Our campaign policies - what we’re campaigning for
Our campaign policies set out what we're campaigning for.
Head of State
Our campaign is focused on New Zealand’s head of state. Our campaign is for a citizen as head of state by transforming the office of Governor-General, who is for all intents and purposes almost our head of state already, into New Zealand’s actual head of state.
Our campaign supports:
Our parliamentary system of government: keeping the head of government - the Prime Minister - and head of state separate. We believe it is important to keep the Governor-General’s reserve powers (e.g. dissolving parliament) separate from the Prime Minister, following the principles of the separation of powers;
Transitioning the office of Governor-General of New Zealand from the Queen’s representative in New Zealand to New Zealand’s head of state, with the same limited reserve powers that the Governor-General currently has. Effectively, a non-executive head of state whose role is focused on ceremonial and community duties.
To achieve this, we propose:
First, putting in place an appointment process for the Governor-General, where the office is elected by a vote in parliament of three-quarters of MPs (and can be removed by the same process), to ensure the person chosen for the role is above politics. We would have the same sort of people we currently have as Governors-General to represent all New Zealanders;
Second, once the election process for the Governor-General is in place, a simple referendum asking the New Zealand people the question "Do you support New Zealand becoming an independent state, with the Governor-General becoming our head of state?" would then be put to the vote.
Legislation establishing the referendum must have:
A clause that "saves" the head of state's reserve constitutional powers as being the same as the Governor-General;
A Treaty of Waitangi clause defining Iwi-Crown relations and clause for “the Crown” being defined as “The Government and People of New Zealand”;
A clause stating membership of the Commonwealth must continue, with recognition of the Head of the Commonwealth
Third, pending the passing of the above referendum, a future review of the head of state’s election, and whether the office could be elected directly or remain as is, with any changes required to be put to a referendum.
Te Tiriti o Waitangi - The Treaty of Waitangi
The Treaty of Waitangi - Te Tiriti o Waitangi is New Zealand’s founding document. A New Zealand citizen as head of state won’t change this or the relationship between Maori and the Government. We don’t need the Crown, which stood by and did nothing during the worst excesses of the colonial era.
Our campaign supports:
Recognising the Treaty of Waitangi - Te Tiriti of Waitangi as New Zealand’s founding document;
In legislation establishing the republic, a specific Treaty clause re-stating the Māori-Kawangatanga (i.e. the New Zealand Government) relationship and preserving that relationship;
For more detail, see our page on the Treaty of Waitangi.
The Commonwealth
An independent head of state wouldn’t mean New Zealand loses its membership of the Commonwealth of Nations. In fact the majority of members of the Commonwealth don’t have the Queen as their head of state.
New Zealand will still compete at the Commonwealth Games, and partake in all of the Commonwealth’s organisations.
For more detail, see our page on New Zealand’s continued membership of the Commonwealth of Nations.