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10 Nov 2025 15:51
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  •   Home > News > Maori

    The Maori ward vote in New Zealand contains important lessons for Canada

    Recent Maori ward plebiscites indicate that while institutional reforms for Indigenous representation are vital, meaningful change isn’t possible without broad public understanding and trust.

    Karen Bird, Professor of Political Science, McMaster University
    The Conversation


    Canadians have often looked to Aotearoa New Zealand as an established model for electoral inclusion of Indigenous voices.

    But local elections recently held in New Zealand offer an important cautionary tale for Canada, where treaty rights remain contested terrain and Indigenous self-determination is often misunderstood or politicized.

    In New Zealand’s October 2025 local elections, voters in 24 of 42 municipalities voted to remove their Maori wards — seats dedicated to Indigenous Maori voters — by 2028. The wards were designed to guarantee the representation of Maori in local government decision-making processes.


    Read more: Guaranteed Maori representation in local government is about self-determination — and it's good for democracy


    While seeming to reverse progress toward Indigenous representation at the municipal level, the larger story is that the national government forced local councils to hold these polls regardless of whether their community wanted them — and more New Zealanders nationwide voted (by 54 to 46 per cent) to keep rather than scrap their Maori wards.

    Yet despite record Maori participation and some urban gains, rural majorities largely voted against the wards.

    Maori representation

    The first lesson for Canada is on designing electoral and governance systems that include Indigenous people in local decision-making processes. Until recently, Maori representation on local elected bodies was exceedingly low at about four per cent nationwide.

    This problem gained prominence in the mid-2000s as part of a broader push for legislative reform to reflect Te Tiriti o Waitangi, considered New Zealand’s founding constitutional document.

    In its 2010 report, the New Zealand Human Rights Commission identified Maori representation in local government as a top race relations priority, warning “unless positive steps are taken, Maori representation in local government will continue to languish well below the proportion of Maori in the population.”

    While there have been reserved seats for Maori voters in parliamentary elections — Maori electorates — going back to 1867, until recently it was rare for local councils to implement Maori wards.

    Legislation since 2002 allows councils to create Maori wards, although few were able to do so due to a unique petition and plebiscite requirement that permitted voters to often overturn them.

    The Labour government in 2021 revised the Local Electoral Act to remove this requirement for polls on Maori wards since they weren’t imposed on any other types of local government wards. The local government minister at the time, Nanaia Mahuta, called the plebiscite provision “fundamentally unfair to Maori.”

    This change led to a surge in Maori wards, so that today Maori representation on local bodies is much closer to the population share of around 17 per cent. But in 2024, the new right-coalition government reversed this move, framing Maori wards as an undemocratic form of race-based representation and forcing all local authorities that had enacted Maori wards since 2021 to put the issue to voters.

    ‘One law for all’

    A referendum is generally not a good way to determine the interests of minorities. As was the government’s intent, Maori wards became another flashpoint in New Zealand’s ongoing debates over treaty rights, perceptions of societal fairness and equality and views regarding Maori culture.

    Over the roughly month-long local election period through Oct. 11, the ACT Party — the coalition’s right flank — ran local candidates and campaigned alongside groups like Hobson’s Pledge using slogans such as “one law for all.”


    Read more: Maori wards: how the Hobson’s Pledge campaign relies on a ‘historical fiction’


    The campaign to divide and sow doubt about Maori intentions featured on controversial billboards displaying Maori individuals without their consent. Meanwhile Labour, the Greens and several Maori and ally-led grassroots organizations advocated keeping Maori wards as consistent with the treaty and principles of democratic equity.

    For their part, most mayors and councillors spoke to the practical benefits of including Maori elected representatives in local decision-making.

    Rural versus urban divides

    The district of New Plymouth (population 58,000) can be considered a microcosm of the recent referendums, reflecting tensions between progressive urban voters and conservative rural communities.

    Although three Maori councillors were elected, voters narrowly choose (55 to 45 per cent) to abolish their Maori ward for the next election in 2028. The local campaign was especially divisive, with one mayoral candidate reportedly facing death threats over his support for keeping that council’s Maori ward.

    Still, the presence of three Maori councillors, two of whom were elected by voters at large, signals grassroots support for inclusive representation.

    A snow-capped mountain behind residential houses.
    Mount Taranaki is seen from New Plymouth, New Zealand. (Enjo Smith/Flickr), CC BY

    Dinnie Moeahu, who has served on council in a district-wide seat since 2019, argued this was a remarkable transformation given that just 17 per cent of his community supported Maori wards in a 2015 referendum.

    As New Zealand continues to navigate its treaty commitments, the challenge will be to bridge these divides.

    Here as well, Aotearoa offers lessons for Canada, especially for municipal governments that may lack even a basic understanding of their obligations to Indigenous communities and where local residents and officials are often indifferent to treaty claims until in a situation of crisis.

    Dialogue, not polarization

    The Maori ward plebiscites indicate that while institutional reforms for Indigenous representation are vital, meaningful change cannot be sustained without broad public understanding and trust.

    Only when settler communities have genuinely engaged with colonial histories, the shared significance and obligations of treaty rights and the human capacity for empathy, can we achieve the foundation for meaningful equality.

    New Zealand offers evidence that this is happening on the ground, in many creative and de-centred ways. Especially vital are interventions to build understanding among Pakeha — the diverse group of people who are white European, particularly of British descent, who have been the beneficiaries of colonization — using practices based in conflict mediation, performance and listening.

    The final lesson for Canada is that these efforts call on political leaders at all levels to temper divisive rhetoric, recognizing that inflammatory discourse deepens misunderstanding and hinders progress. Real change begins with education, compassion and a commitment to dialogue over polarization.

    The Conversation

    Karen Bird's research on Maori wards and electoral systems designed to represent ethnic and Indigenous groups in countries worldwide is funded by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC).

    This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license.
    © 2025 TheConversation, NZCity

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