Culture New Zealand Parliament disrupted by Maori MPs performing a protest Haka in wake of new bill that will set new interpretation for Waitangi Maori treaty

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Preserve Tube archive / https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/politica...es-bill-has-been-released-here-s-what-s-in-it Politics Te Ao Māori /

The youngest member of New Zealand’s parliament, Māori Party MP Hana-Rawhiti Kareariki Maipi-Clarke, started a haka to protest the first vote on a contentious bill that would reinterpret a 184-year-old treaty between the British and Indigenous Maori. The parliament was briefly suspended on Thursday after the protest. First signed in 1840 between the British Crown and more than 500 Maori chiefs, the Treaty of Waitangi lays down how the two parties agreed to govern. The interpretation of clauses in the document still guides legislation and policy today.

The Treaty Principles Bill has been released: Here's what's in it /​

Watch: Haka interrupts vote for the Treaty Principles Bill​

A haka led by Te Pāti Māori interrupted voting for the Treaty Principles Bill this afternoon.

Opposition MPs and the public gallery stood to perform Ka Mate, after Hauraki Waikato MP Hana-Rawhiti Maipi-Clarke stood to deliver her Te Pāti Māori's vote against the bill.

The Speaker, Gerry Brownlee, who had expressed his lack of patience with a number of MPs for their interjections throughout the afternoon, suspended the sitting until the bells next ring.

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The four-page Treaty Principles Bill has been introduced and will be debated in Parliament next week.
As with all bills, the text begins with an explanatory note, includes links to some of the advice provided about it, such as a regulatory impact statement, and sets out the specific wording the law would change if enacted.
All parties other than ACT have committed to voting the bill down at the second reading after it has been to select committee, which would stop it from passing into law.
The bill states it would set out the principles of the Treaty of Waitangi in legislation, and requires those principles to be used when interpreting legislation, where relevant.
The bill's final clause states nothing in the bill would amend the text of the Treaty of Waitangi or Te Tiriti o Waitangi.
A group of protestors had gathered in Auckland's Newmarket. Photo: RNZ / Marika Khabazi
The principles set out in the bill as introduced are:
  • Principle 1: The Executive Government of New Zealand has full power to govern, and the Parliament of New Zealand has full power to make laws, (a) in the best interests of everyone; and (b) in accordance with the rule of law and the maintenance of a free and democratic society.
  • Principle 2: (1) The Crown recognises, and will respect and protect, the rights that hapū and iwi Māori had under the Treaty of Waitangi/te Tiriti o Waitangi at the time they signed it. (2) However, if those rights differ from the rights of everyone, subclause (1) applies only if those rights are agreed in the settlement of a historical treaty claim under the Treaty of Waitangi Act 1975
  • Principle 3: (1) Everyone is equal before the law. (2) Everyone is entitled, without discrimination, to (a) the equal protection and equal benefit of the law; and (b) the equal enjoyment of the same fundamental human rights.
The bill also states that principles of the Treaty "other than those set out" by the Treaty Principles Bill "must not be used to interpret an enactment", and clarifies that the Treaty Principles Bill does not apply to the interpretation of a Treaty settlement Act or the Treaty of Waitangi Act 1975 in relation to historical treaty claims.
Read more:
The bill's champion, ACT's David Seymour, hailed the introduction of the bill in a media release saying the principles of the Treaty "are not going anywhere".
"Either Parliament can define them, or the courts will continue to meddle in this area of critical political and constitutional importance. The purpose of the Treaty Principles Bill is for Parliament to define the principles of the Treaty, provide certainty and clarity, and promote a national conversation about their place in our constitutional arrangements."
He noted a change made to the earlier version, with the second principle having been narrowed "to provide that the rights of hapū and iwi differ from the rights everyone has a reasonable expectation to enjoy only when those rights are agreed to as part of a Treaty settlement. This has occurred because the previous wording was too broad".

The Principles of the Treaty of Waitangi Bill.
He said the Treaty itself would not be changed, just the way it was interpreted in law.

Timeline​

  • Bill introduced to Parliament 7 November
  • Hīkoi protesting the bill begins on 10 November, departing Cape Reinga on the 11th, to arrive at Parliament on 19 November
  • First reading debate on the bill during the week of 11-15 November. Prime Minister Christopher Luxon will not be in the country during that reading
  • After first reading, Bill to be sent to select committee for six-month public hearing process
  • After select committee, Bill to be sent for second reading debate in Parliament - where all parties but ACT have promised to vote it down

Kerfuffle over early introduction​

News broke on Tuesday that the bill would be introduced to Parliament this week - a fortnight earlier than had previously been expected.
The change in timing came as the Waitangi Tribunal scrambled to publish the second part of its report on the Bill, and the treaty clause review set out in NZ First's coalition agreement.
It was a scramble because the Tribunal is typically unable to publish material related to government bills once they have been introduced.
Once it had been notified of the changed timing through an official memo from the government, it then informed the lawyers presenting evidence for its report so they could submit all their evidence in time.
Seymour accused the Tribunal of breaking the government's trust over the matter.
Te Pāti Māori co-leader Rawiri Waititi also condemned the earlier introduction, saying he believed it was aimed at halting the planned hīkoi. (The organisers have said they would not reschedule the hīkoi.)
Seymour said it was "much ado about nothing", however, and the change in date was simply part of normal Parliamentary processes.
That's somewhat backed up by most of the political parties, with Labour's Chris Hipkins saying they would not normally expect to be informed of a change in the date of introduction. The Greens, meanwhile, welcomed having the detail of the bill to scrutinise.
Prime Minister Christopher Luxon on Thursday defended the timing of the bill's introduction, saying he totally disagreed with the suggestion it was shifted to avoid the hīkoi.
"Totally disagree ... we've got a lot of legislation to do between now and Christmas and what we're doing here is when legislation becomes available - in this case it was a couple of weeks earlier, it was drafted, and the legislation's ready to go - we move legislation around all the time, so it's not unusual at all."
Luxon will not be in Parliament today for the bill's official tabling in the Debating Chamber - like other recent prime ministers he does not attend on Thursdays.
He will also not be in Parliament for the First Reading debate set down for next Thursday, as he will be in Peru for the APEC meeting. He will be at Parliament on the week of the planned hīkoi.

Tribunal's findings​

The Tribunal's second report on the bill found that:
  • The Crown's process to develop the Bill has purposefully excluded any consultation with Māori, breaching the principle of partnership, the Crown's good-faith obligations, and the Crown's duty to actively protect Māori rights and interests
  • This policy process is in breach of the principle of good government, as Cabinet has decided to progress the Bill despite it being a policy that is not evidence-based, has not been adequately tested, has not been consulted upon, and fails regulatory standards
  • The proposed content of the Bill does not reflect the texts or meaning of the Treaty/te Tiriti
  • Principle 1 misinterprets the kāwanatanga granted to the Crown in 1840, which is not an unbridled power restrained only by its own sense of what is in the best interests of everyone
  • Cabinet's approval of Principle 2 for introduction in a Bill was found to be a breach of the principles of tino rangatiratanga, kāwanatanga, partnership, and active protection
  • Principle 2, if enacted, would revoke the promises and guarantees the Queen made to Māori in 1840
  • Principle 3 bears no resemblance to the meaning of article 3 and that Cabinet's decision to introduce the principle in a Bill was a breach of the Treaty/te Tiriti principles of partnership, equity, and active protection
  • These breaches caused significant prejudice to Māori
  • Māori would be particularly prejudiced by the extinguishment of tino rangatiratanga in a legal sense if the Bill were to be enacted
  • The new principles would advance the discredited agenda of assimilation, as they are designed to end the distinct status of Māori as the indigenous people of this country
  • Even if the Bill were not enacted, Cabinet's decision to introduce the Bill would prejudice Māori by further damaging the Māori-Crown relationship, and Māori would feel the brunt of the social disorder and division, including through the select committee process.
  • If the Government does not abandon the Bill, the Tribunal recommended that, given the constitutional significance of the issue, the Bill be referred to the Tribunal under section 8(2) of the Treaty of Waitangi Act 1975
Seymour told RNZ he had not read the report in full, but he had seen summaries.

"Their criticism is not surprising, in fact it's expected because the Treaty Principles Bill by defining the principles does the job that they've been supposed to do for the last 48 years, so it's not surprising that they resent that job being done by Parliament. Parliament asked them to do it in 1975, and Parliament has the right to say 'Well, if you haven't done a very good job we're going to do it for you'."
He pushed back at the suggestion his bill was not a faithful interpretation.

"I'd just make the argument that any interpretation of the Treaty must be consistent with a liberal democracy and give equal rights to each person that has to live in this country, as the only country they have.

"Their version says that the Treaty is a partnership and that some people are in partnership with the Crown and others are not. Their version is inconsistent with a liberal democratic framework and that's why I think it's time for Parliament to step in and say 'actually we do want to respect the treaty, we'd like to honour the treaty, but in a way that gives equal rights to all because that's how liberal democracy works."

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REDDIT CRINGE:
https://old.reddit.com/r/newzealand/comments/1gqvnkw/comment/lx1cg4m/?context=8
Redditors are soying all over it. Apparently this is up there with Brady's fifth ring or something (not true). Some chuds are calling it dumb.
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https://old.reddit.com/r/newzealand/comments/1gqvnkw/comment/lx24a5n/?context=8
We should also have a young congresswoman whose job involves performing ceremonial chimpouts every few weeks. I nominate Sydney Sweeney.
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https://old.reddit.com/r/newzealand/comments/1gqvnkw/comment/lx1wemh/?context=8
Apparently they're imported and are not a fan of ceremonial tantrums.
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https://old.reddit.com/r/newzealand/comments/1gqvnkw/comment/lx1pl66/?context=8
https://old.reddit.com/r/newzealand/comments/1gqvnkw/comment/lx22sdf/?context=8
Segregation is when you're asked to behave like a normal person in congress.
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it's such performative bullshit. either you're part of civilized society or you're a savage animal screeching war chants. I guarantee you these faggots are 100% westernized in their normal life and only do "deeply important cultural rituals" like this is when the cameras are on so the subhumans on reddit will gush all over them. it's embarrassing. the fact that western governments allow these people to do this shit and still retain their seats in power afterwards is pathetic and a sign of how far we've fallen.
 
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Other times it's patently clear how silly it looks, why the fuck are you doing this gay shit
The technical term is "cry bully". They know a bunch of redditors and shitlib White/Jewish women will cheer them on and demand they be given more free shit.

Look at all the gay reddit Marvel enthusiasts going on about how stunning and brave it was, how it made the white MP sit his ass down & learn, claiming the Haka is an ancient challenge that's been bravely issued.

Of course if the opposing MP actually answered the "challenge" as he would've in the past (with his rifle), or even simply carried her outside to finish her temper tantrum, the switch would flip to muh poor heckin' minority woman victim of colors was genocided etc etc.

Gay performative victim tantrum.
 
I'd rather listen to that than filibustering and it's a more cultured way of disrupting a bill than the usual method employed by the Japanese and Taiwanese representatives:


they're not the natives of new zealand. they arrived in the 1200s from east polynesia.
Iceland was only settled in 980AD but nobody's strutting around telling them that it actually belongs to the puffins cos the crackers have a date system that's older than the Landnáma. Also, that paper states that there's no evidence of any human activity in New Zealand before the 1200s, giving the 13th c. Polynesian settlers first dibs on it.
 
"Their criticism is not surprising, in fact it's expected because the Treaty Principles Bill by defining the principles does the job that they've been supposed to do for the last 48 years, so it's not surprising that they resent that job being done by Parliament. Parliament asked them to do it in 1975, and Parliament has the right to say 'Well, if you haven't done a very good job we're going to do it for you'."
This seems to have pretty much nailed it. They've been telling them for decades that their "Tribal Law" areas aren't being run fairly and warned them that they needed to fix it. Or eventually enough fed up people would get elected and they'd fix it for them.

Well, they didn't fix it and guess what happened?

Everyone who broke Parliament rules gor that stupid dance should be hit with a hefty fine and barred from Parliament during future sessions about this bill.
 
they're not the natives of new zealand. they arrived in the 1200s from east polynesia.
And they killed and ate the folks living there. Who are the true colonizers? When I visited like 20 years ago, the Māori obviously faced some forms of discrimination, but didn’t have the same grievances as the “first peoples” in the Americas.

Victimhood and grievance politics - USA’S #1 EXPORT BAYBEEE 🇺🇸🦅🇺🇸
 
I don't blame them, I'd be pissed too if the New Zealand government (notorious control freak faggots) claimed that they would have complete control of me and my people. The overuse of the Haka is mega cringe though.
Governments everywhere claim they have complete control of everyone in their respective countries. Stone Age tribesmen are nothing special there.
 
There's no full-blooded Maoris left, gone in the 70s. In census forms you can simply choose to culturally identify as Maori and, upon choosing things like scholarships, you need confirmation from the local Maori community that you're participating in their culture. It is very fake and gay. Children in primary schools there learn Te Reo every day, are taught their legends, and involved in Maori singing/dancing as part of the core curriculum. They will teach the Maori interpretation of certain stars being responsible for potatoes growing but they will not cover the actual meaning of Christmas or Easter in schools. These people are ungrateful and make every other nationality in NZ perform humiliation rituals under threat of being called racist colonisers.

Also, there's a dude who wears a cowboy hat in parliament who will ask questions only in Maori and get very upset if you don't respond. Absolute babies. Enjoy Winston Peters, the deputy prime minister, a Maori who says they are all New Zealanders and racial divide is retarded. Every Maori treats him like a house nigger. He was a skilled lawyer before becoming a politician and was the only politician to speak to the protesters outside Parliament who refused the jab/lockdowns and camped outside for weeks. Every other politician signed an agreement to ignore the protestors but he didn't.

The way elected representatives behave in the NZ parliament is equivalent to a school yard. It is very disorderly and disrespectful. The Liberal politicians are the loudest, often yelling/jeering/interrupting.

 
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