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Dr Muriel Newman
Contact Muriel:
Email: muriel@nzcpr.com
Phone 09 4343 836
or 021 800 111
PO Box 984, Whangarei
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After
a year of operation, and hundreds of thousands of dollars
worth of spending of public money, most New Zealanders still
have no idea that a government review of our constitution is
underway.
Two recently held
Focus Groups confirmed that fact. A professional facilitator
guided discussion around a series of questions about the state
of race relations in New Zealand and the government’s
constitutional review. On the issue of race relations, the
groups were very well informed. They were emphatic that the
Treaty of Waitangi was no longer an historic symbol of
unification but had become a political weapon of division. The
Waitangi Tribunal was also seen as divisive and backwards
looking.
Overwhelmingly the groups supported the notion of equality
- New Zealand as a country where all people are treated as
equals, “If you are a citizen, you are a citizen, a Kiwi –
you should be treated the same”. And they emphasised that
New Zealand was no longer a society of two races, but a
country of many. They thought that while people should keep in
touch with their background culture and heritage, they should
be prepared to blend in and become Kiwis first and foremost.
Many saw
biculturalism as divisive, dangerous, and backwards looking
– segregating everyone on the basis of race was not the way
for a modern society to move forward.
One
immigrant mother told a story about how her daughter no longer
wanted to go to school, “All the Pacific Island and Maori
kids are ganging up on her because she’s the only white girl
in the class and they are saying they are going to kick her
out of the country. Now these are 12 and 13 year olds and they
are serious. And she’s saying she doesn’t want to live
here any more because she doesn’t feel at home, she
doesn’t feel she belongs …” Nowadays, racism is brown
against white.
They
felt it was time that the Maori seats and other symbols of a
bicultural past were abolished. New Zealand had evolved and
moved on – “one people, one race, one country”.
When it
came to the constitutional review, there was very little
awareness of it at all. The following statement was read out:
“The possible outcomes for this review could be a proposal
to place the principles of the Treaty of Waitangi in a written
constitution based on biculturalism. This would mean that all
Acts of Parliament would be tested against these principles
and the rights outlined in the Treaty would be able to be
enforced by Maori in a way that’s not possible at present.
In effect such power would legally enforce Waitangi Tribunal
decisions as well. The governance of New Zealand could be
radically changed”.
The response was deep concern. They felt a bicultural
constitution was asking for trouble. They worried that if it
protected Maori, then it would exclude everyone else, and they
asked, “Do Maori have more value than everyone else? It’s
making us different people when we are all one race and should
all be treated the same.”
They understood the present constitutional arrangements to be
working and were suspicious of what it was that the government
was trying to push through. They were fearful of what it might
mean for them and worried that it would speed up the exodus of
good Kiwis to Australia. They felt that any changes to the
constitution should not be decided by politicians but should
be put to a binding referendum of voters, “It shouldn’t be
left up to the politicians”. They wanted to know who the
people running the review were, and they wanted to know why it
was being undertaken at a time when everyone already had more
than enough to worry about. As one woman said, “they need to
listen to what New Zealand wants – what the majority wants
and put it into practice rather than say ‘we’ll do the
survey, we’ll listen to you all but at the end of the day
we’re going to make the decision for you!’”
They
have good cause to worry. The government’s
“consultation” process is a $4 million sham. The Maori
Party led review is engineered to deliver a predetermined
recommendation – a need to “modernise” our
constitutional arrangements by introducing a new written
constitution for New Zealand that recognises the Treaty as our
“founding” document.
The
implications of this are alarming and profound. A Treaty-based
constitution would enshrine Maori privilege, turning non-Maori
New Zealanders into second class citizens in their own land. A
new written constitution would give un-elected Judges supreme
power over our elected Members of Parliament, ensuring that no
future Parliament could ever remove the Treaty from our
constitution. New Zealand would forever be locked into a
future of separatism and racial division.
This
review is underway because the National Party agreed to it in
2008, when they signed their confidence and supply agreement
with the Maori Party. A Constitutional Advisory Panel
acceptable to the Maori Party was appointed by the Deputy
Prime Minister Bill English and the Minister of Maori Affairs
Pita Sharples in August 2011. Five of the 12-member panel are
Maori studies academics with vehement anti-colonialist views,
and seven are on record as saying they regard the Treaty of
Waitangi as New Zealand’s founding document.[1]
Although
budgets are tight across the public sector, over $4 million of
taxpayers’ money has been allocated to the panel for this
review. Their objective is to lead an “engagement process”
that delivers a final report to the government between
September and 14 December 2013 on New Zealanders’
perspectives on our constitutional arrangements. The report is
to include details of where reform is considered
“desirable”.
Maori
have been singled out as needing special segregated
consultation. Half of the $4 million budget has been earmarked
for that purpose. The end result will be a biased report that
will not reflect the views of the majority of New Zealanders.
This is exactly the same strategy used during the build up to
the foreshore and seabed law change. The whole process is an
absolute disgrace and should be discredited.
Professor
Martin Devlin, a member of our Independent Constitutional
Review Panel, examined the government’s engagement strategy
in detail. His scathing analysis was published as an NZCPR
guest commentary in September HERE.
In spite of their $4 million budget, the government’s
advisory panel has decided that the best way to “have a
conversation” with New Zealanders is not through open public
meetings, but through private meetings with carefully-selected
interest groups. Some of the groups approached have expressed
concern that by agreeing to become involved, their names will
be used by the Panel as “evidence” that they are
undertaking widespread consultation and have widespread
support. The groups named on the Panel’s website (HERE)
are:
Aotearoa, Education Institute, Employers and Manufacturers
Union, Ethnic People’s Advisory Panel, Federation of
Multicultural Council, Forest and Bird Protection Society,
GABA (Gay Auckland Business Association), Human Rights
Commission, Independent Maori Statutory Board, Kōhanga
Reo Trust, Local Government NZ, McGuinness Institute, Monarchy
NZ, Museum of New Zealand - Te Papa Tongarewa, National
Council of Women, National Urban Māori Authority, NZ Law
Society, Office of the Clerk, Pacific Peoples Advisory Panel,
PACIFICA, PPTA (Post Primary Teachers’ Association), PSA
(Public Service Association), Recreation Association,
Republican Movement of Aotearoa NZ, Royal NZ Foundation of the
Blind, Rugby Union (NZRU), Rural Women NZ, Society of Authors
(PEN NZ Inc), New Zealand Union of Students’ Associations,
Te Atakura Society for Conscientisation, Te Mana Ākonga
(National Māori Tertiary Students’ Association), Te Rūnanga
Nui o Ngā Kura Kaupapa Māori, Temple Sinai –
Wellington Progressive Jewish Congregation, Vice Chancellors -
Universities NZ, Young Nationals, Youth Law, Grey Power, Te
Hunga Roia Māori Māori Lawyers' & Law Students'
Association, Anglican Church, Collaborative for Research &
Training in Youth, Student Volunteer Army, Council of Social
Services (Christchurch), Waitangi Associates, Canterbury
Employers' Chamber of Commerce.
In
September the Advisory Panel released a 70 page
propaganda-filled document, New
Zealand’s constitution: the conversation so far.
Promoted as a “background” paper, to inform the public
about our existing constitutional arrangements, I asked this
week’s NZCPR Guest Commentator, Canterbury University law
lecturer David Round – the Chairman of our Independent
Constitutional Review Panel – to critique the report for
readers. He concludes that the
panel that wrote the report is little more than a spokesman
for further Maori privilege, that their report avoids
unpalatable facts and difficult questions, and that it
contains numerous examples of half-truths and racist political
positions to push the view that much greater legal authority
must be given to ‘Treaty principles’ to entrench a racial
minority in a position of perpetual privilege.
An example highlighted is on the role of the Treaty. “Here
things start to get really bad. This section, which claims to
be a summary of the present situation so as ‘to inform a
conversation about the future’, is subtitled ‘The Treaty
of Waitangi in Our Constitution’. This of itself is
misleading. The Treaty is not part of our constitution. The
panel claims that the Treaty has an ‘accepted position as
the founding document of New Zealand’. At a legal level,
this is simply untrue. The Treaty, as every judge still says,
has no legal status. It is, of itself, not part of our law…
Yet anyone reading this section would naturally assume from
this description as our ‘founding document’ that it was
the legal foundation of our state. Not to spell this out
carefully is, putting the best interpretation upon it,
negligent ~ and since it is impossible to believe that this
document was not extremely carefully written, we must suspect
that it is deceitful.”
In his report, David reminds us that, “This whole inquiry is
a concession to the Maori Party. This is radical Maori’s big
chance. If they pull this one off, they will have won. They
will be on top forever, the rest of us ~ those who have not
decided to flee to Australia ~ helots in our own land.”
His
statement, “This is radical Maori’s big chance. If they
pull this one off, they will have won. They will be on top
forever, the rest of us helots in our own land” says it all.
That’s what this battle is all about. Constitutional power
and the right to the co-governance of New Zealand is what the
Maori elite have been seeking all along. Thanks to National,
it is now within their grasp. Unless this review is
discredited as a political power grab by the Maori sovereignty
movement, New Zealand stands in a position of grave risk.
David
ends his report with this. “A lady recently sent me a news
item reporting that Peter Sharples, the leader of the Maori
Party and Minister of Maori Affairs, wanted to see more
teaching of ‘Maori history’ in schools. The lady commented
‘They never stop pushing, do they?’ No, they never do stop
pushing, and that is why they are succeeding. That is why we
are on the back foot; because we sit quietly and comfortably
at home while the rabble-rousers are imbuing their following -
both the no-hopers and the young flash ones who are doing very
well - with a sense of perpetual grievance.” You can read
David’s comprehensive report HERE.
If
you want this gravy train to stop, we need your help. Stand up
for New Zealand – for our future by signing the Declaration
of Equality HERE.
Send David Round’s statement from the beginning of this
newsletter to your contacts and urge them to take a stand and
sign the Declaration. Volunteer your skills and energy HERE.
Donate to our public information campaign HERE
so we can inform our fellow citizens of the danger that lies
ahead. And start holding your Members of Parliament to account
– their contact
details are HERE.
This nightmare is only happening because National is allowing
it to. How far will they go? Do National MPs really understand
the underlying agenda? Do they realise that the Maori
Party’s plan is to usurp the sovereignty of Parliament and
that un-elected judges would be in control? Do they realise
that a Treaty-based constitution would require Maori to have a
binding say on every single law that goes through Parliament?
Do they realise that they too are being manipulated and that
if the future of our country is to be protected, they too must
take a stand? And what do opposition MPs think? Will any of
them support the majority of New Zealanders who just want us
all to be equals?
This
week’s poll asks: Do you approve of $4 million of your tax money
being spent on the Maori Party’s constitutional review? Click here for poll >>>
Footnotes
1.Mike
Butler, Treaty
beliefs in their own words.
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