general election for 16-year-olds to vote in, and perhaps 2025 as the first time that they might be able to vote in local government elections. But to get an extended franchise by these dates would require that the following very high barriers be overcome.

1: Public opposition to lowering the voting age

The problem for advocates of lowering the voting age to 16 is the vast majority of voters disagree. Poll after poll shows that about three-quarters of the public is not yet convinced that it’s a good idea. The public has actually been more favourable to giving the vote to prisoners than they are to letting younger people vote.

A TVNZ Vote Compass poll in 2020 showed 70 per cent in favour of a voting age of 18 years, and 20 per cent favouring a lower age. Then a 1News Colmar Brunton poll showed a massive 85 per cent opposed lowering the voting age to 16. And Curia Research also polled on the question in 2020 and found 88 per cent favoured the status quo. A more recent Curia poll showed that 79 per cent opposed dropping the voting age. And back in August of this year, a Talbot Mills poll showed 66 per cent opposed, and only 28 per cent in favour.

It seems that those favouring change – largely those in political activism, journalism, and academia – are strongly at variance with wider concerns. The case for change simply hasn’t had the cut through yet, until it does, a change in the law is highly unlikely.

2: National and Act oppose lowering the voting age

The rightwing opposition parties are unequivocally against lowering the voting age. This means that when the Labour Government introduces legislation next year to lower the age to 16, it will fail. What’s more, it means that a future National-led government would be inclined to reverse any shift to a lower voting age.

Normally any significant changes to electoral law require some sort of cross-party consensus, and this just hasn’t yet been forged. Campaigners have focused more on judicial activism, which turns out to have achieved them a powerful win, but without actually convincing most of the political parties yesterday’s Supreme Court declaration becomes something of a moot win.

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National and Act have the power to stymie any changes to the general election voting age because the Electoral Act is constitutionally entrenched, meaning a super-majority of 75 per cent is required to make changes in Parliament. Ninety MPs are required to vote in favour of such a change, which is not going to occur.

3: Labour Party caution

Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern has come out in favour of lowering the voting age to 16 years and has promised to introduce legislation in terms of general election voting next year, as the Government’s answer to the Supreme Court’s ruling. However, she has made the call safe in the knowledge that such legislation won’t be consequential, because it won’t be passed.

Cynics might see it as a smart move by Ardern. It ticks off a legal requirement to respond to the Supreme Court ruling, and keeps her onside with progressives who favour a reduced voting age, but at the same time it avoids actually changing the law and alienating the three-quarters of the public opposed to 16-year-olds voting. Quite simply, Labour can rely on National and Act to save them from achieving what they possibly don’t really want to win – an unpopular lowering of the vote.

The problem for Labour will be the question of the voting age for local government elections. This is now where attention is likely to shift. This is because the Local Government Act isn’t constitutionally entrenched, which means that only a simple majority in Parliament is needed to lower the voting age to 16. The Government can’t just rely on National and Act to block this change.

The pressure will therefore be on the Government to reform the Local Government Act immediately. Labour has no excuses not to do so and it will therefore be a real test of Ardern’s principles.

Pressure to reform the Local Government Act’s voting age has also been increased by the review that the Government itself commissioned. The recent Future of Local Government report also recommended a voting age of 16 years for local elections, making it more difficult for Labour not to progress this.

The argument of reformers is now that local elections could be a “trial” for a lower voting age. Or, put another way, by introducing a lower voting age in this less important level of government, it would be a good way for the public to get used to the idea, with the hope that it would lead the way to the public supporting a lower voting age for general elections too.

But is Labour too cautious to make this change? It’s likely to stymie this by trying to keep the voting age for both general and local elections bound up together. The Government might even kick for touch by arguing that it wants to hear back from the Independent Review of Electoral Law before making any decisions – who are not due to report until after next year’s election. This would effectively make the change too late to implement until much later elections.

The general convention – which Jacinda Ardern reiterated yesterday – is for the implementation of significant electoral law changes to only take place for the election after the next one. This would mean that even if the Electoral Law was changed in 2024 to allow 16-year-olds to vote, this wouldn’t occur until the 2029 general election.

4: The Appearance of politician self-interest

Much of the debate about the voting age is likely to be blocked due to apparent political self-interest. Quite simply, the age level for voting has a large impact on the support levels of the various political parties.

There is a general consensus that younger people vote in higher proportions for the parties of the left. This is why one of the Supreme Court judges, Stephen Kos, gave a dissenting opinion yesterday, saying that “Altering voter age is not a neutral political action”, and “Whichever direction it goes in is likely to benefit some parties disproportionately”.

This means that National and Act’s opposition to a voting age is partly driven by the desire to protect their own levels of support. Act leader David Seymour expressed this yesterday, saying: “We don’t want 120,000 more voters who pay no tax voting for lots more spending”.

Conversely, Labour and the Greens could be accused of wanting to lower the voting age for their own advantage. Stuff political editor Luke Malpass explains today that “most of the political upside would go to Labour or the Greens, meaning that a Labour or Labour/Greens Government could look pretty self-interested in making any such change. That’s because those younger voters tend to split 2:1 to the left (either Labour or the Greens)”.

Malpass calculates that lowering the voting age to 16 could result in 80,000 more votes (a 2.7 per cent increase), which “could result in an extra seat for the centre-left. In an MMP environment where elections can be close-run, this would amount to a small – but not insignificant – realignment of the electoral board in favour of the political left.”

Such motivations for lowering the voting age are likely to become more apparent in any developing public debate about reform. New Zealanders have been shown to use “fairness” as a clear criteria in approaching issues such as electoral reform, and so on this subject they might be very inclined to also regard the lowering of the voting age with suspicion – leaving reform to the distant future.

Further reading on the voting age

VOTING AGE
Thomas Coughlan (Herald): Change to local body voting age possible – even likely (paywalled)
Michael Neilson (Herald): Parliament to vote on lowering voting age from 18 to 16, could see ‘differential’ system for local and general elections
Luke Malpass (Stuff): Which parties would a voting age lowered to 16 likely favour in Parliament?
Richard Harman (Politik): Supreme Court v Parliament (paywalled)
Liam Hehir: The disappointing but not surprising Supreme Court decision (paywalled)
David Farrar: Hehir on the Supreme Court and the voting age
Anna Whyte (Stuff): Lowering voting age to 16 likely to fail in Parliament
River LIn (1News): Luxon calls on voting age to remain at 18
Brent Edwards (NBR): Opposition unimpressed with Supreme Court decision on voting age (paywalled)
RNZ: Voting age 16 law to be drafted requiring three quarters of MPs to pass – Ardern
Tess McClure (Guardian): Ardern promises bill to lower voting age to 16 in New Zealand after discrimination ruling
Michael Neilson (Herald): Parliament to consider lowering voting age to 16 after Supreme Court rules ‘inconsistent’ with Bill of Rights
RNZ: Supreme Court rules in favour of ‘Make It 16’ to lower voting age
Stuff: Door for voting age change open after backers score win in ‘uphill battle’
Will Trafford (Whakaata Māori): Voting age should be lowered to 16 – Supreme Court
Zarina Hewlett (Today FM): The voting age: Keep it 18 or make it 16?

Other items of interest and importance today

PARLIAMENT
Pattrick Smellie (BusinessDesk): Election 2023: a minor (party) flirtation (paywalled)
Thomas Coughlan (Herald): Christopher Luxon not ruling out NZ First coalition after Winston Peters rules out Labour
Jane Patterson (RNZ): Luxon not ruling out post-election deal with NZ First
Newshub: Christopher Luxon won’t rule out NZ First coalition after Winston Peters says no to current Labour Party
Tova O’Brien (Today FM): For the first time ever Winston Peters has chosen a side before election day
Mike Hosking (Newstalk ZB): Winston’s risky Labour call
Martyn Bradbury (Daily Blog): If ACT rules Winston out, Luxon and NZ First will be snookered
Phil Pennington (RNZ): The ‘big maybe’ over Māori seats in Parliament due to census undercount
Will Trafford (Whakaata Māori): Census undercount could have shortchanged Māori seats – Waititi
Jonah Franke (Stuff): By-election? What by-election? Voter indifference as battle for Hamilton West heats up

HATE SPEECH REFORMS
Chris Trotter (Interest): In spite of Labour’s back-down on ‘Hate Speech’, the debate looks set to rage on through election year
Arran Hunt (Heald): Will hate speech laws turn NZ into another Iran? (paywalled)
Martyn Bradbury (Daily Blog): How to save Labour from their Religious Hate Speech Law minefield
Anna Whyte (Stuff): Hate speech change: What it means and why it matters
Jamie Enosr (Newshub): Government’s hate speech change explained: How different is it to proposals, will it be unlawful to insult someone’s religion
David Harvey: Eroding Freedom of Expression

HOUSING
Seni Iasona (Newshub): Grant Robertson says 1000 fewer people in emergency housing shows Govt ‘making progress’ amid desperate plea from Rotorua Mayor Tania Tapsell
Michael Neilson (Herald): Government to make Healthy Homes extension announcement for Kāinga Ora and private landlords
1News: Govt’s possible healthy homes deadline extension ‘a slap in the face’
Giles Dexter (1News): Healthy Homes deadline extension under ‘active consideration’
Georgina Campbell (Herald): Warning building boom could see homes built in ‘terrible places’
Susan Edmunds (Stuff): Farewell to home ownership: Interest rate hike forces borrowers to reconsider plans
Jonathan Killick (Stuff): Recap: Frustration, elation in the race for a rental
Greg Ninness (Interest): Median rent up $40 a week nationally in September year but almost flat in Auckland
RNZ: Iwi file Treaty claim over proposed Hamilton housing project

FOREIGN AFFAIRS
Katie Scotcher (RNZ): Volodymyr Zelensky invited to address New Zealand Parliament
RNZ: Defence Minister Peeni Henare to discuss funding weapons for Ukraine with Cabinet colleagues
Mei Heron (1News): What Peeni Henare likely discussed with Ukraine defence minister
Stefan Dimitrof (Whakaata Māori): Defence minister reaffirms New Zealand’s support of Ukraine
1News: Mahuta announces new sanctions against Putin’s daughters
Stephen Hoadley (Newsroom): Five summits reaffirm global cooperation
RNZ: Jacinda Ardern talked to Xi Jinping on human rights, Pacific development, Robertson says

ENVIRONMENT
Simon Wilson (Herald): National Party’s approach to climate-change policy is a massive failure for farmers (paywalled)
Rachael Kelly (Stuff): Climate Change Commission staff will meet with Groundswell NZ
Henry McMullan (1News): East Coast communities concerned about farmland sell-offs
Rod Oram (Newsroom): COP 27 ends with historic win and abysmal fail
RNZ: COP27 was ‘bitter, divisive, chaotic’, climate change expert says
Herald Editorial: Climate conference results a mixed blessing (paywalled)
Stefan Dimitrof (Whakaata Māori): Microplastics found in breast milk highlights importance of Global Plastics Treaty
David Williams (Newsroom): Mackenzie protection deal disarmed
Hauraki Coromandel Post: National MP Scott Simpson attends UN Climate Change Conference

HEALTH, DISABILITY
Emma Vitz and Shanti Mathias (Spinoff): The rising costs of outsourced healthcare
Rob Campbell (BusinessDesk): We need to centralise health to localise it (paywalled)
Rachel Thomas (Stuff): Health minister asks for patience as GPs demand changes to ‘soul-destroying’ conditions
1News: GPs say practice wait times becoming ‘dangerous’
Kristie Boland (Stuff): UK nurses turn to hospo jobs after waiting 8 months for NZ work approval
Louise Ternouth (RNZ): Disability sector facing critical staffing crisis and calling for more carers
Damien Venuto (Herald): The Front Page: Covid cases are rising – will Govt intervene or are we on our own?
RNZ: Covid-19 update: 24,068 new cases, 40 deaths and 344 in hospital reported in past week
Chris Ford (RNZ): Opinion: Let’s go no further with voluntary euthanasia
Zoe Madden-Smith (Re: News): New over-the-phone abortion service getting 100 bookings a week

BUSINESS, EMPLOYMENT
Kaysha Brownlie (Newshub): National Party reiterates plans to repeal Fair Pay Agreement law
Jane Nixon (1News): Bill to address supermarket duopoly set to pass in 2023
Tom Pullar-Strecker (Stuff): Tiwai Point aluminium smelter set to stay open ‘long term’, says broker
Ian Llewellyn (BusinessDesk): Tiwai power deal likely to be settled (paywalled)
Jonathan Milne (Newsroom): Give mountain a chance to recover, say Ruapehu iwi
Emma Hatton (Newsroom): Small retailers ditch insurance over rising costs

EDUCATION
Lee Kenny (Stuff): Eight $200k-a-year executives wanted at Te Pūkenga, despite need to cut $35m from budget
Jimmy Ellingham (RNZ): Massey vice-chancellor’s 18% pay jump not a pay increase, Public Services Commission says
Jenna Lynch (Newshub): Christopher Luxon takes aim at parents, ‘culture of excuses’ for truancy crisis, but Jacinda Ardern fires back

RMA, Infrastructure
David Parker (Herald): Making resource management faster, cheaper and better (paywalled)
Fran O’Sullivan (Herald): Infrastructure: Three Waters ‘the right thing to do’ – Grant Robertson (paywalled)
Nicholas Boyack (Stuff): Trentham Racecourse on track for 850 new homes
Graham Skellern (Herald): Infrastructure: Record pipeline of road and rail projects, Michael Wood says Auckland harbour crossing critical (paywalled)
Simon Bridges (Herald): Infrastructure: 5 ways to fix Auckland’s transport problems (paywalled)
Reuben Tucker (Herald): Infrastructure: A Lodestone for transformation (paywalled)

TRANSPORT
Anne Gibson (Herald): Experts ponder: is this what might be planned for $15b second Waitematā Harbour crossing? (paywalled)
Oliver Lewis (BusinessDesk): Michael Wood responds to Christchurch transport request (paywalled)
John MacDonald (Newstalk ZB): End of the road for Waka Kotahi ads?
1News: 6 road deaths over weekend could have been prevented – police

JUSTICE, CORRECTIONS, POLICE
Dave Armstrong (Stuff): A policy that hits youth offenders where it hurts
Duncan Garner (NBR): If law is not working, why can’t we get tough? (paywalled)
Sam Sherwood (Herald): Police officers failed to declare conflicts of interest while involved in international procurement process
David Farrar: Some dismal stats on prisoner literacy and numeracy programmes

BLACK FERNS TO BE CELEBRATED AT PARLIAMENT
Mana Wikaire-Lewis (Whakaata Māori): Official celebrations for Black Ferns on Parliament’s lawn in December
RNZ: Black Ferns World Cup win to be celebrated in Parliament
1News: World Cup-winning Black Ferns to be celebrated at Parliament

LOCAL GOVERNMENT
Todd Niall (Stuff): Is Auckland Council’s next budget really the fiscal apocalypse?
RNZ: Tāmati Coffey voted off Rotorua Trust

OTHER
Phil Pennington (RNZ): Identity Check online system pilot launched despite gaps over privacy, rights
Nick Truebridge (Newshub): Charity says hungry and struggling elderly New Zealanders account for 80 pct of calls
Herewini Waikato (Whakaata Māori): National iwi hui wants funding and resources to take care of whānau
Sharon Brettkelly (RNZ): NZ’s prehistoric past at risk of crumbling away
Gavin Ellis: NZME reaches a milestone some thought impossible
Gerhard Uys (Stuff): Pig farmers concerned banks won’t finance expensive upgrades for new animal welfare standards

2 COMMENTS

  1. With general elections every 3 years, currently a persons first vote could be at 18, 19, or 20. What if we allow registration/voting not just if you’ll turn 18 by or on the day, but during the term? Fix the dates while we’re at it. It’s basically the same effect, is more pallitable to the electorate as people not having to wait until they’re 20 is built into the arguement, and possibly even circumvents the supermajority protection.

  2. I don’t get it. Why should the worthless personal opinions of Joe Public and the self-interest of politicians be given any least consideration? The Courts have declared the current situation to be in breach of the Human Rights Act so unless their ruling is overturned, there is no valid reason not to lower the voting age, only bullshit excuses.

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