KEY INSIGHTS
Of New Zealander’s polled:

  • Social unity/division
    • 77% believe NZ is becoming more divided (42% ‘much more’ + 35% ‘a little more’)
    • 3% believe NZ is becoming less divided (1% ‘much less’ + 2% ‘a little less’)
  • Co-governance
    • 45% don’t want more co-governance = 1.6x more than the 28% who want more.
    • 48% want a co-governance referendum = 2.7x more than the 18% who don’t.
    • 34% don’t understand co-governance. 45% a basic understanding. 17% have a good understanding.
  • Use of Te Reo Māori
    • 52% want to retain the name New Zealand for our country. 36% prefer Aotearoa New Zealand. 10% prefer Aotearoa.
    • 49% want government departments to be known by their English name = 1.9x more than the 26% who don’t.
    • 45% don’t want Māori on road signs = 1.4x more than the 32% who do
  • Demographic quotas
    • 38% want female quotas in parliament = slightly more than the 33% who don’t
    • 38% don’t want ethnicity quotas in parliament = slightly more than the 31% who do

KEY NOTES

  • This information is from 4 different research companies, as shown in the graphics above.
  • Stuff Freshwater Strategy Poll:
    • There wasn’t a distinction made between the co-governance of natural resources, e.g. rivers, and the co-governance of public services, e.g. water infrastructure.
    • There was no option to have both English and Māori government department names.
    • There was no distinction made between place name road signs, e.g. Auckland/Tāmaki Makaurau, and functional road signs, e.g. STOP.
    • There is an existing Māori quota in parliament through the 7 Māori electorate seats. This may have influenced how people answered that question.
  • Newshub Reid:
    • Didn’t offer the option of ‘New Zealand Aotearoa’
    • This is an older poll from January 2023, so the results may be different now. It is similar to the 1 News Kantar Public Poll from September 2021 where 58% want to retain ‘New Zealand’, 31% want ‘Aotearoa New Zealand’ and 9% wanted ‘Aotearoa’. We have not seen more recent research.

KEY QUESTION

  1. Are we having the right amount, too little, or too much public discussion on each of these decisions?
  2. Should a government be able to progress policies of high public interest that weren’t campaigned on in a general election, or weren’t voted on via a referendum?
  3. As a country, do we hold the right number of referendums, too few, or too many?
  4. Is investment in direct democracy a good use of taxpayer funding, whereby voters get to have more say on more issues more often?
  5. When will the Prime Minister define Co-Governance as promised, since only 17% have a good understanding?
  6. What is the best way to celebrate our Māori heritage in a multicultural society, to create greater social unity and less social division?

HAVE YOUR SAY


Full data analysis
Please contact us if you would like the full analysis as the table is far too large to insert into the content here.

Other notes:

  • All publicly available data has been published.
  • The Post is owned by Stuff, and The Post is a sub-brand, so we called this ‘Stuff & Freshwater Strategy’ rather than ‘The Post Freshwater Strategy’ poll.
  • We didn’t show the full questions asked in that Freshwater Strategy poll in the graphic above as they were very long and would have reduced engagement and comprehension. The full questions were:
    • There should be more co-governance with Māori in government decision-making.
    • There should be a referendum on Māori co-governance, to end the confusion and let every New Zealander have a say.
    • Government departments should be known by their English name, not their Māori name.
    • Road signage should be written in Māori as well as English.
    • There should be quotas to ensure different ethnic groups are represented in parliament and government.
    • There should be quotas to ensure enough women are represented in parliament and government.
  • We ordered the 4 graphics from newest to oldest.
  • Graphic colours:
    • We have used traffic light colours for most of the graphics where green = support, red = oppose, grey = neutral/don’t know/refused.
    • For the co-governance understanding poll, grey was taken for don’t know/refused, so we chose orange to represent a basic understanding (some knowledge but also some missing).
    • For the country name graphic, we used New Zealand’s primary national colours – black and white – and red for ‘Aotearoa’ since it is the next dominant colour used in Māori national symbols.
  • Additional notes from each research company can be found in the data source pages below.
  • All numbers are provisional and subject to revision.

Thank you to The Guardian, Essential, Stuff/The Post, Freshwater Strategy, TVNZ/1 News, Kantar Public/Verian, Discovery/Newshub, Reid, and the Factors who helped pull this together.

SOURCES:

The Guardian Essential = https://essentialreport.co.nz/questions/new-zealand-becoming-more-or-less-divided/

Stuff/The Post Freshwater Strategy = https://www.thepost.co.nz/a/politics/350072912/voters-want-referendum-co-governance-not-bilingual-signs-poll-shows

1 News Kantar Public = https://www.1news.co.nz/2023/03/15/poll-how-well-do-people-understand-three-waters-co-governance/

Newshub Reid = https://www.newshub.co.nz/home/politics/2023/02/newshub-reid-research-poll-what-should-country-s-official-name-be.html

(c) Copyright of the companies listed above.

Republished under permission

Did we make a mistake, or have you got smarter data?  Let us know.

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