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Opinion piece by Sir Bob Jones
1 November 08
Maori
seats give unwarranted influence based on race
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I
dislike the Maori seats, which are both racist and
undemocratic. Introduced as a short-term measure, they should
have been abandoned decades ago.
Why not allocate Asian, left-handers, Pacific Islanders or
even homosexuals special seats.
Anyone's
at liberty to start a left-handers' or Asian party, but there
would be great indignation were they to be automatically
guaranteed seats in the House, a privilege currently accorded
Maori. If an argument could ever have been made for Maori
seats, which is questionable, then it has long since gone.
That they exist is due to MMP, which allowed the successful
creation of the Maori Party while letting Maori voters follow
tradition and favour Labour with their party vote. Lacking
that advantageous MMP factor plus his general ineptitude is
why Mat Rata failed with his attempt to create a Maori party.
Polls
suggest the election will be decided by the Maori Party which
will thus find itself gifted with a grossly unfair and
disproportionate influence.
Will
it behave responsibly? The answer is an unequivocal yes, at
least under the current leadership of Tariana Turia and Pita
Sharples, who are justifiably two of Parliament's most
respected members. But Turia is odds-on to pull stumps in
three years time and who can blame her? She is a dignified
woman who finds much of the current political conduct
distasteful. And what if Sharples is hit by the proverbial
bus, or gives up in despair as he hinted at recently?
While
both have occasionally spouted nonsense it must be said
they've done this a damn sight less often than the vast
majority of MPs. Sharples showed himself to be a truly
honourable member in revealing the disgraceful overtures of
Maori Affairs Minister Parekura Horomia to influence the
Privileges Committee decision on Peters, solely on the basis
of Winston's race. The committee is a judicial institution and
making its findings is not the equivalent of lobbying over
planned legislation. On television, Sharples mused about his
ongoing durability as a parliamentarian in being obliged to
tolerate the unprecedented climate of corruption and
immorality which so characterises the current government's
third term. He's not alone. I know of another extremely
prominent Opposition politician who has contemplated chucking
it because of the culture of mendacity that has evolved in
recent years.
The
Maori Party lists only three policy objectives on its website.
All are an outrage and will never happen, at least not without
causing a revolution.
The
first is to take ownership of the foreshore and seabed, the
absurd claim which spawned the Maori Party and which brought
about a properly bold response from the Government. The
expressed tenuous grounds for this claim apply equally to
claiming the air we all breathe.
The
other two stated objectives are to allow Maori to retire (and
presumably claim superannuation) at 60 while non-Maori wait
until 65, and finally, unspecified special tax advantages,
solely for Maori.
In
essence these goals amount to an assertion that Maori are
entitled to special privileges solely by dint of their race
and presumably because they settled here first. On that
rationale all recent immigrants to New Zealand should pay
higher tax rates and qualify for super when they're 90.
Turia
and Sharples are much better than that. They should rewrite
their party's objectives to a broad aim of overcoming Maori
underperformance which appears to be their real concern, and
scrub forever, divisive race- based favouritism as their
party's ambitions.
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