Political Roundup: The Misuse of power to entrench Three Waters legislation

22
848
When governments become tired and lose their popularity – usually in their third term – they often become desperate to get their way and prone to misusing their power.

This is currently in evidence with the Labour Government’s push to lock in elements of their Three Waters reform programme by sneaking in a rule that says a future Parliament would need 60 per cent of MPs to vote to change the ownership of the new water services. Constitutional legal experts are outraged by a move they say is unparalleled and sets a dangerous new precedent for how governments make law.

The change occurred late on Wednesday night, when Parliament was sitting under urgency, with Labour and the Greens ramming through legislation on their Three Waters reform programme. Out of nowhere, Green MP Eugenie Sage proposed an amendment to the Three Waters legislation that would require future parliaments to achieve a 60 per cent vote in order to privatise the new water entities.

This was slipped in without proper debate, and certainly without the chance for the public to make submissions on this key part of the law. Critics suggest that the Minister of Local Government Nanaia Mahuta arranged with the Green MP to slip the change in at the last minute. Both Mahuta and Sage have since publicly defended the change that Labour and the Greens voted in favour of.

Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern is now under pressure to backtrack on the law change, and today she told RNZ “We’ll discuss that in caucus and take another look at that.”

Why the change is controversial

It’s a core democratic principle that Parliament should be able to make and change laws when they have a majority of support – over 50 per cent of MPs. But this Three Waters decision changes that to that 60 per cent. A future Parliament is therefore bound by the decisions of the current one – which is regarded as unconstitutional by legal scholars.

There are some accepted constitutional exceptions to the 50 per cent rule for changing laws, but these are only for certain laws relating to elections. For example, changing the voting age requires a “super-majority” of 75 per cent of MPs.

The entrenchment of electoral law, requiring a 75 per cent majority to change the way that Parliament is elected, has long been a consensus. It is agreed upon by all parties, because it relates to how politicians are elected. It is accepted that the rules for elections need special protection so that they aren’t simply changed in order to advantage the politicians currently in power.

TDB Recommends NewzEngine.com

In the case of Three Waters, the level of 60 per cent was chosen by Labour and the Greens, because that is the amount of votes that they currently have in Parliament. There is no principled argument for it being 60 per cent, and a higher level would have been chosen if Labour and the Greens could have made it higher.

Why the change could set a dangerous precedent

Critics of the Labour-Green law change say it sets a “dangerous precedent”. A number of constitutional law scholars have published an open letter today warning about this. They argue that governments should not use the entrenchment mechanism for trying to lock in their own reforms on standard policy changes.

They warn it could set off a “race to the bottom” in which various left and right governments just entrench the policies that they feel strongly about, and it becomes an anti-democratic game, in which a government tries to tie the hands of successors. Ultimately, it brings the constitution under pressure, and is likely to invite the courts to intervene in Parliamentary matters.

Constitutional expert Andrew Geddis of Otago University writes today that the change is “potentially momentous” for parliamentary governance – with “MPs placing handcuffs on tomorrow’s MPs”. Others have called it “democratic vandalism”.

It’s also worth pointing out that the Government’s Crown Law Office advised Labour against the change, and the Department of Internal Affairs had also stated that entrenchment was “inappropriate” for a law that was not about electoral issues.

Support for the change

Not everyone is criticising the change. Some supporters of Labour and the Greens have come out in favour.

For example, ActionStation’s Max Harris, a scholar of constitutional law, argues that it is entirely reasonable to entrench the Three Waters law, partly citing the need for “proper protection of rights under Te Tiriti o Waitangi”. And he points out that there is “nothing in NZ’s uncodified constitution that says what can and cannot be entrenched”.

The Greens, too, have doubled down on the change. Eugenie Sage has gone on Twitter to defend her move, explaining that entrenchment was necessary because “water is essential to life, so it is of sufficient importance”. She also tweeted that “Officials advised against it but there is no obligation to always take their advice.”

The whole episode should be one of huge concern for the democratically-minded. And the fact that Labour and the Greens don’t see the democratic problems with their law change is alarming. It is also concerning that the opposition parties haven’t picked up the extent of the problem and publicised it.

Ultimately, the growing public outcry will likely be too strong for Labour to ignore. But it also says something that the Government have been so keen to push through such a bad law. This really doesn’t seem like the actions of a government that expects to be in power for very much longer.

Further reading on Three Waters reforms

Democracy Project: Top tweets on the Government’s Three Waters law entrenchment
David Farrar: Labour f…. the constitution

Andrew Geddis (Spinoff): What happens when MPs ‘entrench’ legislation, and why does it matter?
Michael Neilson (Herald): Three Waters: Lawyers’ constitutional concerns over entrenched privatisation provision – ‘dangerous precedent’
Thomas Manch (Stuff): ‘Dangerous’: Last-minute Three Waters clause could change New Zealand’s constitution

Liam Hehir (Blue Review): Everything you wanted to know about entrenchment but are afraid to ask
Thomas Cranmer: Entrenchment: the latest storm engulfing Three Waters
Graham Adams (The Platform): We need to talk about Jacinda

Herald Editorial: Three Waters murk needs clearing up (paywalled)
Cherie Sivignon (Stuff): Tasman may be ‘poor cousin’ to Wellington under Three Waters reform

Other items of interest and importance today

ECONOMY
Andrea Vance (Stuff): The Covid reckoning is overdue – and the team of five million is being asked to wear the cost, again
Tracy Watkins (Stuff): Is this really the recession we needed to have?
Simon Shepherd (Newshub): Grant Robertson and Adrian Orr at odds over Reserve Bank’s recession engineering
Mark Quinlivan (Newshub): Grant Robertson addresses Government spending, says Labour ‘saved lives and livelihoods’
Tom Pullar-Strecker (Stuff): Recession may be short and sharp instead of long and shallow, says Reserve Bank
Liam Dann (Herald): Don’t let recession talk stop us addressing big challenges (paywalled)
Steve Braunias (Herald): The Secret Diary of Adrian Orr (paywalled)
Anaru Eketone (Herald): Māori and Pacific bear the brunt of our need for structural unemployment
RNZ: OCR hike: What we know so far and what is being said
Brianna Mcilraith (Stuff): Explainer: What in the world is inflation and why do we care?
RNZ: Mental health and material situation of youth cause for concern – Treasury’s chief adviser
Daniel Smith (Stuff): Students face a grim jobs market as thousands graduate into a recession
Herald: Black Friday sales down 6.9 per cent
Brianna Mcilraith, Sinead Gill and Gianina Schwanecke (Stuff): Are Black Friday shoppers heeding the Reserve Bank’s advice to rein in spending?
Matt Cowley (Bay of Plenty Times): Reserve Bank governor Adrian Orr was right to increase the official cash rate (paywalled)
David Schnauer (Herald): Attitude will get us through economic long Covid (paywalled)
Victor Billot (Newsroom): An Ode for .. Adrian Orr
Kevin Norquay (Stuff): Pensioners face ‘wicked problems’, Retirement Commissioner says as she prepares to unleash battle plan

PARLIAMENT
Luke Malpass (Stuff): Aftermath of Reserve Bank rate hikes shows just how crucial Grant Robertson will be for Labour
Claire Trevett (Herald): Recession and mortgage rate hikes – Reserve Bank governor Adrian Orr’s grim week sets stage for next elections
Jane Patterson (RNZ): Recession prediction leaves Labour with a labour problem
Herald Editorial: Is Labour sinking deeper into an election quagmire? (paywalled)
Kate MacNamara (Herald): Budget 2022: How $2 billion of emergency Covid funds were redirected (paywalled)
Grant Duncan (The Conversation): Coalitions, kingmakers and a Rugby World Cup: the calculations already influencing next year’s NZ election
MIchael Neilson (Herald): Māori Electoral Option: Officials recommended no exclusion period, say ‘tactical vote switching’ claim lacks evidence
Hamish Bidwell (Hawkes Bay Today): Napier visit: Christopher Luxon takes a swing at ‘whinge’ culture amid boot camp criticism (paywalled)
Martyn Bradbury (Daily Blog): Q+A: Luxon train wreck interview is just so bad you have to see it to believe it
Rodney Hide: Reflecting on five years under Ardern
Steven Joyce (Herald): Hopelessly marooned on a road to nowhere (paywalled)
Peter Wilson (RNZ): Labour’s nightmare reality – an election year recession
Thomas Coughlan (Herald): Beehive Diaries: Which MP did Megan Woods compare to Colonel Sanders? (paywalled)
Stuff: Points of Order: Escaping to the Chathams, Kelvin takes a tumble, MPs’ speedy speeches
RNZ: Parliament ‘pulls up stumps’ after marathon innings
Imogen Wells (Newshub): Chris Hipkins, Simeon Brown in tit-for-tat over office space for bureaucrats
Phil Smith (RNZ): Submitting to parliament (but in a good way)
No Right Turn: Open Government: Another farce
Nevil Gibson (NBR): Memo to government: Get your ducks in a row (paywalled)
Stuff: Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern shares details of father’s cancer treatment

VOTING AGE
Bronwyn Hayward and Richard Shaw (Stuff): Busting the myths about voting at 16
Keith Rankin: Extending Democracy And The Age Of Voter Entitlement
Sasha Borissenko (Herald): Should 16-year-olds be allowed to vote? (paywalled)
Victoria Woodman (Newsroom): No voting magic about the age 18
Calida Stuart-Menteath and Hamish McNicol (NBR): What’s the big objection to lowering the voting age? (paywalled)
Hillary Dutton (Stuff): You don’t require a fully developed adult brain to make informed decisions
John Roughan (Herald): The young deserve their say in running the country (paywalled)
Paula Bennett (Herald): Age 16 vote detracts from mental health, housing and crime issues (paywalled)
Sonya Bateson (Herald): My reasons why 16-year-olds should be allowed to vote (paywalled)
Tess McClure (Guardian): ‘I’m tired of asking adults to save the planet’: readers have their say on lowering the voting age in NZ

CRIME
Rayssa Almeida (RNZ): Indian community says death of Sandringham dairy worker Janak Patel must not be in vain
Akula Sharma (Herald): Sandringham dairy stabbing: Janak Patel farewelled at funeral in Wiri
Karanama Ruru (Stuff): Family, friends and community attend funeral of Sandringham dairy stabbing victim Janak Patel
Richard Harman (Politik): By-election gets ram-raided
Heather du Plessis-Allan (Herald): Sandringham dairy worker killing: Labour was warned (paywalled)
Mike Hosking (Newstalk ZB): Dairy worker death is a tipping point for Government
Herald Editorial: Voices are rightfully raised in anger over heinous crime (paywalled)
Scott Palmer and Ashleigh Yates (Newshub): Sandringham stabbing: Jacinda Ardern near tears after speaking to family of victim Janak Patel
Herald: Sandringham dairy stabbing: PM Jacinda Ardern says conversation with family of killed worker ‘full of sorrow’
Seni Iasona (Newshub): Sandringham stabbing: Jacinda Ardern defends Government’s record on crime, will look at making changes
1News: Ardern rejects Seymour’s criticism of her not being in Sandringham
George Block and Cherie Howie (Herald): Dairy stabbing: Man accused of alleged murder was deported from Australia this year
1News: Nationwide protest for Sandringham stabbing victim tomorrow
George Heagney (Stuff): ‘Enough is enough’: Pleas for action in wake of Sandringham dairy stabbing
Rachel Sadler and Ashleigh Yates (Newshub): Auckland dairy stabbing: Business advocate Sunny Kaushal says ‘enough is enough’, calls on Government to address ‘crime emergency’
Rachel Moore (Stuff): Crime wave sees Hamilton shopkeepers calling for guns and government help to deter criminals
RNZ: Sandringham stabbing: Shop worker safety ‘goes beyond fog cannons and bollards’, business leader says
Mark Quinlivan (Newshub): National MP Mark Mitchell decries ‘complete and utter failure’ of Government’s crime package after fatal dairy stabbing
——————–
1News: Luxon firm on military camps for youth despite opposing evidence
Donna Miles (Stuff): Punitive instincts hurt us all
Ashleigh McCaull (RNZ): Hundreds of teenagers warned or prosecuted for revenge porn
RNZ: Outrage over damage, theft of part of Māori carving

BUSINESS, EMPLOYMENT, MIGRANT WORKERS
Martin Van Beynen (Stuff): Welfare beneficiaries recruited as ‘dummy’ directors as companies face liquidation
Kirsty Johnston (Stuff): He worked 70 hours a week, for $11 an hour, for five years. His boss wouldn’t even give him the day off for his wedding
Robin Martin (RNZ): Immigration red tape frustrates short-staffed farmers
Tom Pullar-Strecker (Stuff): How much are wages really going up?
Tamsyn Parker (Herald): Employers planning for hefty pay rises in 2023 (paywalled)
Brianna Mcilraith (Stuff): Would you be up for doing the job ‘not all New
Eric Crampton (Stuff): Regulating the grocers: Policy incompetence or malice?
RNZ: 68% of directors expect decline in country’s economic performance – survey
Theresa Gattung (Herald): The Front Page: From today, Kiwi women are working for free
Will Trafford (Whakaata Māori): Te ao Māori in boardrooms gaining momentum – research

HEALTH
Kate Green (RNZ): Minister Andrew Little left in no doubt over despair, outrage in health workforce
Rachel Thomas (Stuff): Doctors challenge health minister to be ‘an ethical employer’
Demelza Leslie (Newshub): Doctors claim Health Minister Andrew Little is in denial about how bad health sector is
Tom Taylor (RNZ): Patients turned away from west Auckland clinics as GPs lacking
Thomas Manch (Stuff): Government agrees to $200m annual boost to aged-care nurses wages
Michael Neilson (Herald): Healthcare pay parity: Government announces $200m to ensure fair pay across sector
RNZ: Health staff working outside of hospitals set to get a pay increase
Michael Wright (Stuff): The cruellest tax: Clipping the ticket on unfunded cancer drugs
RNZ: Accident Compensation Bill passes first reading
Erin Gourley (Stuff): Private hospital CEO issues statement slamming ‘unnecessary’ nurses strike
Laura López (The Standard): Medical gender transition in New Zealand: How common is it really?
Colin Peacock (RNZ): Mediawatch: Relapse reports upset gang-based rehab programme

HOUSING
John Minto (Daily Blog): Don’t state house tenants want to live in Asquith Ave in the Prime Minister’s electorate?
Miriam Bell (Stuff): Saving for a home deposit is 19% harder than five years ago, but it is improving a new online tool shows
RNZ: Government launches new housing affordability tool
Susan Edmunds (Stuff): What will the housing market look like in November 2023? Three experts weigh in
Rob Stock (Stuff): Meth mania ended four years ago, why has the Govt been so slow to clean up meth contamination standards?

LOCAL DEMOCRACY 
Amy Williams (RNZ): Snubbed: Wayne Brown’s request for deputy PM and senior officials to work with Auckland councillors turned down
Rachael Kelly (Stuff): Councillors boycott Gore mayor Ben Bell’s Cromwell retreat
RNZ: Majority of Gore District councillors oppose new mayor’s choice of deputy
RNZ: RMA replacement consultation timed badly – Napier mayor
No Right Turn: Labour attacks LGOIMA – in secret
Steven Walton (Press): Christchurch mayor says keeping rate rise to promised 4% will be ‘very challenging’

PM’S CHATHAMS VISIT
Anneke Smith (RNZ): Chatham Islands iwi sign treaty settlement agreement
Michael Neilson (Herald): PM Jacinda Ardern’s first Chatham Islands visit, Ngāti Mutunga Treaty settlement, housing, cost of living crisis front and centre
Luke Malpass (Stuff): Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern’s big day out at the Chathams
Luke Malpass (Stuff): Jacinda Ardern visits the Chathams: a less usual and much farther New Zealand trip
Alexa Cook (Newshub): Jacinda Ardern signals Treaty settlement progress on first Chatham Islands visit
RNZ: Government announces water safety scheme for Chatham Islands

EDUCATION
William Hewett (Newshub): ACT proposing to fine parents of truant children to tackle New Zealand’s ‘shocking’ attendance rates
RNZ:
Gianina Schwanecke (Stuff): Teachers union says Government pay offer ‘needs improvement’, as principals prepare to announce their decision
George Heagney (Stuff): Teachers disappointed with Government pay offer
RNZ: Auckland University unionised staff to keep refusing to enter student grades
Catherine Hubbard (Stuff): Animal therapy farm visits in jeopardy after funding ends
Herewini Waikato (Whakaata Māori): Four new kura join Kura ā Iwi o Aotearoa
Will Trafford (Whkaata Māori): Milestone Māori: Graduate completes entire degree in te reo
Richard Prebble (Bassett, Brash and Hide): Boys’ education

HATE SPEECH, TWITTER
Adam Pearse (Herald): Govt not honouring treaty in watered-down hate speech reform – Human Rights Commission
Bridie Witton (Stuff): Hate speech: Disabled, Rainbow communities and women ‘forgotten’ in watered-down plans
Alwyn Poole (Kiwiblog): Hello Kiri Allan – etc – People of genuine faith do not need your “hate speech” protection
Shaneel Lal (Herald): Hate speech ban should extend to queers, women and disabled (paywalled)
Martyn Bradbury (Daily Blog): Marc Daalder’s woke Hate Speech tears are delicious
RNZ: Twitter fails to detect upload of Christchurch mosque terror attacks footage

FOREIGN AFFAIRS
Andrew Macfarlane (1News): Minister admits Aus treating Kiwis like second-class citizens
1News: Q+A: New Zealand ‘punches above its weight’ on trade – WTO head
Sam Sachdeva (Newsroom): Trade head: How to tackle the world’s ‘poly-crisis’
RNZ: New Zealand says Xin Chao to trade with Vietnam

TRANSPORT
Mark Quinlivan (Newshub): Transport Minister Michael Wood says he’s not planning ‘specific’ spending cutbacks despite Reserve Bank’s recession warning
Jonathan Milne (Newsroom): Business trepidation about $3 billion light rail levy
Mike Hosking (Newstalk ZB): Road to Zero another in a long list of government failures

JUSTICE, COURTS
Damien Grant (Stuff): When an activist judiciary invites itself to the party
Stuff: Anna Tutton appointed new Chief Coroner
RNZ: Family court further victimises the vulnerable – advocates

ENVIRONMENT
David Williams (Newsroom): Christopher Luxon and the art of offsets
Rod Oram (Newsroom): NZ is on climate glide time
Koroi Hawkins (RNZ): Pacific fisheries observers could return in 2023
Farah Hancock (RNZ): Aotearoa’s Vanishing Species Part 1
Farah Hancock (RNZ): Aotearoa’s Vanishing Species Part 2

CO-GOVERNANCE
Fran O’Sullivan (Herald): David Parker pushes back against co-governance (paywalled)
K Gurunathan (Stuff): Fanning the flames of fractiousness around co-governance

DEFENCE
Jeremy Wilkinson (Open Justice Reporting): NZ Defence Force spends four years overturning $25,000 employment ruling against them
Larissa Howie (1News): Kiwi warship returns after testing $600m high-tech upgrades

OTHER
Marc Daalder (Newsroom): Govt weighs up police access to encrypted data
RNZ: Potential job creation of planned NZ data centres not known
Guyon Espiner (RNZ): Fatal police shooting: Mental health care given to Jerrim Toms under scrutiny at inquest
Stephen Winter (Newsroom): No break in sight for Abuse in Care Commission

22 COMMENTS

  1. If this outrageous process applies to city/town management of their parks and reserves, then Parliament may be breaking its own law by applying it to the Wellington Town Belt.

    I think the WTB Act 2016, and amended 2018, is entrenched legislation, delegating management of the WTB to Wellington City Council. To get this changed, requires a Parliamentary vote with 75% consensus, or a referendum with a 50% or 60% agreement. This hasn’t happened.

    As far as I know, unfortunately nobody on the current WCC has the institutional or historical knowledge of these issues. Grant Robertson should; he managed the Wellington Town Belt Act when it was being progressed through Parliament 2015/16.

    If in fact Parliament is breaking the law concerning the green belt of our capital city, then the GG should dissolve Parliament and call a snap election.

    Many more years of diligent sweat were put into saving and protecting this land, with open and public processes, than the surreptitious way in which water control is being approached now.

  2. The left shooting themselves in the foot again. Why they’re so determined to lose the next election due to Three Waters astounds me. It’s a policy with minimal support, why waste all your political capital on it?

    As for this entrenchment, are the left so idiotic that they cannot see that NACT would use this too if it became precedent? If Max Harris and Clint Smith are for something, be against it.

  3. Putting all the political and legal arguments aside it simply comes down to this “is water of suffecient importance for it to be held in public ownership and not privatised?”
    The treaty certainly would put it in that category.
    Seems to me that the only people who would argue against entrenchment must believe in future privatisation. National and Act must see this as at least a possibilty to be opposing entrenchment.
    Maybe there should be a law that specifies those assets that must remain in public ownership.

  4. The last paragraph sums it all up. They expect to lose next year’s election and have drawn up a ‘wish list’ to push through parliament, I shudder what else they have on this wish list before St Jacinda steps down and leaves for a UN role….not her problem then eh?

  5. Unbelievable. This super majority stunt smacks of incredible arrogance. ‘You might not like our 3 waters bill but… by God you are going to have it’. Same ignorant pigheaded attitude that goes ‘we can’t be bothered making safe roads – so the great unwashed will just have to drive slower – whether they like it or not.’ When to governance ‘by the people, for the people’ stop being a thing in NZ?

  6. You can see why Winston does not want to work with this Labour government they just cannot be trusted. I was informed by a Green Party member that Shaw suggested this provision way back when the Waters idea was mooted 2 years ago so why the last minute push to get it through under urgency. Was this another example of releasing a policy late on a Friday hoping no one would notice it

    • Trevor. Yes it was. Labour and the Greens are as dodgy as each other, Shaw no more a holy little altar boy than Sage a homely earth mother, IMO. Read Jason above.

  7. This type of dishonest behaviour calls for the Government to resign.
    It’s devious and definitely not democracy at work.
    Arrogant and disrespectful.

      • Shona View Ardern’s UNO speech wanting global free speech censorship, and requesting increased WHO powers and you may rethink.Who’s abolishing the children’s commissioner ?

  8. You expect parties like National to sell stuff off or privatise stuff, they’re well known for doing that but then you start seeing Labour doing the same stuff makes you wonder who Labour is representing anymore, they pander to the left to get their vote and then turn right and make everybody’s lives worse.
    Stepping off this voting BS like a whole bunch of others,
    Where is the tick box on election day for “vote of no confidence in all political parties”
    Because thats what I would be ticking.

  9. What is wring with trying to ensure that the assets are not able to be privatised? Unless you are planning to sell them I the future, what’s the problem. I thought 1 of the arguments against 3 waters was that it was a road to privatization. Now the government is trying to prevent this and the very same people who were objecting based on possible future sales are crying foul. Politics at its worst.

  10. ” But it also says something that the Government have been so keen to push through such a bad law ”

    Well what led us down this road in the first place was the Shyster and the National / Act / Dunne / Maori party who supported privatising 49 % of the water despite real public opposition they went ahead anyway and as always gave the finger to public opinion when it doesn’t suit the government of the day’s agenda.

    Its a sad state of affairs and a reality of neo liberal thinking that LINO and the Greens think its necessary to invoke this clause in the first place. Should this not be put to the people in a referendum and let’s have a real debate about the options.

    Is there anything left in this country that is not for sale including our natural resources ?

  11. Hmm. Lot’s of young egos coming through. Now bind together, create cohesion and aim for synchronisity. There’s a surprise along the way (a real one, and it’s super nice). Enjoy!

Comments are closed.