A constitutional referendum was held in Niue on 31 August 2024.[1][2] Four amendments to the constitution were proposed, which were voted on separately.[2] Two of the proposals – to rename the post of premier to prime minister and to identify the Auditor-General of New Zealand as the country's official auditor – were approved. The other two – to increase the number of ministers and extend the term length of the Niue Assembly – were rejected.
Background
The first reading of the constitutional amendment bills took place in March 2024, with the Assembly voting in favour of all four. Although PremierDalton Tagelagi had proposed proceeding directly to a second reading, the Assembly referred the bills to the Constitution Review Committee.[3] The second reading was approved in May.[4] This was followed by a mandatory 13-week period during which public consultations took place.[4]
Following consultations in 13 of the 14 villages, the bills passed their third reading in early August.[5]
Proposed amendments
The four proposed amendments were (in their order on the ballot):[2][3]
Changing the title of the head of government from premier to prime minister
Increasing the size of the cabinet from four to six members
Extending the term length of the Assembly from three to four years
Identifying the Auditor-General of New Zealand as the country's official auditor rather than a generic reference to the Audit Office of New Zealand.
Results
Question
For
Against
Invalid/ blank
Total votes
Registered voters
Turnout
Outcome
Votes
%
Votes
%
Changing the title of the head of government from premier to prime minister
369
51.46
348
48.54
2
719
1,156
62.20
Approved
Increasing the size of the cabinet from four to six members
221
30.95
493
69.05
5
Rejected
Extending the term length of the Assembly from three to four years
205
28.59
512
71.41
2
Rejected
Identifying the Auditor-General of New Zealand as the country's official auditor