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David
Round
David
Round teaches law at the University of Canterbury and is author of
"Truth or Treaty? Commonsense Questions about the Treaty of
Waitangi".
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NZCPR
Guest Forum
A
Slippery Slope to Ruin
David
Round
18 September 2011
For
some years I taught constitutional law at the University of
Canterbury. I was also a debater, in those days when debating
was a more popular activity than it is now ~ and it would
happen, from time to time, when I appeared to speak in a
debate, that the chairman, in introducing me, would tell the
audience that I was a remarkable man, because (among other
things) I lectured in constitutional law, and this in a
country that did not possess a constitution! I would smile
politely at this merry jest and pass on to the subject of my
discourse.
But
now I shall explain. New Zealand may not possess a single
grand document like the document ~ actually the collection of
documents ~ which the United States has, for example, and
which can be pointed to and read as ‘the Constitution’.
But of course we have a constitution. Every organised state
has one, and simply has to have one.
Every incorporated society has one, and has to have
one. Every group, incorporated or not, every sports club and
trust and residents’ association ~ every organisation has a
constitution, and has to have one. That is what
‘organisation’ means. A constitution is simply the
collection of rules by which a group is organised
~ the way in which it is constituted
or made up. That is all. New Zealand’s constitution is the
body of rules which describe and prescribe how we run our
affairs ~ how laws and executive decisions are made, how we
are taxed and how taxes are spent, how we decide disputes, how
we select and replace the people who do these things, and so
on. In New Zealand, as in England, there is no one document
that can be pointed to as ‘the constitution’, but that
does not mean we do not have one. We cannot, unlike many other
countries, draw a precise line between what is
‘constitutional law’ and what is just ordinary law ~ those
laws which we think of as typically ‘constitutional’ are
to be found in all sorts of places ~ but of course we have a
constitution. If we did not, we would not have an organised
society.
Sometimes
people speak of ‘written’ constitutions (the United States
sort) and ‘unwritten’ constitutions, such as our own. But
this is a little misleading, because all our constitutional
law is certain, and it is all written down somewhere. It may
not be on one single piece of paper, but it is still written.
It is to be found in Acts of Parliament, in the principles of
the common law as declared over the centuries by judges, in
the royal prerogative (part of the common law) and in the
‘conventions’ ~ the ‘agreed understandings’ of what is
to be done. We do now have the rudimentary beginnings of a
written constitution, however ~ in 1986, prompted by Mr (now
Sir) Geoffrey Palmer, our Parliament made the Constitution
Act, which collects together a number of very basic
provisions. It is not controversial ~ it merely speaks of the
Sovereign, the exercise of the royal prerogative by the
Governor-General, Ministers of the Crown and Parliamentary
under-secretaries, the House of Representatives and the
Speaker, the full power of Parliament to make laws, the
protection of judges from removal from office, and such like.
In 1990 Parliament also made the New Zealand Bill of Rights
Act ~ a somewhat stupid name, for reasons which, forgive me, I
do not have time to explain at this very moment ~ which states
certain rights which we all have, ‘subject to such limits as
are justified in a free and democratic society’. But neither
of those Acts of Parliament is a ‘higher law’. In the
United States of America, as we are all aware, the
Constitution is a higher law. It is ‘entrenched’ ~ that is
to say, it cannot be altered as other laws are altered, but
only in a special and complex and difficult way. And it is
also the supreme law against which all other laws are to be
judged and, if necessary, found wanting. The American courts
have the power to declare laws invalid if they conflict with
the constitution ~ if they conflict, to put it more
accurately, with the judges’ interpretation of what those
eighteenth century documents prescribe. And judgments,
therefore ~ especially of the higher courts, especially the
Supreme Court ~ can often take on a highly political quality.
The authors of the Constitution nowhere mention, and never
thought about, issues such as abortion, racial segregation and
affirmative action, gay rights or donations to political
candidates and parties. Such issues are, in any case,
political and moral and philosophical issues, where judges
have absolutely no special expertise qualifying them to make
better decisions than anyone else. When judges decide
arguments over fierce modern issues matters according to the
words or intention of the constitution, they are in fact free
to make law. This is why there is such great interest in the
membership of the Supreme Court, and in its decisions ~
because many decisions are not narrowly ‘legal’ decisions,
as we might think, but very political ones. It is for this
reason also that nominees to the United States Supreme Court
must undergo an examination by a committee of the Senate. When
judges are able to some considerable extent to act as
politicians, it is only reasonable that they be examined as to
their political alignments as well as their more strictly
judicial record.
Now
by this point I am beginning to get ahead of myself, and so I
must take a breath and tell you where I am going. At the end
of last year the Deputy Prime Minister, Mr Bill English, and
the Minister of Maori Affairs, Dr Peter Sharples, announced a
far-reaching review of New Zealand’s constitutional
arrangements. I would not blame you if the announcement ~ and
a later announcement, just a month ago, of the membership of
the ‘Independent Advisory Panel’ ~ had slipped under your
radar. I do not recall much, if any, publicity at the time.
(Indeed, at morning tea this very week I mentioned the review
to several of my colleagues in the Law School, and a couple of
them had not heard of it either.) The review is, fortunately,
to be a reasonably leisurely one ~ the advisory panel’s
final report is only due in September 2013, and final
decisions will be made thereafter by Parliament ~ and so there
will be plenty of time for us to think about the issues and
make our views known. It is absolutely vital that we do. The
issue of our constitutional arrangements is more important
than anything else that we have argued about over the last
twenty years. It is more important than any Treaty settlement,
more important than the foreshore and seabed or the United
Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, more
important than anything.
Constitutions deal with power, with who exercises it and
according to what rules. Everything that has been done in the
last twenty years by way of dealing with Maori issues has been
done according to the constitutional rules we have grown up
with, absorbed with our mothers’ milk and know without even
thinking about. The results, we might say, have been bad
enough. But if our constitution is changed, then decisions
will be made in different ways in future, and by different
people. Past decisions may certainly be less than
satisfactory, but that is our fault, for not having been firm
enough ~ but past decisions will be nothing compared with
future decisions which will be made under much more Maori
influence. The almost inevitable consequence of any changes
made by this review will be a transfer of power from those who
have it now to other people. That will mean, in fact, a change
from our present equality to a regime of inequality. (Bear in
mind, also, that once these particular constitutional changes
are made, it will be easier for the newly-empowered to push
through further changes in future.)
At
present, ultimately, power rests with the people, and all the
people enjoy equal political rights. Parliament is supreme,
and we elect parliaments. ‘The English constitution,’ a
nineteenth century Englishman said, ‘is a majority of one in
the House of Commons’. With that majority ~ and we have only
one house in this country ~ a parliament can make any laws it
pleases, and support any Ministry it pleases. Occasionally,
certainly, some people worry about this, and wonder if there
should not be ‘safeguards’ of some sort to prevent
parliaments from being too hasty or dictatorial. In principle
there is something to be said for this, although the need has
not been as pressing since MMP was introduced. But in our
present situation, the remedy will be worse than the disease.
And
what is our present situation? Well, we know it only too well,
but let me remind you. This review was promised to the Maori
Party by the National Party as part of its coalition deal
after the 2008 election. It is not prompted by any failings in
our constitution (other than some perceived failing to give
Maori more power than they possess now). It is prompted
entirely by Maori ambitions, and Maori are already preparing
their complaints and demands for new constitutional forms.
What is more, the terms of reference of the Independent
Advisory Panel are already declared to be to ‘seek the views
of all New Zealanders…in
ways that reflect the Treaty relationship’ and ‘in
ways that reflect the
partnership model and are responsive to Maori consultation
preferences’. One might almost conclude that the Panel’s
conclusions are already to be found in its instructions.
The
Panel is of a remarkable racial composition. Its co-chairs are
the respected former professor of law (and my old colleague)
John Burrows, now a Law Commissioner, and Sir Tipene
O’Regan. It has five European members, five Maori members,
one New Zealander of Pacific Island extraction and one of
Asian descent. Among the five Maori members are Professor
Ranginui Walker, known to readers of this column, and
certainly someone who will be very vigorously pursuing
privileges for members of one of his ancestral races. I am
afraid to say that several of the Panel’s other Maori
members seem to my perhaps jaundiced eye to be capable, at
least, of being readier to pursue selfish racial interests
than the common good. Forgive my presumption. Certainly, many
of the people appearing before the Panel will be pressing for
racial privilege in a new constitution. I do not envy John
Burrows his task.
Our
present situation is such, then, that unless poor old
longsuffering New Zealanders kick up the most IMMENSE stink,
the almost inevitable direction of any proposed constitutional
change will be towards further racial division and Maori
privilege. And once such privilege is in place, then our
continued racial division, and our poverty and accelerated
decline as a nation, is inevitable.
Once
power is transferred from those who have it at present, the
newly powerful will not give it back. If our constitution is
altered in the way in which it looks as though it may well be
altered ~ that is to say, to give more power to one particular
racial minority, and (by a written constitution, which will
thereafter have to be interpreted by judges) to give power to
unelected and unaccountable supporters of the Maori cause in
the higher judiciary ~ then we are on an irrevocable slippery
slope to ruin. I mean this seriously. If what the Maori Party
and its friends desire by way of constitutional change comes
to pass, then this once lovely little country of ours will be
irrevocably stuffed. More things will happen, of the sort that
we have deplored over the last twenty years, and worse, and we
will have less and less ability than we seem to have even now
to stop them. Yes, it does seem strange that
‘reform’ should lead to a loss of power by the
people, but that is what will inevitably happen. Our laws now
recognise the equality of all citizens. Let me repeat, the
forthcoming constitutional review is not prompted by any
failure of our constitution, which is working perfectly well,
and without any problems at all. (The only possible exception
to that remark might be in relation to our voting system,
where some might wish to replace the present MMP system with
either the former first-past-the-post system or some entirely
new one ~ but voting systems are not a part of the review,
being dealt with by a referendum at the time of this year’s
general election and possibly another referendum later.) This
review has been established, not because of any failure in our
constitution, but simply because the National Party promised
it to the Maori Party. It is entirely prompted by Maori
demands ~ it has no other justification. Maori are already
starting to agitate, to demand the ‘justice’ which our
present constitutional arrangements evidently deny them. They
seek greater power. They will not exercise it for the common
good, but in their own interests. National’s behaviour over
the foreshore and seabed provides abundant evidence that the
Party’s senior figures are perfectly ready to sell their own
fellow-citizens down the river for the sake of their own
short-term political advantage. They did it then, and there is
no obvious reason why they will not do it again. Any change in
our constitutional arrangements to grant more rights to Maori
must inevitable be a change away from our present equality,
and that must mean, inevitably, a change towards inequality.
As Maori obtain more rights, so the rest of us must lose some.
Nor
must you imagine that such changes will be opposed by many
enlightened liberal defenders of the human spirit. For a
generation, at least, much of New Zealand’s liberal
‘intelligentsia’ has been profoundly illiberal. Democracy
is very much yesterday’s idea. The majority of the people
are ~ so ordinary,
my dear ~ simply so
unexciting~ so dull ~ so worthy of nothing more than being
completely ignored, while we pursue the latest new fashions in
ethnic and multicultural chic.
Darling, David Round is just so mediaeval.
I have given many examples in the past in these columns of the
way in which our reasonable and widely-shared views are
instantly dismissed out of hand by the enlightened as not
worthy of a second’s consideration, and I see no reason why
their attitudes should not continue. No ~ I doubt that we will
get much help from our intellectual leaders, who on the whole
think that the Treaty is just a simply marvellous
idea. We are on our own.
But
there is hope, although, like the cavalry, it may arrive only
at the eleventh hour. For most of our history, certainly,
until liberty and democracy were achieved, and until we could
therefore take them for granted and be anaesthetised by home
comforts and tawdry luxuries, our constitution has been a
matter of burning concern. Constitutional development has
indeed been one of the great themes of English history. From
Magna Carta’s sturdy assertion of established rights against
the encroachments of bad King John, through the tumults of the
Middle Ages, the despotism of the Tudors, the great resistance
of the seventeenth century (when the people sent one king to
the scaffold and another to end his days in gloomy exile in
France) ~ through all of this to the gradual establishment of
Ministerial responsibility and parliamentary government under
the Hanoverians and a
constitutional monarchy under Victoria, the great concern of
the Crown’s free subjects was the assertion and maintenance
of their ancient liberties. This is why our hearts beat faster
at the mention of those heroic days and deeds and documents.
Our hearts stir at the assertion of liberty in the American
Declaration of Independence, and in the lesser-known but
magnificent Declaration of Arbroath whereby the Scots,
fighting against the English Edward, declared that ‘it is in
truth not for glory, nor riches, nor honour that we are
fighting but for freedom ~ for that alone, which no honest man
gives up but with his life itself’.
‘Freedom’!
Think of that! Freedom! What might that be now, exactly?
Set
against that magnificent background, this present review seems
to be an utter betrayal of the human spirit. Its
instigators’ purpose is not freedom, not the greater good ~
not even the shallow lure of economic prosperity, not that
that isn’t handy ~ but special ‘rights’ for a racial
minority. Their purpose is to bind the non-Maori population of
this country hand and foot and turn them over to a racist
constitutional regime in which they have far more power than
they deserve. Apartheid as improvement. We would laugh out
loud at the suggestion that granting more power to farmers,
say, or manufacturers, or trade unions or the poor or the
elderly, would lead to anything but their stronger pursuing of
their own interests ~ yet somehow our rulers manage to suspend
disbelief and assume that the inevitable consequence of
enlarging Maori influence on our constitution will be the
greater good. Equally bizarrely, they seem to think that we
will not notice that such ideas are not consistent with our
own understanding of our ancient rights and liberties.
The
conclusion I am forced to, then, is that whatever the outcome
of this review, it will only engender further bitterness and
division. If Maori get what they want, then we shall be angry
in future for ever. If they do not get what they want ~ if we
manage to hold the line ~ well, that will be good, but they
will be disappointed, and they will be angry forever in
future, because they will consider themselves deprived of what
they are (somehow) entitled to. And absolutely everyone will
of course have become agitated and concerned during the
debate. The entire exercise seems to me to be doomed to an
unfortunate outcome, regardless of what precisely happens.)
Doubtless
different Maori will come up with different suggestions as to
how New Zealanders’ alleged obligations under the Treaty
might be implemented. In recent years some have suggested a
separate Maori House of Parliament, whose consent would be
necessary to laws. Such a proposal would mean that the vote of
a European New Zealander would not be worth as much as that of
a Maori ~ for the 15% or so of the Maori population would have
as much say as the 85% non-Maori. It would also be a guarantee
of blackmail demands for ever. It would also mean, of course,
a thorough racial classification of everyone in the country to
ascertain whom they should be voting for and what their rights
were. And then here we’d be, back in Nazi Germany.
(Some
elections ago, by the way, the Green Party had a policy of
separate and equal Maori and European Houses of Parliament.
Perhaps they will tell us if they still have that policy, but
they certainly used to.)
Possibly
likelier, but equally disastrous, would be the elevation of
the principles of the Treaty to some form of ‘higher law’.
If we were to adopt a written constitution then it would be
very surprising indeed if it did not begin with some
acknowledgement of the Treaty and its principles, and thereby
give judges the opportunity to strike down laws made by
Parliament on the ground that they offended against Treaty
principles. This is not far-fetched. Our present Chief Justice
~ one Treaty claimant described her at the time of her
appointment as Maoridom’s ‘best weapon’, although we
would readily concede she is not entirely responsible for what
other people say about her ~ has already publicly stated that
she considers herself legally entitled to strike down Acts of
Parliament right now if they offend against her interpretation
of Treaty principles. She has not been the only judge to voice
that opinion. This would be the overturning of centuries of
absolutely fundamental constitutional law and democratic
principle. She considers herself to be entitled to strike down
the laws of this country, decided by democratically-elected
Parliaments, if she thinks that ‘Treaty principles”
justify it. These are the words of a would-be dictator. As I
may have said before, for a judge to do that would be as much
a coup d’etat
as if armed men entered Parliament and drove the Members out
at gunpoint. It is as much treason as Guy Fawkes’ plans
(worse, in fact, for it seems that he may very possible have
been framed!) She has already demonstrated her readiness to
overturn long-established law and embark on disgraceful
political adventures when she and her fellows in the Court of
Appeal made the 2003 Ngati
Apa decision on the foreshore and seabed which has already
brought so much anger and division to this country and will
continue to do so. That decision was a deliberate political
choice. If we get a written constitution, however, we will
inevitably be handing more power over to its interpreters ~
some of whom will be people like her.
Treaty
principles, as I hope I have explained sufficiently in the
past, are such vague platitudes, pulling in different
directions, that they can be used to justify about any
decision any judge might ever want to reach. If we should ever
be unlucky enough to have the Treaty or its principles
inserted into our constitution as some special standard with
which legislation must comply, then judges will forever after
be entitled to strike down any law, any decision on the ground
that it offended against Treaty ‘principles’. The Maori
Council has already argued, for example, that it is a breach
of ‘Treaty principles’ if Maori do not receive
preferential treatment in the allocation of limited medical
services, such as kidney dialysis ~ this because old people
(with kidney disease) are ‘taonga’, guaranteed by the
Treaty. By the same token, young and middle-aged Maori people are
probably taonga also. So if our constitution says that the
Treaty and its principles have some special status ~ a
reasonable prospect if we get a written constitution ~ and if
some judge swallows this argument, also surely a reasonable
possibility ~ then hey presto, Maori enjoy better access to
health care for ever than anyone else. We pay the taxes, they
use the services. And so it could be with any aspect of
government. One could easily imagine that a taxation law, say,
could be struck down because Maori can’t afford it as much
as anyone else, and therefore it’s oppressive ~ or there
might be a declaration that Treaty principles require the
Maori language to be taught in all schools, or that the whole
country be bilingual, or that more money be allocated to Maori
television, or Maori education, or that the Department of
Conservation give Maori special rights (the judges have begun
to head down this track already), or that the Treaty requires
that more rateds money be spent in Maori communities, or that
they should have 50:50 representation on local bodies….The
possibilities are endless. And there are judges who will enjoy
nothing more than making lofty holier-than-thou pronouncements
of principle with disastrous consequences and then handing it
over to others to attempt to clean up the mess. Examples may
be found in some decisions on Treaty principles in the last
twenty-four years.
In
the light of our present political situation, then, I cannot
but think that just about any constitutional reform which is
likely to ensue from this current review is going to be bad
for this country and its people. Our attitude should most
certainly be one of caution ~ indeed, of cynicism. My own
family has a saying, a famous remark by a great-great
uncle of mine ~ also a lawyer, as it happened ~ who used to
say, ‘If you trust anyone, you’re simple’. A little
cynical, perhaps, but also wise. And this is the principle of
all democracy. We won’t trust other people, thank you very
much ~ we’ll be in charge ourselves. We won’t hand care
for ourselves over to the state, or to another race, or to
judges. No thank you. Right now, we’re in charge, and we
want things to stay that way.
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