Anti-MMP campaign launched
Ex Labour Party president, Wellington Mayor join campaign ahead of referendum to be held at the same time as the November 26 general election.
Ex Labour Party president, Wellington Mayor join campaign ahead of referendum to be held at the same time as the November 26 general election.
A campaign against MMP was launched today, aiming to persuade voters to opt for change in the referendum that is going to be held at the same time as the November 26 general election.
The Vote for Change Society today released a list of high-profile supporters.
Retired businessman Peter Shirtcliffe, who ran a campaign against MMP before it was introduced in 1996, is back on board. But the new campaign also includes some younger faces, and people from both sides of the political spectrum.
Those backing Vote for Change include Wellington mayor Kerry Prendergast, former Waitakere mayor Bob Harvey, public relations specialist Anna Hamilton-Manns and political scientist Emma Daken.
The referendum will ask voters whether they want to change to another electoral system, and to tick a preferred alternative from a list of options including the old first-past-the-post system.
If a majority want a change, a second referendum will be held alongside the 2014 general election which will run off MMP against the alternative that gets the most ticks.
"Vote for Change wants a system that restores more certainty, that allows voters to easily hold governments to account and kick rascals out of Parliament", said the organisation's spokesman Jordan Williams, a Wellington lawyer.
"The current system lets party bosses sneak MPs who have been dismissed by their local electorates back into Parliament on party lists."
Mr Williams said many people had high hopes that MMP would create a new era of consensus politics but instead "small groups and party bosses can now hold the rest to ransom".
A pro-MMP lobby group, Campaign for MMP, has been active since the Government announced the referendum shortly after the 2008 election.
Recent opinion polls have indicated a majority of voters want to keep MMP.
Labour leader Phil Goff said today he didn't agree with the Vote for Change campaigners.
"I agree with the principle that every vote should be of equal value, and that's something MMP achieves," he told reporters.
"That's why personally I will be backing MMP...if a party gets 20 percent of the vote, surely it should get 20 percent of the representation in Parliament."
Mr Goff said the decision was for New Zealanders to make, not the politicians."But I think you will find that most people in the Labour Party think that MMP is a fair system based on that no matter where you live your vote does count, and is of equal value to everybody else, and I think that's pretty fundamental to democracy."