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NZCPR
Guest Forum
Mike
Butler
6
May 2012
Treaty
beliefs, in their own words
One
unchanging political reality is that review panels are set up
to get the outcomes of the interested party. I suggest that
the current constitutional advisory panel has been carefully
set up with focussed terms of reference, and carefully vetted
panel members, to achieve the Maori Party goal of ensuring
that the review gives effect to the treaty, and entrenching
separate Maori seats. Therefore, I did a search for quotes
from each panellist.
The
panel, launched on December 8, 2010, was a part of an
agreement between National and the special-interest Maori
Party in which the National Party agreed not to seek to remove
Maori seats without Maori voter consent, while the Maori Party
and the National Party agreed not to pursue entrenching the
Maori seats during the current term.(1) Part of the Maori
Party's 2011 election policy was to ensure the constitutional
review gives effect to the treaty.
The
panel is set up to consider: The size and length of terms of
parliament; whether terms should be fixed; the size and number
of electorates, including the method for calculating size;
electoral integrity legislation; Crown-Maori relationship
matters; the Maori electoral option, Maori electoral
participation, and Maori seats in parliament and local
government; the role of the Treaty of Waitangi within New
Zealand's constitutional arrangements; whether New Zealand
should have a written constitution; and Bill of Rights issues.
But
since one co-chair and five panelists are or were Maori
studies academics with vehement anti-colonialist views and
only two have legal backgrounds, it would appear that the
focus will be on Maori issues, especially the treaty. Here are
their views
Co-chair
Sir Tipene O'Regan:
"The
Treaty is the foundation of our polity and of the political
unit that is us."
"The
economy has been built on taking and dispossessing of Maori
assets, and after dispossession you are telling what the
problem of the dispossessed is. I have devoted myself to
regaining the dispossessed core capital."
"Letters
to the editor often talk about Maori having special rights
under Article 2, and the same rights as everyone else under
Article 3. Yes, Maori get a "double lick", and they
are entitled to it because that was the promise of the Treaty:
to Pakeha, the right to be here and the power of the state,
basically conveying cultural control." (2)
Deborah
Coddington:
"In
terms of financial wealth, Australia is financially better
off, but they could learn something from us in terms of
respecting tangata whenua. Yes, the English ripped off the
Maori, too, when it came to getting them to sign the Treaty of
Waitangi. Henry Williams deliberately mistranslated from Maori
to English to protect his land holdings, and numerous other
travesties were perpetrated."
"Last
week, Philip Ruddock, a former minister in John Howard's
government, gave one of the most contorted and convoluted
reasons I've seen for abolishing the Aboriginal and Torres
Strait Islander Commission. In essence, he should have just
come out and admitted he's a bigot and doesn't believe that
Australia's first people have a place in Australia's
constitution. Incredible as it may seem, Aborigines and Torres
Straits Islanders are still not included in Australia's
constitution. There's no reference to these people in the
country's founding document, more than 111 years after Queen
Victoria gave her assent to Australia's constitution in 1900,
despite the fact Australia supports the United Nations
Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous People." (3)
Hon
Dr Michael Cullen:
"So
if I am asked to say what is the place of the treaty in New
Zealand today, in one sense my answer is a simple one. It is
that it is a living document which provides an orderly
framework for the settlement of historical grievances and the
resolution of ongoing debates about the rights of the original
inhabitants and owners of the land."
"On
the issue of sovereignty I believe that it is pushing things
too far to argue that the chiefs willingly transferred what
the British at the time, and we today, would understand by the
term sovereignty. In a society based on tribal or sub-tribal
groups, with no national political, administrative, or legal
structures, it is hard to believe that could have been the
case."
"...
in the 19th century in particular, the treaty was breached
with monotonous regularity by New Zealand governments."
(4)
Dr
Leonie Pihama:
"The
treaty is "a crucial document which defines the
relationship between Maori and the Crown in New Zealand"
and which provides "a basis through which Maori may
critically analyse relationships, challenge the status-quo,
and affirm the Maori rights." (5)
"There
has been an ongoing challenge to the States denial of Te
Tiriti o Waitangi since its signing in 1840. There has been
active challenge to existing constitutional arrangements and
legal practices for generations. All of which have been denied
and marginalised by successive governments."(6)
Professor
Linda Tuhiwai Smith:
"Maori
believe that the principles of the treaty have been co-opted
by the government to
suit the government's agenda. The defining of the
terminology is central to our understanding of kaupapa Maori.
Who controls the definition of kaupapa Maori principles? Let
us rephrase the question - what are the principles, practices
and procedures of kaupapa pakeha? By doing this we see the
ethnocentricity of the question. This question rarely presents
itself because pakeha do not analyse or question their own
culture; it is considered the 'norm'. Historically Maori have
been positioned as the other to pakeha. The questions are
about naming, claiming and controlling. This is the story of
colonisation." (7)
Emeritus
Professor Ranginui Walker:
Walker
is a treasure trove of quotes since he is a prolific writer. A
clue to his beliefs may be seen in the titles of his books,
which include Perceptions
and Attitudes of the New Generation of Maoris to Pakeha
Domination, Liberating Maori from Educational Subjection, and Ka
Whawhai Tonu Matou / Struggle
Without End, the last line of which reads "(Maori)
know the sun has set on the empire that colonised them. They
know too it will set on the coloniser even if it takes a
thousand years. They will triumph in the end because they are
tangata whenua."
Co-chair
Prof John Burrows:
"Most
people think the Treaty of Waitangi must have constitutional
status." (8)
Peter
Tennent:
"It
is not going to be about 12 people sitting around a table, it
is trying to reflect the views and the aspirations of New
Zealanders." (9)
No
quotes could be found from doctoral student and Maori language
teacher Hinurewa Poutu, former Dunedin mayor and legal
consultant Peter Chin, former National Party Cabinet Minister
John Luxton, or broadcaster, former teacher and netball rep
Bernice Mene.
New
Zealand First leader Winston Peters refused to take part in
the review,
saying: "The Treaty of Waitangi will be the cornerstone
of any constitution designed by these people and it means that
every New Zealander will be subject to the irrational
psycho-legal-babble that surrounds the treaty's mythical
principles." (10)
I can confirm that I read much of this babble while searching
for quotes. Of concern is the fact that these Maori Studies
constitutional advisors claim to be speaking for Maori where
only O'Regan appears to be elected to represent a branch of
Ngai Tahu. Have they asked themselves whether the direction
they have chosen is going to benefit or actually disadvantage
the people they claim to represent, who appear mostly to not
care or have moved to the Gold Coast for a better life?
A review
into constitutional arrangements conducted in 2005 recommended
that parliament should designate a select committee to deal
with changes with constitutional implications as they arise,
provide accurate, neutral, and accessible public information,
and allow a generous amount of time to consider any particular
issue. That review concluded that there was no constitutional
crisis and the only people pushing for change were Maori
interests.
So, just
seven years later, without any urgent constitutional matters
arising demanding attention, there is a whole new
constitutional advisory panel that was set up on the bidding
of a special-interest political party -- the Maori Party.
I
suggest that enshrining the treaty, as currently interpreted
by the Waitangi Tribunal, in law, will entrench a two-tier
society with a privileged treaty class funded by every
taxpayer. This would be a recipe for resentment of the sort
that has led to armed conflict in other nations. A more
immediate problem is one the Key government will face when
this advisory panel comes up with recommendations, which could
be racially tilted, with a tough general election looming.
Sources:
1. Relationship
Accord and Confidence and Supply Agreement with the Maori
Party,
2. Modern
day developments within Maori society and the role of the
social policy agency as a provider of quality policy advice,
Income Maintenance Policy Division of the Social Policy Agency
seminar, April 22, 1993.
3. Race
relations drag lucky rival backwards,
4. Michael
Cullen: Anzac
Day harmony points way to Waitangi's future
5. http://www.rangahau.co.nz/research-idea/27/
6. Prison
Privatisation in Aotearoa,
7. Kaupapa
Maori Principles and Practices, Professor Linda Tuhiwai Smith
with Dr Papaarangi Reid,
8. Te
Papa constitutional review debate, February 2, 2012.
9. Tennent
to help shape NZ's future,
10. Peters
Rejects National/ Maori Party Constitutional "Sham",
March 2012.
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