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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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In a recent editorial on his Newstalk ZB Breakfast
Show, Mike Hosking made the point that in spite of paying out
billions of
dollars in settling claims and giving numerous apologies over
a 30 year period, Treaty of Waitangi grievances are showing no
sign of ending. He called the Waitangi Tribunal a circus and
the whole process a farce, saying that the public are
completely sick of it all.
But he also raised another important point. In response to new
claims by Ngapuhi that they did not cede sovereignty to the
Crown, he said, “This Ngapuhi report… has raised more
questions than it’s answered due largely to the fact that
when you ask the questions (as we tried to on the programme
yesterday) the answers either weren’t forthcoming or if they
were you didn't have a clue what they meant… So they didn't
give authority to the Crown. What does that mean - they run
the country? They’re the Government, they can make the
rules, they don't answer to our laws. What’s been the point
of all this? What’s been the point of any of this?”[1]
As Mike found, the elite groups who are pursuing the Maori
sovereignty agenda are almost impossible to pin down. They
avoid addressing the issues, knowing if they did the public
backlash against their power grab would crush any hope they
ever had of achieving their goal. So instead, they are playing
a long and careful game – extortion by a thousand small
demands.
As each month passes, there are new rights, new privileges,
new funding, new settlements - all in a relentless incremental
transfer of money, power and public resources that goes
largely unnoticed by most New Zealanders, who are too busy
getting on with their own lives. However, some New
Zealanders (especially those associated with the NZCPR) do
notice, because we have come to realise that this is all part
of a much larger agenda – a drive for the co-governance of
New Zealand. How to alert a largely passive public, who are
blindingly oblivious to the danger, will be our major
challenge next year.
Let’s look at the bigger picture: the Maori Party’s plan.
They are using the $4 million taxpayer-funded constitutional
review to impose a bicultural constitution on New Zealand.
They have hand-picked an Advisory Panel that next year - as a
result of a ‘by-invitation-only’ consultation process -
will report to the government that New Zealanders are in
favour of a ‘new’ written constitution that enshrines the
Treaty of Waitangi. They will make recommendations to that
effect.
Having received their report the National Party, desperate to
keep the Maori Party on side, will set up a new working group
to further investigate the issue and draft legislation. After
further, largely Maori-only consultation, a bill will be
tabled, which, with majority cross-party support, will be
quietly passed by Parliament and a new bicultural constitution
will be imposed on a largely unsuspecting nation.
So what would a bicultural constitution mean?
At the present time, New Zealand has a written constitution
that has been described as one of the most successful in the
world.[2] Rather than being found in one document, our
constitution consists of a collection of statutes,
conventions, and common law rights that together set out the
basic rules by which our country is governed. This makes our
constitution extremely flexible – changing the constitution
involves simply changing the specific law. For instance, if
New Zealanders decide that under MMP Maori are now
over-represented in Parliament and that race-based Maori seats
are no longer needed, they could be removed by simply
repealing three main clauses in the Electoral Act. Similarly,
if the public believes the race-based Maori Statutory Board is
undermining local democracy in Auckland and should be
abolished, that would involve repealing Part 7 of the Local
Government (Auckland City) Act. If the public concludes that
the Waitangi Tribunal has outlived its usefulness and should
be abolished, then the 1975 Treaty of Waitangi Act would need
to be repealed.
Under our constitutional arrangements, New Zealand has one of
the strongest parliamentary democracies in the world, since
the ultimate law-making power is held by elected Members of
Parliament who can be sacked if they lose the confidence of
voters.
Those calling for a new “written” constitution want to
transfer that ultimate law-making power from our elected
representatives to unelected judges - who cannot be sacked. By
re-drafting our constitutional arrangements into a single
document, lawyers and judges would be put in charge of
law-making in New Zealand and if our elected Members of
Parliament tried to change this arrangement, their attempts
would be struck out as being “unconstitutional”.
Any New Zealander who talks about the need for a new
“written” constitution to fix problems that they
perceive exist within our present constitutional arrangements
should consider the implications very carefully. They need to
ask themselves who they want to be in charge of law-making in
New Zealand – elected Members of Parliament or unelected
judges? If they believe Parliamentary democracy is one of New
Zealand’s cornerstone institutions that should be protected,
then they should join us in strongly rejecting the call by the
supporters of biculturalism for a new “written”
constitution. Instead they should argue for change through the
repeal of race-based laws, the strengthening of the Bill of
Rights, or the amending of specific legislation that is the
source of their frustration.
While it is vividly clear that a new written constitution
would undermine our Parliamentary democracy, less clear are
the implications of incorporating the Treaty of Waitangi into
a new written constitution.
I asked this week’s NZCPR Guest Commentator, David Round, a
lecturer in law at Canterbury University and the Chairman of
our Independent Constitutional Review Panel to outline for us
what he thinks a new bicultural constitution could look like.
Using a model produced by former Prime Minister Geoffrey
Palmer, he has outlined 24 different ways in which Maori would
gain superior preferential treatment over all other New
Zealanders.
But as he notes, this is just a start. The crucial point is
the fabricated notion being pushed by Treaty activists that
they have superior rights over everyone else. New Zealand
would turn into a country where race is the single most
important determinant of a person’s future - controlling
whether they were part of the ruling class, or a second class
citizen.
“The Treaty, our politically active judges already tell us,
involves some idea of partnership. Never mind that the Treaty
actually says that the Queen is to be sovereign over all ~ by
some strange legal alchemy, clever judges have transmuted this
into its very opposite. This is now regularly
interpreted to mean a partnership of equals. Maori are not to
be subject to the Crown, but are to be its partner. This
partnership is a fundamental subversion of democracy. Special
reserved Maori seats on local bodies, and even in parliament
itself, are just the start. Maori are claiming now that their
involvement in decision making should not be on the basis of
one person one vote, but instead on 50:50 representation. Some
are already clamouring for a separate Maori house of
parliament whose consent would be required for any laws.
Imagine dealing with that! But they all seem to be united in
expecting representation well in excess of what their
proportion of the population would entitle them to. That is
what they have on the official Constitutional Advisory panel~
five Maori and five European New Zealanders. That is what they
are demanding in their new proposals for ‘co-governance’
in the Hauraki Gulf Forum ~ equal numbers to all other
interests combined. That is what they will be seeking
everywhere; and once they have got this 50:50 representation,
then they form an unassailable voting bloc. Then we will be
forever at their mercy. And given what foolish judges have
already said about partnership, it is entirely possible that
Maori Treaty rights under a new constitution will give them
this equal 50:50 representation.”
If you share our deep concerns about these developments, then
I urge you to read David’s full article HERE.
Don’t leave yourself in the dark – become informed and see
the ambush that awaits us in 2013. These radicals need to be
exposed and stopped, but that will only happen if the passive
and silent majority find their voice.
Back in 1995, the editor of the left-leaning New Zealand
Political Review magazine, Chris Trotter, faced the same
problem of trying to find out what a bicultural constitution
might look like: “Talked about by many, explained by few,
Maori Sovereignty – and its implications for our future -
remains frustratingly vague”. As a result, he had a go at
writing one himself. In his article The Constitution of
Sovereignty, he created a revolutionary scenario as the
context from which “to give the promises of the Treaty of
Waitangi concrete expression”. He did this because, “It is
almost inconceivable that Pakeha New Zealanders would
surrender their dominant position in this society without a
fight”. [Chris’s full article can be read HERE]
Today, the truth is very different - while most New Zealanders
remain oblivious to any real threat, the radicals with their
extremist vision of restoring the country back to Maori rule,
are in the ascendancy. At the rate we are going, Chris
Trotter’s dreadful depiction of a bicultural Aoteoroa could
be achieved almost without a word of complaint, much less the
fight he had predicted. Following are some extracts from
Chris’s article.
“The First Article of the new constitution is devoted to the
principle of Maori Sovereignty. Aotearoa is declared to be the
birthright of the tangata whenua and the stewardship of its
lands, forests and fisheries is irrevocably vested in the
Maori nation.
“The Second Article recognises the Pakeha as the ‘People
of the Treaty of Waitangi’ whose right to live alongside the
tangata whenua was recognised in 1840. That right is
reaffirmed by their agreement to establish a Republic in which
the governance of Aoteoroa-New Zealand is vested equally in
the Maori-Pakeha peoples.
“The Third Article sets forth the mechanism for returning
ownership of lands, forests and fisheries to the Maori. In
essence it abolishes the monarchy and transfers all Crown
lands and all properties held from the Crown in fee simple to
the Maori Nation. Pakeha will thereby become honoured
tenants of the tangata whenua…
“The Fourth Article guarantees to the Pakeha full property
rights in perpetuity to all private dwellings and their
adjacent lands previously held in fee simple from the Crown.
“The Fifth Article converts all lands, forests and fisheries
exploited for commercial gain into leasehold property and
requires the leaseholders to pay compensatory rents to the
Maori Nation for a period of 150 years.
“The Sixth Article declares all remaining property –
including basic infrastructure, commercial buildings and
public services – to be held in trust from the Republic of
Aoteoroa.”
In his article Chris Trotter suggests that a National Maori Assembly would be the
constitutional embodiment of the Maori Nation to sit alongside
the House of Representatives as the constitutional
embodiment of the Pakeha Nation. A Senate would provide
for shared governance and 
a Council of State would run
government departments. The
President would be elected alternatively by the Maori and
Pakeha Houses of Parliament for a single 7 year term. The Supreme
Court, whose primary job would be developing the
constitution, would be made up of equal numbers of Maori and
Pakeha judges. A
Citizens’ Charter would be established to tie in to the
rights agenda of the United Nations, and full procedures for
amending the constitution would include a 75 percent vote in
all three Houses of Parliament to be “ratified by a public
referendum supported by a simple majority of both the
Maori and Pakeha electorates”.
While Chris Trotter’ scenario was clearly fictional, unless
New Zealanders rise up to defend their rights and our
democracy, who knows where this drive for a bicultural
constitution will lead.
This week instead of our usual poll, we ask for your advice
– What should be done to alert the public to the threat to
New Zealand’s democratic future posed by the Maori Party’s
plan to introduce a bicultural constitution? Click here
to comment >>>
Footnotes:
1.Mike
Hosking, Ngapuhi
report fantastical bollocks
2.James Allan, What
a disgrace
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