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How a cookie tin lottery at New Zealand’s Parliament helps decide what becomes law

WELLINGTON, New Zealand (AP) 鈥 Under the scrutiny of a black-robed official and before a hushed audience, a decorative cookie tin rattles like a bingo drum. Inside: the future of New Zealand 鈥檚 laws.

3 min read
How a cookie tin lottery at New Zealand's Parliament helps decide what becomes law

The decorative cookie tin, known in New Zealand as the biscuit tin, which was purchased from a department store in the early 1990s to draw lawmakers’ bills from and remains in use, at Parliament in Wellington, New Zealand, Thursday, May 22, 2025. (AP Photo/Charlotte Graham-McLay)


WELLINGTON, New Zealand (AP) 鈥 Under the scrutiny of a black-robed official and before a hushed audience, a decorative cookie tin rattles like a bingo drum. Inside: the future of New Zealand 鈥檚 laws.

The ceremonial lottery at , where bills are drawn randomly from what鈥檚 known as 鈥渢he biscuit tin鈥 in local parlance, is a way to ensure every New Zealand legislator has the chance to advance a proposed law, no matter how unpopular their bid. When a rare empty slot opens on Parliament鈥檚 agenda, the battered metal cookie tin is produced from a glass case and its solemn and silly rite is hastily arranged.

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