Defence Act 1909 Ward appears to have changed his mind because in April 1909, he announced that the government intended to introduce compulsory military training for youths up to 21 years old. There was some sporadic opposition to the idea, but that was very definitely a minority view. In Wellington, there was quite pronounced opposition from socialists. The Society of Friends raised the issue of conscientious objectors with Ward. The
Defence Act 1909, Section 35, brought in a general training requirement for males 12 to 14 years old (Junior Cadets), 14 to 18 (Senior Cadets), 18 to 21 (General Training Section), and 21 to 30 (the Reserve). There was exemption for religious conscientious objectors under Section 92 of the Act but only subject to performing non-combatant duties within the military. Failure to comply with the Act could result in fines and potentially imprisonment for those who did not pay them. The Act also introduced a range of new offences, a number of which were aimed at the behaviour of those being trained. The
Defence Amendment Act 1912 repealed Section 35 (a) and thereby removed the requirement for those aged up to 14 years old to be trained. There continued to be mixed opposition to the Act, such as Methodists seeking a broader conscientious objection clause and the Tinsmiths and Sheetmetal Workers Union seeking removal of the compulsory requirements. Anti-militarists, such as Reginald Williams of the
Passive Resisters Union, and the
National Peace Council also spoke out against compulsory training. They were all very much in the minority of public opinion since conscientious objectors were generally perceived as shirkers. Political opposition to the measures came from the socialists and
Federation of Labour.
World War I Public opinion had tended to harden against conscientious objectors as
World War I approached, as the derisive term "conchies" emerged. Alternative service suggested by the government was generally rejected by the public in favour of punishment and imprisonment. In 1915 Britain began to move towards conscription, but New Zealand thought the need unlikely. By early 1916, Great Britain had introduced conscription, and debate in New Zealand papers was generally overwhelmingly in favour of following suit. Those opposing it were considered unpatriotic and shirkers by the general public. However, it is hard to tell what public opinion truly was, as
sedition charges were laid against those who expressed a contrary view and
deserters and their employers were pursued and given harsh punishments. That attitude was reflected with the introduction of conscription in 1916 in the Military Service Act 1916, which from 16 September 1916 imposed a liability on all men from the 20th birthday up to the day before the 46th birthday to be entered in a ballot for military call-up. The only grounds for conscientious objection were: That he was on the fourth day of August, nineteen hundred and fourteen, and has since continuously been a member of a religious body the tenets and doctrines of which religious body declare the bearing of arms and the performance of any combatant service to be contrary to Divine revelation, and also that according to his own conscientious religious belief the bearing of arms and the performance of any combatant service is unlawful by reason of being contrary to Divine revelation. That was a considerable contraction of the exemption under the Defence Amendment Act 1912, which had allowed under Section 65(2): On the application of any person a Magistrate may grant to the applicant a certificate of exemption from military training and service if the Magistrate is satisfied that the applicant objects in good faith to such training and service on the ground that it is contrary to his religious belief. Only
Christadelphians,
Seventh-day Adventists and
Quakers were recognised as conscientious objectors under the 1916 legislation. The combined number of males within those religions was only about 1,200. Only 20 to 30 of them were exempted military service. The only political opposition to conscription in Parliament came from five members of parliament and trade unions. Five
Labour Party members (
Fraser,
Semple,
Armstrong,
O'Brien, and
Webb) were imprisoned for their opposition to conscription. Of the 124,211 New Zealand men who served during World War I, 91,941 were volunteers and 32,270 were conscripts.
Number of compulsory military trainees during war Prosecutions The numbers of prosecutions for breaches relating to compulsory military training and military service were 28 in 1911, 3,187 in 1912, 7,030 in 1913, 6,321 in 1914, 3,136 in 1915, 2,478 in 1916, 2,342 in 1917 and 1,501 in 1918. In addition to prosecutions under the Act, some local authorities implemented by-laws to prohibit the distribution of anti-compulsory military training leaflets.
Abolition The compulsory military training provisions of the Defence Act were placed in abeyance in 1930 because of the
Great Depression. From July 1931, voluntary training was inaugurated. During that period, high school students were subjected to a few periods each week of military training. In May 1939, a voluntary military reserve was established in response to the looming crises in Europe.
World War II During
World War II, difficulties in filling the Second and Third Echelons for overseas service in 1939 and 1940 and the Allied disasters of May 1940 led the government to reintroduce conscription reluctantly in June 1940 by the
National Service Emergency Regulations on 18 June, made under the Defence Act and the Emergency Regulations Amendment Act of 31 May. Men aged between 18 and 46 again became liable to be called up by ballot. Volunteering for Army service ceased from 22 July 1940 although entry to the Navy and Air Force remained voluntary. From January 1942, workers could be
manpowered, or directed to essential industries. Four members of the cabinet, including Prime Minister
Peter Fraser, had been imprisoned for anti-conscription activities in World War I, the
Labour Party was traditionally opposed to it, and some members still demanded
conscription of wealth before men. Conscientious objection was allowed under the legislation if the applicant could prove to the satisfaction of the Appeal Board that he had objected on conscientious grounds before the outbreak of war. Only 200 cases were approved, with 800 being imprisoned for failing to comply with the regulations. A total of 194,000 men served in the armed forces during the war. ==Postwar==