Enactment Second ballot legislation had been regularly debated without success in the New Zealand Parliament for the previous twelve years. Three second ballot bills, in the name of
premier Richard Seddon, were introduced in 1896, 1897 and 1898; all lost. A fourth attempt was made by
Joseph Ward, then the
Postmaster-General, in 1905. Ward made his second attempt, and the fifth overall, to pass second ballot legislation in 1908 after he had become prime minister. The Second Ballot Act 1908 was passed 37–14 in the
16th session of the New Zealand Parliament in late 1908, ahead of
that year's general election. The leader of the large, broadly left-of-centre
Liberal Party, Ward feared that the emergence of the
Independent Political Labour League would split the vote on the political left and thus be beneficial to the conservative opposition (who in 1909 would coalesce as the
Reform Party). Ward expected that the two-round voting system would result in all second ballots to be between Liberal and conservative independent (later Reform) candidates. Opponents of the bill, such as
William Herries, who preferred the
contingent vote system (a variation of
instant-runoff voting), cautioned that second ballot voting would "throw the power more into the hands of the faddists and the supporters of the candidates who are not in the first two [who could] fix practically the whole election if it is likely to be close." The Second Ballot Act applied to general electorates only, and not to the four
Maori constituencies. == Application ==