Time for a 4 year term?

The NZ Herald editorial explores the need for a 4 year term. I have long thought we needed this. Conventional wisdom suggests that 3 years is too short for a good government and too long for a bad one.

Saturday’s referendum on the electoral system did more than just embed MMP, subject to the tinkering recommended by an Electoral Commission review. It also, by implication, enhanced the case for the term of Parliament to be increased from three to four years.

The argument against this has always been that in a country with few constitutional restraints on the power of the Executive, a short term affords the electorate one strong means of restraint.

If proportional representation promised to be an equally effective safeguard, its popularity had yet to be confirmed. Now, with the substantiation of MMP’s broad acceptance, the time is right to reconsider a four-year term.

The thought is not new. In the most recent referendum on the subject, in 1990, 69.3 per cent of those who voted opposed the notion. That rejection must, however, be placed in context. It was held at the tail-end of a two-term Labour Government whose disdain for the public view led eventually to the introduction of MMP.

MMP has held us back, in part because of the need to coalition governments:

Politicians were held in particularly low esteem, and people were in no mood to endorse a device that would make governments even less responsive to the electorate.

Things are different now. John Key has proved a particularly popular Prime Minister, in large part because he has kept such a close eye on public sentiment. His first term, however, provided a graphic illustration of the deficiencies of a three-year Parliament.

Traditionally, these involve a first year spent settling in, the second tackling a stack of legislation, and the third preparing for the coming election.

The work of Mr Key’s Administration was hindered further by the aftermaths of the Christchurch earthquakes and the Pike River disaster. His experience provided a compelling case for a four-year term.

The topic will be examined by the constitutional review panel set up in August at the behest of the Maori Party. But, after gauging public opinion, it is not due to make its recommendations on this and an array of other issues until September 2013.

I’d say we should have a referendum but governments have a poor habit if ignoring referenda.

There will, of course, be those who fear the surrender of any measure of voter sovereignty. But their qualms relate to the behaviour of politicians under the first-past-the-post voting system. All the elections held under MMP have resulted in no party being able to govern outright. Governments have had to consult widely and to accommodate a broad range of views. Helen Clark, who belatedly became an advocate of a four-year fixed term, and Mr Key have both proved adept at managing this and providing stable government.

Four years would provide governments with a far more realistic time frame for implementing policies. In particular, there would be fewer of the short-term policies designed to produce a quick blip in economic performance. And there would be more time for the public to assess whether particular initiatives are working.

The opening of workplace accident insurance to private competition, rushed in by National in 1999 just before it lost power, is just one example of a policy that was overturned before there was a fair analysis of its impact.

There is good reason to believe there would now be a more positive response to a referendum on a four-year term. Most of the previous objections no longer apply. It should be the next plank in the establishment of a more effective government.

  • Confused

    Correct me if i’m mistaken, but the result of the referendum on Saturday was only the result of the counting of the votes cast before election day, so the herald saying it imbedded MMP with only a small percentage of the votes cast sounds a little premature. I understood the full results won’t be known for a few weeks, or are they being undated online?

    • Anonymous

      You are correct.  The election-night referendum count was only of the votes cast in advance. 

  • Peter Wilson

    Perhaps it should be 4 years for right wing governments and 3 years for the rest?

    Seriously though, confused is correct, the votes counted were just the advanced votes, but it’s probably a good indication.

    In any case, a small win signifies more than that, it says there is not a groundswell of support for change, and so you stick with the status quo. The key thing now is to accept the result and work on changing the current system. Also, it’s not a vote for MMP, simply a vote to decide if another system should even be considered.

    The first thing to work on is who decides what changes are accepted? I’m picking the MP’s will have a fairly strong say in that.

  • Anonymous

    A four-year term would be well worth considering.
    A good, stable government (as the Nats have been) would certainly get a second term even then. That’d give them eight years – bloody good.  
    As for Labour governments – under a four-year term, I’d say almost all of them would be turfed out after one term.  Four years is long enough for the dislike to build up.  

    • Kosh103

      National in charge for 8 years??? Christ the country would be labled 3rd world by then.

      • Peter Wilson

        It’s not so much National, but coalition partners that define the government. In future, the Labour party will become largely irrelevant as Key brings in the Greens, and no doubt, if WP is constructive, may consider giving NZF a final chance.

        Then, expect ACT to be resurgent as National lurches to the center.

        As the late Rod Donald said, you could have one party dominating for the next generation, it’s hue changing as the public favours (or not) various of it’s coalition partners.

        With National unbeatable and stable, you’d find there would be little “opposition” to extending the term to four years, or more.

    • Kosh103

      National in charge for 8 years??? Christ the country would be labled 3rd world by then.

  • devlsadvocate

    An incumbent doesn’t need a settling-in year.

    How about a 3 year term if the incumbent wins the election, and a 4 year term if there’s a change of government?

    Ministerial roles are appointed by the government, so if theres a change they can arrange some sort of handover assistance between their own MPs.

    Changed-seat electorate MPs are harder done by there, though – but hell, it shouldn’t be hard for them to come to terms with electorate issues in that time. And of course new non-ministerial list MPs can get fucked.

    That should save a bit of coin and be a little fairer too….

  • Anonymous

    There was a referendum on this in 1967. two-thirds of those who voted opposed it

  • Geoff Houtman

    A lot has changed since ’67. It gives us two years of MP’s doing their actual jobs rather than 1 under the current system.

    We should also have an “Election Weekend” in law. 3rd Saturday in November every 4 years.
    Takes out that nasty “snap election” option.