Better Together, Obviously.
The Council for New Zealand's Rightful Integration as Australia's Eighth State — working toward the administrative completion of Federation since 2019.
Three Pillars of Integration
Geographic Destiny
The Tasman Sea is 2,000 km wide. Bass Strait is 240 km. If the logic holds for Tasmania, it is merely a matter of scale for New Zealand. We are one continent, partially submerged.
Economic Inevitability
A combined economy of $1.95 trillion AUD would rank as the world's 12th largest — what Dr. Chen-Williams describes as "the world's 12th largest reason."
Cultural Continuity
Two nations that share a language, an ANZAC tradition, a love of rugby, a foundational debate about pavlova, and a common conviction that the other side is slightly too big for their boots.
Source: CNZRIAS Economic Division // Trans-Tasman Integration Index (TTII)
One Continent, Partially Submerged
New Zealand and Australia share the Indo-Australian Plate. They are, in the strict geological sense, part of the same landmass — the continent of Zealandia, 94% of which is submerged. The Tasman Sea is not a border. It is a flooded plain.
View the Cartographic GalleryWe are not two countries separated by an ocean. We are one continent, partially submerged, awaiting administrative recognition.
They Pointed at the Same Stars
Both Australia and New Zealand independently chose to feature the Southern Cross on their national flags. They looked up at the same sky and said: that is us. The flags are documentary evidence of a shared geographic identity that integration would merely formalise.
The West Island Initiative
We are aware of the West Island Initiative. We read their materials with great interest. We note that their central premise — that Australia and New Zealand constitute a single coherent geographic and cultural unit — is one we agree with entirely.
We simply differ on the org chart.
We wish them well, and look forward to welcoming them to the Council's mailing list in due course.