New Zealand's flag will not change

Locutus

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Jun 18, 2007
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New Zealand has voted to keep its current flag by 57 per cent to 43 per cent in a nationwide poll.

More than two million people voted in the ballot — about two-thirds of eligible voters — to decide whether to keep the British Union Jack on their flag or replace it with a silver fern. The results were announced Thursday.




The current flag has been the national symbol since 1902. It was up against a new design that was winnowed from more than 10,000 entries submitted by the public.


This design of a white fern with the Southern Cross constellation was chosen as the referendum winner going up against the existing flag. (New Zealand government)

Those advocating change argued the flag was a relic of the nation's colonial past and too similar to Australia's flag. Those favouring the status quo said the new design was uninspiring or an attempt by Prime Minister John Key to create a legacy.


New Zealand's flag will not change, voters there decide - World - CBC News
 

Blackleaf

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Oct 9, 2004
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I don't blame the good old New Zealanders. Their current flag with the Union Jack on it is by far the best, just as Canada's previous flag with the Union Jack on it is much better than the current one. The Canadians were daft to change it.

Which flags still include the union jack?

By Justin Parkinson
BBC News Magazine
24 March 2016


The New Zealand flag

New Zealanders have voted to keep the union jack in their national flag, despite calls for it to be replaced with a silver fern. But where else does the flag of the UK still feature around the world?

Red, white and blue. They're the colours of the present union jack, the flag the United Kingdom has presented to the world since 1801. It features the crosses of three patron saints - George (England), Andrew (Scotland) and Patrick (Ireland - although since 1922 only Northern Ireland has been part of the UK). Its official name is the union flag, but the BBC refers to it as the union jack, as per common parlance.

New Zealand, after much discussion of whether the union jack represents a legacy of colonialism, has voted to keep it in the top left-hand corner of its own flag. But several other countries, states and territories continue to feature it.


Australia

The best-known is probably Australia's, in use since 1901, with a slight modification in 1908. The union jack is above the "seven-pointed Commonwealth star" and to the side of the Southern Cross, a constellation of five stars that can be easily seen in the southern hemisphere. The country's six state flags have union jacks too.


Hawaii

More surprisingly, perhaps, Hawaii, the 50th state to join the United States, in 1959, also includes the union jack. This dates back to 1793, when British captain George Vancouver presented one (without the diagonal red cross of St Patrick, as this preceded the 1801 Act of Union between Great Britain and Ireland) to King Kamehameha I. The union jack flew as Hawaii's sole flag until 1816, when red, white and blue stripes were added. It has remained a part of the flag.

"It might seem strange, as Hawaii was never British," says Graham Bartram, chief vexillologist at the Flag Institute, "but it works as a symbol of friendship. What's interesting is that, when the union jack changed in 1801, so did the flag of Hawaii, even though there wasn't an official connection."


British Antarctic Territory (British Overseas Territory)

The flag of British Antarctic Territory consists of a union jack on a white background, reminiscent of snow, with a lion and a penguin on the crest.


Falkland Islands (British Overseas Territory)

The flag of the Falkland Islands features a union jack, alongside their coat of arms, showing a ram - symbolic of the local sheep industry - and the Desire, the ship whose crew were said to have discovered the islands in the 16th Century.


Cook Islands

The Cook Islands, a self-governing territory of New Zealand, has the union jack next to 15 stars representing the main islands of the group.


Saint Helena (part of the British Overseas Territory of Saint Helena, Ascension and Tristan da Cunha)

The flag of Saint Helena, in the mid-Atlantic, was commissioned in 1983 to commemorate 150 years as a Crown colony. Its union jack stands alongside a crest bearing a wirebird - the national bird - and a ship beside a rocky cliff.


Ascension Island (part of the British Overseas Territory of Saint Helena, Ascension and Tristan da Cunha)

Since 2013, Ascension Island has had its own flag, having previously flown the union flag alone on ceremonial occasions. The new design still incorporates it, but uses other symbols from the southern Atlantic British territory in its crest. These include three wideawake birds and two turtles.

Canada's national flag hasn't featured a union jack since 1965. But the flags of the provinces of Ontario, Manitoba and British Columbia do.


Tuvalu

Tuvalu, a tiny island nation in the south Pacific with Elizabeth II as its head of state, dropped the union jack from its flag in January 1996 but reinstated it 15 months later, after Bikenibeu Paeniu was elected prime minister. "It's the flag our people wanted in the first place," he said at the time. "The new flag was never taken to the people for their views. This is the respect for the fathers of our nation. The flag is our symbol, a symbol of our unity."


Fiji

Fiji
is currently debating Prime Minister Frank Bainimarama's plans to replace the current flag, featuring the union jack as part of its flag, amid considerable opposition.

It also forms part of the flags of these British Overseas Territories:

Bermuda...


Bermuda

The British Virgin Islands...


British Virgin Islands

The Cayman Islands...


Cayman Islands

Montserrat...


Montserrat

Pitcairn Islands...


Pitcairn Islands

Tristan da Cunha...


Tristan Da Cunha

And South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands.


South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands

"There's often a fundamental misunderstanding of flags by politicians," says Bartram. "It isn't the design but what it shows about their history and means to them. Saying you like a flag because of its design is like saying you like your family because they are all handsome or beautiful. You love them because of who they are, unconditionally. Flags are a bit like that."


Which flags still include the union jack? - BBC News