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NEW ELECTORATES

THE READJUSTMENT PROCESS BASED ON LAST CENSUS HTrou Ouk Pari,i a went Aar Ebportir.] WELLINGTON, October 7. When, the official and detailed figures of the last population census are available from the Government! Statistician a statutory process operates automatically under which theboundaries of the 76 European constituencies of the Dominion are readjusted in line with the distribution of the people. With the flow of population to the North Island, experience of several readjustments has been a reduction in the number of South Island seats and corresponding increase in the North. This is expected with the coming readjustment. The South Island to-day has 29 members, and the North Island 47. Boundary revision cannot be set in motion until the Government Statistician is in a position to provide the Commission with population details much more minute in respect to areas than the information already published from district enumerators. The whole Dominion, for this purpose, is divided into small sections much smaller than the boundaries of tbe hundreds of local authorities, so that the Commissioners when finally allocating quotas of electors to give fairly equal representation in Parliament for each thousand voters, may take groups even of a thousand, moving them from one electorate into the boundaries of another which may have to be enlarged. For this reason the process of readjustment may not commence for a month or so, but the Electoral Act re- , quiries the Statistician to report these details as early as possible, and following this, the Representation Commission must make its reallocation of electorates within three months. 1 The Representation Commission comprises _ the Surveyor-General and the Commissioners of Crown Lands for Taranaki and Auckland, with two unofficial members appointed by the Government, to act as Nmth Lslandl commissioners, while the South Island Commission will be the Commissioners of Crown Lands for Westland, Canterbury, and Otago, together with two Others who will shortly be appointed by the Government. | Both North and South Island Comt missions act jointly in the important 1 preliminary stage when they have to take a general survey of the population results and allocate the figures in the separate categories of urban and rural. The residents of 64 towns and cities and these living within four miles of the chief post offices of Auckland, Wellington, Christchurch, and Dunedin come into the urban figures, the remainder being rural population with l an electoral advantage of the addition i of 28 per cent, to their numbers. This country quota has been criticised, but

the new Government, though being inclined to readily innovate, has made no change in the system, therefore the country quota will again operate automatically. _ . In the previous readjustment of electoral boundaries the Commission calculated that the North Island had a population of 831,813,_ but the country quota enlargement raised the total to 929,388, representing 97,575 nominal electors. The South Island actual total of 512,656 was increased by 64,240 to 576,896. The Commission in fixing new boundaries is directed _by Statute to have regard to community of interest, facilities of communication and topographical features, and its proposals are announced tentatively in advance in order to receive objections before the final revision is gazetted.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/ESD19361007.2.158

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Evening Star, Issue 22463, 7 October 1936, Page 18

Word count
Tapeke kupu
528

NEW ELECTORATES Evening Star, Issue 22463, 7 October 1936, Page 18

NEW ELECTORATES Evening Star, Issue 22463, 7 October 1936, Page 18

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