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Post by dutyfree on Aug 25, 2023 23:07:22 GMT 12
I am no twit so I dont tweet
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Post by eri on Sept 19, 2023 7:07:56 GMT 12
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Post by eri on Oct 26, 2023 6:51:45 GMT 12
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Post by muzled on Nov 15, 2023 11:43:07 GMT 12
Record immigation, it shits me! Applies to both parties but this one squarly belongs to the red team. (it shits me more with them because they campaigned on not having high immigration). www.interest.co.nz/public-policy/125242/migration-driven-population-growth-has-more-doubled-compared-pre-covid-levels#commentsWas down in Wanaka/Queenstown in the w/e, friend was telling us they were after a customer service rep, put ad in seek/TM - 160 applicants! (based in QT) She said a year or so ago they'd be lucky if they got 10, and then commented how the teenagers of QT kept the place running while immigration was low because the restaurants etc had no option but to hire skool kidz. Why can't we find a happy medium between the two? And you know the ones leaving aren't the fruit pickers/baristsas we're importing. New Zealand's rate of migration-driven population growth has more than doubled compared to pre-Covid levels.
Statistics NZ estimates that this country had a record net migration gain (long term arrivals minus long term departures) of 119,000 people over the 12 months to the end of September this year, compared to a net gain of 59,000 in the 12 months to September 2019, just before the Covid pandemic hit.
The latest figure is the biggest ever migration-driven population gain for any 12 months period.
The current annual net gain of 119,000 came from a net gain of 164,000 overseas citizens coming to this country long term and a net loss of 45,000 New Zealand citizens heading overseas long term.
Altogether 211,000 overseas citizens came to this country long term in the 12 months to September this year, while another 47,000 overseas citizens who were already here departed long term, giving the net gain of 164,000.
The biggest source countries for foreign citizens migrating to this country were India, the Philippines, China, Fiji and South Africa.
There were 26,000 NZ citizens who returned to this country long term after an extended stay overseas in the year to September, while 71,000 departed long term over the same period, giving the net loss of 45,000 NZ citizens for the year.
That was the biggest ever net loss of NZ citizens in any 12 month period.
The previous record was a net loss of 44,000 in the 12 months to February 2012.
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Post by eri on Nov 16, 2023 6:37:30 GMT 12
the left will get in again in nz
and when they do they will commence to "address inequality" by asset stripping the middle-class
they'll waffle on about taxing the top 2%.... but for the bottom half to get a lot more..... for doing nothing
the top half will have to be taxed a lot more, ($5,000 - $50,000pa) via something like a property tax, (maori land would of course be excluded)
because sure as hell the beneficiaries aren't going to start working, many don't even bother to send their kids to school anymore, even with the free lunches...
and their wants, needs and numbers will continue to grow exponentially
so as nat/act/nz hopefully get about repairing the damage to the economy and infrastructure caused by 6 years of bait'n'switch liebour
the left will continue working out how to better harvest the workers so their non-working support base can enjoy the same lifestyle
and in 3/6/9 years when enough of the the tiny centre-section of swing voters have forgotten the mess of 2017-2023, the left will bribe the electorate for another 'turn' at the helm
they'll roll out their deep structural changes while gushing on about improbable surface froth
knowing that
what aspirational worker, wouldn't want to hedge their bets, try some life overseas?
why wouldn't they want to open options for a future where they get to work for themselves and their family
without having to carry the increasing burden of the angry unemployables' life expectations
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Post by muzled on Dec 12, 2023 17:19:54 GMT 12
So Dame Jacinda campaigned on lowering immigration as part of her fairy dust story. And now the previous govt, the one that stands up for the blue collar worker and all, has pretty much doubled the previous record that lord sir john imported. www.interest.co.nz/economy/125649/population-gain-migration-running-more-double-previous-recordIf chippy had a spine he would have stood up for the original policy of keeping immigration low (even the previous record of 63,500 seems outrageously high) and they might have stood a better chance of being re-elected. Anyway, thankfully they're spineless gits and they're gone.
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Post by fish on Dec 12, 2023 18:35:32 GMT 12
So Dame Jacinda campaigned on lowering immigration as part of her fairy dust story. And now the previous govt, the one that stands up for the blue collar worker and all, has pretty much doubled the previous record that lord sir john imported. www.interest.co.nz/economy/125649/population-gain-migration-running-more-double-previous-recordIf chippy had a spine he would have stood up for the original policy of keeping immigration low (even the previous record of 63,500 seems outrageously high) and they might have stood a better chance of being re-elected. Anyway, thankfully they're spineless gits and they're gone. High immigration drives up gross GDP, increases house prices, suppresses wage growth and contributes to inflationary pressures by stimulating the economy. Those are all features I've always associated with a National / centre right govt. For Labour to be going boots and all is truly a what the fuck moment.
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Post by eri on Mar 14, 2024 13:39:07 GMT 12
almost 10 years after labour went all racist with its poorly thought out and poorly completed attack on land owners with "chinese sounding names" The Labour Party's targeting of people with Chinese sounding names is of course justified as being in the national interest,...
Carrying on with Little and Tywford's logic, which seems to have adopted the xenophobic fear-mongering tactics of New Zealand First, lists of other ethnic names could also be used to generate national debates on other topics.
Lists of Muslim sounding names buying property could be used to generate debate on possible terrorist activity in specific suburbs.
Lists of Maori and Pacific Island names could be used to generate debate on credit risk and propensity to commit crime.
By the Labour Party's logic, none of this would be racist. It would merely be a means to the ends of generating a national debate.www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/politics/aaron-lim-labours-message-to-the-chinese-is-loud-and-clear/N2ZGIPH6LRF36GD6XFSOIRUUA4/it shows it still doesn't have a basic grasp of either statistics or economics with its poorly thought out and poorly completed attack on accommodation providers. www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/politics/labour-claimed-there-were-346-landlords-who-owned-200-properties-but-official-data-can-prove-only-one/5TC3HIYIBFGF5CURUBLE5FPYSA/ meanwhile it uses this same faulty logic to say that the country's laws shouldn't apply to them or their dodgy lawyers
the nz left is increasingly suffering from the same narcissism that runs/ruins trump
just because you BELIEVE you're the best thing since sliced-bread
doesn't mean to can lie, cheat + steal
and are above the law
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Post by eri on May 14, 2024 11:54:40 GMT 12
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Post by muzled on May 21, 2024 7:52:08 GMT 12
Seems to be a few articles popping up about Willie 'democracy is changing' Jackson to become ze new Labour parti leader. Chris Trotter wrote an article and Bryce Edwards also. Not sure how many people would trust him after his comment above and 6 years of driving co-governance with that well known socialist, Dame Jacinda But he's a colourful character and would appeal to a lot of muddle nuzlnd. democracyproject.nz/2024/05/20/bryce-edwards-could-willie-jackson-be-the-populist-leader-that-labour-need/That article links to this one by his ex wife. Some funny quips in there. e-tangata.co.nz/comment-and-analysis/moana-maniapoto-the-willie-jackson-i-know/Moana Maniapoto: The Willie Jackson I know
by Moana Maniapoto | Feb 18, 2017 | 59 | 6 min read
Willie JacksonWillie Jackson can be really annoying. In fact, that was one of the reasons we divorced about 16 years ago. Another reason, no doubt, was that he got fed up with me. But that’s the way things can pan out in a marriage. In New Zealand, according to the stats, one in three married couples split up.
Back then, Willie had a short attention span. No idea about the Treaty either. I tried to break it down for him once, as we drove from Rotorua to Auckland.
“Repeat back to me what I just said.” He’d give me a blank look, shrug, then laugh. Hopeless.
On the plus side, he forgave me for writing off two of his cars, and he was a fantastic manager.
Once, our band was playing in Sydney and, unknown to me, some of them ended up in a big fight at a local hotel. The following morning, Willie called everyone into the motel carpark.
“How dare you come here and get into a fight,” he yelled, taking in the bruises and scratches. “And what’s even worse, you fucking lost?! What sort of a bloody look is that for warriors?”
Embarrassed coughs from band.
“This isn’t a holiday,” he spluttered. “You’re ambassadors for our people. No more drinking, you hear me? Anyone got a problem with that, you can just fuck off now!”
No one moved a muscle. Point made. One thing about Willie is he always walked the talk, and expected others to.
When I first met him in the early ‘80s, he was rough around the edges. Actually, he was always on the edge. Maybe it was a South Auckland thing. In Willie’s circles, you could earn a punch in the head just for looking at someone “funny”.
Willie was the youngest freezing worker union president in the country. He got involved in the union side only because the chain, with its repetitive work, was his idea of living hell. Only a couple of people challenged Frank Barnard in his 26 years as district president of the Auckland Freezing Workers Union — and Willie was one of them. Didn’t win. But it showed that he backed himself and wasn’t afraid of taking on the big boys when he thought he could do better.
He worked as a union organiser under his uncle Syd Jackson (who he saw as a brilliant negotiator), alongside Tau Henare and Atareta Poananga — a team of fierce Māori activists going into bat for their mainly Pākehā female office workforce. He’d get so angry when he saw the lack of respect for honest, hardworking people, whether they were clerical workers or school janitors.
By night, Willie was moonlighting as a bouncer. His mum, June Batley-Jackson (Ngāti Maniapoto), began life as a cleaner and was made a dame in 2010. In between, June managed a security company on behalf of a former SAS soldier, placing bouncers into the worst pubs and clubs in South Auckland. Willie was the only Māori among a bunch of huge Tongans, none of whom were hired for their communications skills.
His dad was Bob Jackson (Ngāti Porou), a proud wharfie and hot-shot chess player — skills he passed on to Willie and our son. Bob went to university between shifts, graduating with a degree in politics and Māori.
“There are only two kinds of people in this world,” Bob would tease. “Ngāti Porou — and those who wish they were.”
However, Bob was no iwi fundamentalist. He was on the fiery Auckland Māori Council with the likes of Ranginui Walker, Hone Kaa and Titewhai Harawira, and was greatly respected for his community work and deep knowledge of tikanga. Bob and June backed a vision by Anzac (Zac) Wallace to create a welcoming space for Māori, particularly those with weak ties to their iwi. Bob named that complex in the middle of Mangere, Ngā Whare Waatea.
Waatea is linked to the Manukau Urban Māori Authority (MUMA), which June ran. And now Willie runs it. At various times, the operation has included a kōhanga reo, funeral parlour, driving school, cafe, fitness centre, credit union, night markets, second-hand shop, foodbank — and now a partnership or charter school, and the award-winning Radio Waatea.
When we were married, I hosted talkback on Aotearoa Radio (a forerunner of Radio Waatea) and Willie was in sports talkback. Alongside our mates Wyn Osborne and Neil Cruickshank, Willie was plotting my music career and we were taking on the New Zealand music industry.
A number of friends from back then and some of Willie’s old mates from Mangere College work with him now. His brother Vaughan (“Huk”) is a longtime producer at Radio Waatea, and Claudette Hauiti, a former National MP, is presenting and producing too. But some at Waatea haven’t had it easy — it’s a huge win if they can hold down a regular job or not smash people over at the drop of a hat. Zac and his wife Deirdre Nehua are now back at Waatea, helping reintegrate former inmates into the community.
Willie might have all the flash titles, but he’s always been answerable to boards dominated by very stroppy, on-to-it wahine. Most of his managers are female too.
Willie’s wife Tania Rangiheuea, a former Victoria University lecturer with two degrees, runs the charter school (cue shock and horror among some Labourites).
The kura creates an in-point for whānau ora programme managers to wrap their services around those families that need them. Not all do, but some who have nothing drop their kids off and pick up kai from the Waatea foodbank.
Newsflash. All the teachers are registered, they follow the New Zealand curriculum, and no one makes a profit — unless you factor the positive gains for society down the track.
For the last 10 years though, many people have only known Willie as a broadcaster. Love ‘em or hate ‘em, in their time as RadioLive talkback hosts, Willie and his bestie JT (John Tamihere) were the only staunchly Māori voices on commercial radio. They got stuck into racist policies and politicians, challenged police and journalistic practice, and basically had a go at anyone (Māori included) they thought was out of line.
Like many overpaid talkback hosts, they often crossed the line themselves. When their mouths ran away from them during the “Roast Busters” saga, genuine offence was exacerbated by everyone else with a historical beef piling in. You need a whiteboard to work out the various agendas.
Similar comments that week by Sean Plunket and Andrew Fagan barely rated a mention, but I guess there’s only one thing more offensive than “a cheeky darkie” (to quote Paul Holmes): it’s two. Instead of creating a golden opportunity in a follow-up show to explore sexist attitudes among all blokes, an unforgiving and highly vocal lynch mob demanded Willie and JT be fired.
I thought the comments in their interview were unacceptable, and I told Willie that. He took all the criticism on board, apologised then, and is still apologising three years later. There are still those who frame him now as less a devil’s advocate and more the devil incarnate. But given the failure of Willie’s most vocal critics to deal to star Pākehā broadcasters with a history of consistently spouting crap stuff about women, and Māori in particular — I’m putting racism near the top of my whiteboard, next to power plays.
Andrew Little rightly believes Willie shouldn’t be defined by his Roast Busters interview — that everything he’s done off air and the people he represents, count for something.
Andrew would be aware that Willie already knows the main players, has enough mongrel in him to thrive in parliament, and isn’t afraid of being unpopular.
After all, Willie and JT have battled iwi leaders, taken the Independent Māori Statutory Board to court, positioned themselves on to various boards, influenced iwi radio and Māori TV, and snaffled some of the biggest government contracts around. Willie has obviously honed his powers of concentration. And he gets the Treaty now.
Backstage at a recent concert, I ran into Rangi McClean (Māori Party), James Papali’i (Mana), and Willie. They’re all very active in their communities and longtime mates. I realised how things have changed in the last 20 years. Plenty of Māori will stand in this next election across all parties. It’s a huge decision for those who are key influencers already. Willie says his reason for standing is to “make a difference”.
It begs the question that all potential MPs must ask themselves: Can I really be more effective inside parliament than out?
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Post by fish on May 22, 2024 11:28:58 GMT 12
Not sure which thread to put this in, but the title of this one is poignant.
$300 fine for DIC, wrecking another car and refusing to accompany police. Hmmm, what deterrent is there to get pissed and drive home, $300 is in the same realm as a taxi in many situations.
Far better to drive and just chance it. Can see exactly why we have the social and criminal problems we do in our society...
Referring to the former Minister for Justice, the one who said she would contest the 'failing to accompany police charge', but admitted it after drawing it out for 9 months...
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Post by muzled on May 25, 2024 17:45:33 GMT 12
A good writeup by Mr Trotter. bowalleyroad.blogspot.com/2024/05/paranoia-on-left.htmlParanoia On The Left. WEB OF CHAOS, a “deep dive into the world of disinformation”, originally screened on Television New Zealand in November 2022. It was screened again last Sunday. (19/5/24) At the time of its first showing, the New Zealand Left was still reeling from the impact of the occupation of Parliament Grounds and its violent dissolution. Acutely aware that the electoral love of 2020 was fast evaporating, “progressives” were grappling with the first intimations of paranoid dread. That paranoid dread has been thrown into overdrive by the reactionary policies of the victorious political parties of the 2023 general election. In the seven months that have elapsed since its electoral defeat, the Left’s intense fear of the unenlightened masses has grown to match the Right’s deep mistrust, bordering on hatred, of the highly-educated. TVNZ’s decision to re-screen Web of Chaos (WOC) confirms that the “woke” power structure’s core political fixation – the growing influence and power of digitally delivered “disinformation” – remains as strong as ever. Slickly directed by Justin Pemberton, one of New Zealand’s leading documentary-makers, WOC nevertheless fails the test of the classic documentary feature by rigorously excluding from the discussion/debate all but the most active promoters of the proposition that digitally delivered disinformation constitutes an existential threat to human civilisation. No one whose testimony might tend to attenuate this core argument makes Pemberton’s final cut. Kindred Films and the Docufactory, the makers of WOC, were willing drivers down a one-way street. The ideas and accusations of these digital disinformation doom-sayers are illustrated throughout the feature by a powerful and continuous series of disturbing images, augmented by a suitably menacing soundtrack. So much so that, in spite of being professionally produced, the documentary ends up having more than a little in common, visually and auditorily, with the fetid Far-Right propaganda videos it purports to deplore. Had the project been commissioned in 2023, it is interesting to speculate whether dramatic developments in the disinformation debate would have persuaded Pemberton and his co-producer, Megan Jones, to deliver a very different documentary to TVNZ. Since WOC’s completion in 2022, the revelations generally referred to as “The Twitter Files” (so-called because they were released to senior US journalists, including Matt Taibbi and Bari Weiss, by Elon Musk, following his takeover of the social-media company) have presented evidence that the extensive campaign against disinformation, born of the social-media chicanery that enabled both Brexit and Trump, and intensified by the social-media amplified pushback against the state’s response to the Covid-19 pandemic, was initiated within the national security apparatus of the United States, and rapidly reproduced in the analogous state machinery of countries over which the US exercises decisive influence. Certainly, this is the provenance of New Zealand’s own “Disinformation Project” (whose Director, Kate Hannah, was one of the principal contributors to WOC) which began in the Department of Prime Minister & Cabinet, was then given “cover” by the University of Auckland, and is now an “independent” entity funded by a person, or persons, or state institutions, unknown. One can only hope that the Twitter Files would have prompted WOC’s producers’ to give considerably more attention, journalistically, to the role of the state in disseminating and suppressing disinformation. Or, at the very least, to have elicited a concession that it isn’t just the governments of Russia and China that tell lies and suppress free speech. The events of 2023 might also have persuaded Pemberton and Jones that the spreading of disinformation and conspiratorial thinking is not restricted to Far Right incels (involuntary celibates) hunched over slimy keyboards in dank parental basements. The Left is every bit as capable as the Right of creating and disseminating conspiracy theories of its own. Capable, too, of believing its own disinformation. The “Atlas Conspiracy”, for example, has taken so firm a hold of the New Zealand Left’s imagination that it is now being paraded as fact on “progressive” websites. It all began when left-wing activists in Australia discovered that the Atlas Network – a sort of international clearing-house for, and advisor to, 450 right-wing libertarian think tanks – may, at some point in the past, have influenced a number of the individuals and groups arguing for a “No” vote in Australia’s “Voice” referendum. In response to the Australian people’s decisive rejection of the proposal to sanction a constitutionally-recognised voice for indigenous Australians, disillusioned and angry Aussie “progressives” concocted an alarming tale of shadowy right-wing forces, orchestrated by the Atlas Network, conspiring to give the nay-sayers their dark victory. To both forewarn and forearm opponents of Act leader David Seymour’s Treaty Principles Bill, Māori nationalists in this country were quick to spread the Atlas conspiracy theory, breathlessly pointing out that Seymour’s legislation also [cue scary music] involves holding a binding referendum. That David Seymour, long before he became an Act MP, had worked for right-wing Canadian think-tanks linked (as just about all right-wing think-tanks are these days) to the Atlas Network, was offered up as the conspiracists’ “smoking gun”. That the information had been on the public record for years, and was not in the least surprising, given Seymour’s ideological leanings, counted for nought. Guilt by association, long the favoured workhorse of the Far Right, was shamelessly harnessed to the Left’s conspiratorial cart. Would Pemberton and Jones have included the Atlas Conspiracy in their “deep dive into the world of disinformation” if they had been making their documentary in 2023-24? Certainly, an editorial decision to exclude such clear evidence of conspiratorial thinking not being an exclusively right-wing phenomenon would have been deeply regrettable. Regrettable, but also inevitable, since the ruling obsession of the contemporary New Zealand Left, and indeed of left-wingers across the Western World, is that political action undertaken by individuals or groups further to the right than the liberal wings of mainstream conservative parties should not only be condemned, but suppressed. That a group like the Atlas Network should be permitted to solicit the support of right-wing donors in its mission to spread the libertarian-capitalist gospel around the world (a perfectly legal activity BTW) is, from the perspective of the contemporary Left, intolerable. That the Koch Brothers, whose generosity to hundreds, if not thousands, of right-wing organisations is legendary, might be tangentially associated with the Act Party, through its leader, and his Canadian employers of decades ago, is all the Left’s propagandists’ need to portray the Atlas Network as a deadly spider sucking the life out of New Zealand’s democracy. As a documentary, Web of Chaos would, arguably, be much improved by the inclusion of more voices than those belonging to the usual disinformation suspects – all of whom dutifully regurgitate to its viewers the arguments developed by American bureaucrats anxious to deny social-media platforms to those who dare to take issue with their political masters’ policies. Only very briefly does the documentary make reference to disinformation’s Cold War origins. A great pity, since the proclivity of states to narrow the sluicegates of political information is as old as history. The Left was once well aware of where most of the truly dangerous political lies come from. That “progressives” no longer fear, nor condemn, the state’s disinformation, to the point where they are now creating their own, is as troubling as it is depressing.
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Post by eri on May 25, 2024 18:49:40 GMT 12
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Post by muzled on May 31, 2024 16:19:55 GMT 12
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Post by muzled on Jun 4, 2024 20:30:33 GMT 12
Graham Adams has a good point about Labours problem with TPM. theplatform.kiwi/opinions/rawiri-waititis-gift-to-the-coalitionRawiri Waititi’s gift to the coalition The government is always going to win a showdown between order and anarchy. Graham Adams Contributing Writer June 4th, 2024 The government is always going to win a showdown between order and anarchy. Not every government is lucky enough to be gifted a parliamentary opponent who effortlessly makes its leaders look sagacious and principled. Someone who immediately makes them look competent and sane in comparison, and very much the adults in the room. With his inflammatory slogans, theatrics and intimidating posturing, Rawiri Waititi ably and enthusiastically fulfils that role in New Zealand’s 54th Parliament (albeit with stiff competition from others in Te Pāti Māori, including his co-leader, Debbie Ngarewa-Packer). As the co-leader of the only party in Parliament premised specifically on ethnic criteria — and owing its place entirely to the anachronistic Māori seats — Waititi is a boon to the government, even if that fact is not entirely appreciated or understood amid the widespread anger flooding social media after his repeated calls last week for a constitutional revolution, including a separate Māori Parliament. Not least, it looks as if he may become a thorn in the side of Labour and the Greens, who are on notice for their refusal to call out his overt racism. And he presents a problem too for the legacy media and their friends in the “disinformation” industry over their reluctance to condemn his language as “racist hate speech” in the way they regularly do to others — particularly those characterised as “far-right”. Apparently the “far-left” is automatically exempt from such criticism. Those inconvenient facts were on display on Newshub’s AM last week when Lloyd Burr interviewed Greens co-leader Marama Davidson and Act’s David Seymour. It was the morning of the Budget debate and the day of national action called by Te Pāti Māori, which was provocatively publicised with an image of crossed pistols against a fiery background. Burr screened a brief clip of Waititi filming Cabinet ministers visible in a room across from his parliamentary office at night. Waititi claimed Tama Potaka, Matt Doocey and Paul Goldsmith were putting together a “white Budget for their white economy”. Asked by Burr whether Waititi’s references to a “white government, white Budget, and white economy” sat well with her, Davidson wouldn’t answer directly, saying only that the government was “one of the most anti-Māori and anti-Tiriti governments we’ve ever seen”. Asked again, Davidson was similarly evasive, leading David Seymour to ask her testily: “How hard is it to call out racism?”He also pointed out the preposterous nature of Waititi’s claims, given that eight of the 20 Cabinet members (ie 40 per cent) are Māori. And while complimenting Burr for raising the topic, Seymour challenged the rest of the legacy media to end their double standard of avoiding criticising Te Pāti Māori’s racist speech. Davidson’s defensiveness and evasiveness in the interview indicated she is fully aware that Waititi’s radical rhetoric poses a problem for the Greens inasmuch as both parties have policies in common and are easily lumped together and disparaged as the “loony left”. She may as well have plaintively asked: “Am I my brother’s keeper?” Davidson understands the cost of inflammatory pronouncements, not least her infamous claim in March 2023 that “I know what causes violence in this world and it’s white cis men.” It was a statement so detached from reality she felt compelled to walk it back soon afterwards. Waititi, in contrast, is not given to retreating; doubling down is more his style. In Parliament on Budget Day he warned: “We continuously allow this House to assume that it has sovereignty — and absolute superiority — over Māori”, as if that sovereignty might exist through his grace and favour. Having issued a Declaration of Political Independence, he announced: “Today, we made a declaration in the name of our mokopuna that we would no longer allow the assumption of this Parliament to have superiority or sovereignty over te Iwi Māori.” Listening to Waititi, who would guess that only one in six enrolled Māori gave Te Pāti Māori their party vote at October’s election (or that it gained only 3.08 per cent of the national vote)? His assumption that he can speak on behalf of Māori generally is risible.In the same speech, he optimistically held out a begging bowl, proposing that Māori, as 20 per cent of the nation’s population, should be able to control 20 per cent of the government’s total tax take. That proposition was met with a tsunami of scorn on social media — amplified by allegations of illegal practices made over the weekend that a Te Pāti Māori MP and the South Auckland marae she once ran used private information collected during the Census for political campaigning as well as rewarding voters with food and vouchers. The idea that any government would hand over a fifth of its tax take to Māori never seemed so fantastical. The previous day in Parliament, Winston Peters had accused Te Pāti Māori and its acolytes of wanting “racial division… not unity”. “They don’t want democracy,” the Deputy Prime Minister said. “They want anarchy.” Waititi, of course, talks freely about revolution outside Parliament as well as within it, and his wife, Kiri, added to the volatile mix last week with an expletive-laden rant on TikTok alleging the government was determined to “get rid” of Māori and boasting that a unified Māori movement would have the ability to “overthrow any government”. They are, of course, playing to the gallery but they are also playing straight into the hands of Peters, Seymour and Luxon. You don’t have to be an experienced political analyst to know just how attractive an ordered democracy is to voters presented with the spectre of anarchy. Unfortunately for Chris Hipkins and Labour, the party’s views about democracy and Māori nationalism have not been dissimilar to those of Te Pāti Māori. During Labour’s six-year rule between 2017 and 2023, senior ministers — including Willie Jackson and Grant Robertson — endorsed the radical idea that “democracy has changed”, while promoting co-governance with iwi across a range of policies from Three Waters and the Māori Health Authority to the RMA reforms and the Canterbury Regional Council (Ngāi Tahu Representation) Act. Willie Jackson claimed “We’re in a consensus-type democracy now. This is not a majority democracy.” Jacinda Ardern herself would not defend a democracy of “one person, one vote of equal value” even when asked directly. When the existence of He Puapua was revealed in March 2021 with its extensive recommendations to establish separate Māori institutions, Ardern quickly shut down criticism by saying the document was not official government policy. In April, Seymour asked the then Prime Minister in the House if her government would rule out a “Treaty-based constitution” — and specifically whether it would “rule out establishing a Māori Parliament [by 2040], as called for by the report He Puapua?” In response, Ardern used the classic non-committal line beloved of politicians: “Obviously, we have no intention of making such a constitutional change…”, before adding, “However, we do commit ourselves to making sure that we are upholding our obligations as Treaty partners…” Sooner or later, Labour is going to have to either publicly repudiate Te Pāti Māori’s push to turbo-charge Māori separatism or endorse it. If the party doesn’t publicly distance itself from that agenda, it will be unelectable in 2026, and beyond. Whichever way Chris Hipkins decides to handle the issue, however, it’s a safe bet he won’t be nearly as direct as Winston Peters, who described the calls to form a separate Māori Parliament as evidence Te Pāti Māori was “off its trolley”. Māori leaders outside the party are already stepping away from Waititi’s revolutionary push. Asked at the national hui held at Hastings on Friday what he thought about the proposal for a Māori Parliament, Kiingi Tūheitia said: “Actually, it frightens me.” The proposal, and any other similarly radical ideas Waititi espouses, will just as surely alarm most voters in the run-up to the next election. Chris Hipkins — or whoever is leading his party by then — is going to have a very tough job convincing a majority of New Zealanders that a coalition between Labour, the Greens and Te Pāti Māori will be an appealing and stable alliance that has the best interests of all New Zealanders at its heart.
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