Our election
I was exhausted when I got home last night after 14 hours at the local polling booth. That was checking people off the roll and issuing them with voting forms--344 of them in my case, of the 2202 people who came through--till 7pm, then counting the votes for candidates and parties, which went till 10pm. The total has to match the votes issued and then gets phoned in. The whole thing's fun, despite being a long day, because of the excitement. I think I'll do it next time, just for the buzz.
We get two votes, one for a member of parliament for the electorate (staunchly National (read conservative) in the case of Tamaki), and one for a party (and if we didn't have that, I wouldn't bother voting in this electorate). Then parliamentary seats are made up from winning electorate candidates, and list candidates till the proportions of parties with seats matches those of the party vote. That's the simple part. However minor parties like Greens and ACT take away from the two main ones, Labour and National, so the government is always a coalition these days. This time it's gone National, but people tend to swing in the other direction when a government's had more than one term. I'm not happy about the result; a National government supporting business owners and rich bastards is not what we need in this crap economy (or really, ever IMO).
I'll be working tomorrow on things like the official count, double vote checking, special vote counting etc. It will be a shock to the system after having my days to myself for months.
One good thing about National getting in though is that business may feel encouraged to consider hiring again--perhaps even me.

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I'm sorry the result wasn't what you wanted :( It says a lot about the state of things in the UK that I'm actually hoping the Conservatives will get in next time (I vote Liberal, but they have absolutely no chance at all).
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And whoever is going to replace Helen? I don't think there are any other personalities in the Labour caucus these days.
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True; I don't know who else there is. National has always been bad for the ordinary worker like me though.
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I usually vote for a Labour candidate, and the Greens as a party because they form a coalition with Labour which helps them (plus I like their policies).
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About the only thing I'm pleased about is no more Winston. But I'm not kidding myself that he'll shut up now. Am also consoling myself with the small gains to the Green and Māori parliamentary presence, too, but I fear that they'll have little influence.
I just read that Michael Cullen has resigned as Deputy Leader.
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I doubt Winston will shut up. :-P
Sigh. [is a bit depressed] I had hopes that Obama's victory might have a mitigating effect on the conservatism here, but it was probably too late. We've need hope and a dream too.
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I hope there's not too much sorrow in the future with a National victory. One bright spot is that Winston is going, no doubt with his full-length mirror. LOL.
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However we'll never survive on our own, and becoming a state of Australia would help, though we'd still be the poor cousins. I'm not patriotic at all, so I wouldn't mind. In fact I'd be living in Australia now if it wasn't for Greg. There's so much more opportunity there, better wages, decent medical care (though ours still beats the US's) and they have optimism and self-esteem.
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Mind you, I have to admire New Zealand when they're better at sticking to the moral high ground than we are.
Better medical care? Really? I remember when they had dental nurses in NZ schools; is that all gone now?
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I think they're still there, but dental treatment for adults is so expensive, a lot of people just go without.
Your doctors are free, aren't they? Not here: each visit is at least $50.
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You can say that again!
Your doctors are free, aren't they? Not here: each visit is at least $50.
No, our doctors aren't usually free. It's up to the doctor whether they bulk bill (free for the patient, govt pays all) or not (patient pays fee, gets a partial refund, usually about 75%). My GP doesn't bulk bill, but he's worth it. A visit is $50-$80 (depending whether I have a longer consult). His practice now has it set up so that my refund goes directly into my bank account, so that makes it easier.
I believe NZ and Australia have reciprocal healthcare agreements, so you'd be covered over here, and I'd be covered over there.
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So if you were here, you'd have to pay the same amount as you do now to see a doctor, but you wouldn't get anything back. This is why some poor people go to ER for basic care.
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Not in this staunchly National electorate! But now I get a Party vote, I feel I have a voice.
We had first past the post till about 15 years ago, I think, and in some elections the government got in with fewer votes across the country than the other party. That can't happen now.
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None of that "even" nonsense, please. We all know how able and hard-working you are, so please don't put yourself down.
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About the swing of the sides: the right- orientated Democratic Party was literally blown away by the Social Democrats. It is quite dangerous because they might go in a coalition with the Communist Party - and it would be very bad for our future development! I just wonder - what were people thinking - or were they?
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I'm sorry about the result, though. Is there any chance that the need to hold together a coalition will lead to a softening of some of the National policies?
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I'm not sure at this point. So far it's National and ACT, another right-wing party, but the Maori Party may join, and they'd have a softening effect, representing so many workers.
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Of course we pay to see the doctor. I haven't been able to afford the dentist or the optician this year; they're obscenely expensive,. Some people even fly to Fiji to get their teeth done, or just never go (like my sister).
But hey, we're better off than Americans who have no health service at all.
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