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Te Pāti Māori

Te Pāti Māori (Māori pronunciation: [tɛ ˈpa:ti ˈma:ori]), also known as the Māori Party, is a political party in New Zealand advocating Māori rights.[2][3] With the exception of a handful of general electorates,[4][5][6] Te Pāti Māori contests the reserved Māori electorates, in which its main rival is the Labour Party.

Te Pāti Māori
PresidentJohn Tamihere
Co-leadersDebbie Ngarewa-Packer[1]
Rawiri Waititi
FounderTariana Turia
Founded7 July 2004; 19 years ago (2004-07-07)
Split fromNew Zealand Labour Party
Ideology
Political positionLeft-wing
ColoursBlack, red and white
MPs in the House of Representatives
6 / 123
Website
www.maoriparty.org.nz

Under the current leadership of Rawiri Waititi and Debbie Ngarewa-Packer, it promotes the following policies: the upholding of tikanga Māori, the dismantling of systemic racism, and the strengthening of the rights and tino rangatiratanga[7][8] promised in Te Tiriti o Waitangi.[9][10] The party is also committed to a mixture of socially progressive and green policy through a "Tiriti-centric" lens.[11] This includes eradicating Goods and Services Tax on food, opposing deep sea drilling, organising and funding a Māori health authority, lifting the minimum wage to $25 an hour, returning Department of Conservation land to Māori kaitiaki, and reducing homelessness.[12] Since Waititi and Ngarewa-Packer's leadership began, the party has been described as left-wing,[13][14][15] progressive,[16][13][17] and "unapologetically Māori".[16][18]

Tariana Turia founded the Māori Party in 2004 after resigning from the governing Labour Party, in which she served as a minister, over the foreshore and seabed ownership controversy. She and Pita Sharples, a high-profile academic, became the first co-leaders. The party won four Māori seats in the 2005 election and went into Opposition. After the 2008, 2011 and 2014 elections, where the party won five, three and two Māori seats respectively, it supported a government led by the centre-right National Party,[19] with the Māori Party co-leaders serving as ministers outside cabinet. During this time, the party advocated more moderate politics.[20]

The party won no seats in the 2017 election,[21] which was analysed as being backlash for their support of National.[22] Under new leadership they returned at the 2020 general election, when Rawiri Waititi won the Waiariki electorate. Although the party's share of the country-wide party vote declined from 1.18% in 2017 to 1.17% in 2020, winning Waiariki gave the party the right to full proportional representation, giving it two MPs, with Debbie Ngarewa-Packer subsequently becoming a list MP.[23] As of 2021, the party's two MPs are also its co-leaders.

In the 2023 general election, the Māori Party won six electorate seats and 3.08% of the popular vote.[24]

History edit

Formation edit

 
Tariana Turia resigned from the Labour government in 2004, becoming a founding co-leader of the Māori Party.

The origins of Te Pāti Māori can be traced back to the 2004 foreshore and seabed controversy, a debate about whether the Māori have legitimate claim to ownership of part or all of New Zealand's foreshore and seabed, that arose during the Fifth Labour Government. A court judgement stated that some Māori appeared to have the right to seek formal ownership of a specific portion of seabed in the Marlborough Sounds. This prospect alarmed many sectors of New Zealand society however, and the Labour Party foreshadowed legislation in favour of state ownership instead. This angered many Māori, including many of Labour's Māori MPs. Two MPs representing Māori electorates, Tariana Turia and Nanaia Mahuta, announced an intent to vote against the legislation.[25]

Turia, a junior minister, after being informed that voting against the government would appear "incompatible" with holding ministerial rank, announced on 30 April 2004 her intention to resign from the Labour Party. Her resignation took effect on 17 May, and she left parliament until she won a by-election in her Te Tai Hauauru seat two months later. After leaving the Labour Party, Turia, later joined by Sharples, began organizing a new political party. They and their supporters agreed that the new organisation would simply use the name of "the Māori Party". They chose a logo of black and red – traditional Māori colours – incorporating a koru design, also traditional. The leaders of the Māori Party indicated that they wished to unite "all Māori" into a single political movement.[25] The party was formally established on 7 July 2004.[26]

2005 election edit

In the 2005 election, the Māori Party won four out of seven Māori seats and 2.12% of the party vote. The latter entitled the party to only three list seats, so the fourth electorate seat caused an overhang seat. In the election night count, the party vote share was under 2% and the Māori Party would have got two overhang seats; when the overhang was reduced to one, National lost a list seat that they appeared to have won on election night. Tariana Turia held Te Tai Hauauru; Pita Sharples won the Tāmaki Makaurau electorate; Hone Harawira, son of Titewhai Harawira, won Te Tai Tokerau; and Te Ururoa Flavell won Waiariki.[27]

First term, 2005–2008 edit

In the post-election period the Māori Party convened a series of hui to decide whether to support Labour or National, though some party leaders indicated they preferred to deal with Labour. That day, however, Turia and Prime Minister Helen Clark met privately and ruled out a formal coalition. Coupled with the support of the New Zealand First, Greens and Progressives, Māori Party support would have given Clark just enough support to govern without the support of other parties. However, in the end, no deal was done and the Māori Party stayed in Opposition, citing that they were not prepared to compromise their positions.[28]

Gerry Brownlee, Deputy Leader of the National Party, claimed after the election that Labour and National each could rely on "57 seats" out of the 62 required in the 2005 election to govern. This implied that National had received support from United Future (3), Act (2) and the Māori Party (4) in addition to National's own 49 seats.[29] Brash himself later supported this statement and claimed he had witnesses to it.[30] This came after the National Party tried to woo the Māori Party in attempts to both see if a coalition arrangement was feasible and to counter any attempts which may have been made by Helen Clark.[31] Tariana Turia denied this claim.[citation needed]

On 24 January 2006 the Māori Party's four MPs were jointly welcomed to Rātana pā with the leader of the National Party, Don Brash, together with his delegation of eight MPs. They had been intended to be welcomed on half an hour apart but agreed to be welcomed and sit together. Turia disputed claims that this was pre-arranged, saying: "We're here for a birthday. We're not here for politics."[32] However critics said this would have reminded onlookers of how the Māori Party and National were said to be in coalition or confidence and supply talks. This may also have served to reinforce the Labour Party's election campaign statement that a 'vote for the Māori Party is a vote for National'. One Rātana kaumatua (elder) said this was deliberate and deserved after the talks.[33]

2008 election edit

In the 2008 general election the Māori Party retained all four of the seats it won in 2005, and won an additional seat, when Rahui Katene won Te Tai Tonga from Labour. Two seats were overhang seats. The party's share of the party vote rose slightly to 2.39%.[34] The Labour Party won the party vote by a large majority in every Māori electorate, meaning that the typical Māori voter had split their vote, voting for a Māori Party candidate with their electorate vote and the Labour Party with their party vote.[35]

The National Party won the most seats overall and formed a minority government with the support of the Māori Party, ACT New Zealand and United Future. Sharples was given the Minister of Māori Affairs portfolio and became an Associate Minister of Corrections and Associate Minister of Education. Turia became Minister for the Community and Voluntary Sector, Associate Minister of Health and Associate Minister for Social Development and Employment.[36] Hone Harawira was critical of the alliance with the National Party and was suspended from the Māori Party in February 2011. He left the party and formed the left-wing Mana Party in April 2011.[37]

2011 election edit

In the 2011 general election the Māori Party was reduced from five seats to three, as the party vote split between it and Harawira's Mana Party. The Māori Party won three electorate seats. With 1.43% of the party vote, the party was entitled to two seats, resulting in an overhang of one seat. The three MPs were Pita Sharples in Tāmaki Makaurau, Tariana Turia in Te Tai Hauāuru and Te Ururoa Flavell in Waiāriki. Rahui Katene lost the Te Tai Tonga seat to Labour's Rino Tirikatene, and Hone Harawira won the Te Tai Tokerau seat for the Mana Party. The National Party again formed a minority government with the support of the Māori Party, ACT New Zealand and United Future. Pita Sharples again became Minister of Māori Affairs, and Sharples and Turia were ministers outside cabinet. With the retirement of Pita Sharples in 2014, Te Ururoa Flavell became the male co-leader of the party. Tariana Turia also retired in 2014.[38]

2014 election edit

Final results from the 2014 general election gave the Māori Party two seats in Parliament. Te Ururoa Flavell won the Waiāriki electorate seat, and the party was entitled to one further list seat (to be occupied by the next person on the party list, Marama Fox) as they received 1.32% of the party vote.[39]

2017 election edit

Prior to the 2017 general election, the Māori Party formed an electoral pact with the Mana Movement leader and former Māori Party MP Hone Harawira. The Māori Party agreed not to contest Te Tai Tokerau as part of a deal for the two parties to try to regain the Māori electorates from the Labour Party.[40] In the election, they failed to take any seats, with Labour capturing all seven of the Māori electorates.[21][41] Party co-leader Te Ururoa Flavell expressed sadness at the loss of seats and announced he would be resigning from politics.[42] Fellow co-leader Marama Fox expressed bitterness at the party's defeat, remarking that New Zealand had chosen to return to the "age of colonization" and attacked the two major parties, National and Labour, for their alleged paternalism towards Māori.[43] Fox commented that Māori have "gone back like a beaten wife to the abuser" in regards to Labour's sweep of the Māori seats.[44] Metro Magazine described the Māori Party's poor results as being part of backlash against them for helping National form a government.[45] Within the following 12 months, the party’s senior figures resigned: Flavell and Fox stepped down from the co-leadership, as well as party president Tukoroirangi Morgan. This opened the field for a new generation of party leaders, namely Rāwiri Waititi and Debbie Ngarewa-Packer.

2020 election edit

The party announced John Tamihere as its candidate for the Tāmaki Makaurau electorate in March 2020. Tamihere had held the electorate from 2002 to 2005, but for the Labour Party. He had also run for Mayor of Auckland in 2019 without success.[46] Tamihere's mayoral campaign was more right-wing, and he said the Māori Party could happily work with the National Party. This contradicted Māori Party President Che Wilson, who had set out a clear preference to work with Labour and had said "if we ever do talk to National it will have to be a big deal for us to move that way again."[47]

On 15 April 2020, the party announced that John Tamihere and Debbie Ngarewa-Packer were the new party co-leaders.[48]

The party received a broadcasting allocation of $145,101 for the 2020 election.[49]

At the 2020 general election, held in October, the Māori Party's Rawiri Waititi captured the Waiariki electorate, defeating Labour MP Tāmati Coffey by a margin of 836 votes. This allowed the Māori Party to enter Parliament, and with its party vote of 1.2%, it was entitled to two MPs.[50] After Waititi, Debbie Ngarewa-Packer entered Parliament as the highest-ranked person on the party list.[23]

Under the Māori Party's constitution, its co-leaders must be drawn from its MPs first, and one must be female and one male.[51] As the only male Māori Party MP, Waititi replaced Tamihere as a co-leader.[52][53][54]

On 11 November, former party co-leader Tamihere requested a vote recount in the Māori electorates of Tāmaki Makaurau and Te Tai Hauāuru, alleging Māori voters had encountered discrimination during the 2020 election. Tamihere claimed that the recount was intended to expose discriminatory laws such as the five-yearly Māori Electoral Option (which limited the ability of Māori to switch between the general and Māori rolls for a period five years). He also alleged longer wait times for Māori voters at election booths and some Māori not being allowed to vote on the Māori roll.[55]

2020–2023 parliamentary term edit

On 26 November 2020, Te Pāti Māori MPs Waititi and Ngarewa-Packer walked out of Parliament after the Speaker of the House Trevor Mallard did not allow them to speak due to parliamentary procedures limiting the speaking time by smaller parties. Waititi had attempted to pass a motion that their party leaders be allowed to give a 15-minute "address in reply" but Mallard had blocked the motion on the grounds that MPs from smaller parties were not scheduled to give their maiden speeches until the following week. Waititi described Mallard's decision as unfair while Ngarewa-Packer claimed that this was "another example of the Māori voice being silenced and ignored."[56]

2020 election donations investigation edit

On 12 April 2021, the Electoral Commission referred Te Pāti Māori to the Police for failing to disclose about NZ$320,000 worth of donations within the required timeframe. These donations came from several individuals and organisations including former party co-leader Tamihere (NZ$158,223.72), the Urban Māori Authority (NZ$48,879.85), and the Aotearoa Te Kahu Limited Partnership (NZ$120,000). Party President Che Wilson attributed the late disclosure to the fact that the party was staffed by volunteers and rookies who were unfamiliar with electoral finance laws.[57] On 29 April, the Police referred the investigation into the Māori Party's undeclared donations to the Serious Fraud Office.[58] By late September 2022, the Serious Fraud Office had closed the investigation and decided not to pursue prosecutions against the individuals and parties involved.[59]

In late September 2022, Charities Services general manager Natasha Weight confirmed that the agency was investigating two charities headed by Party President Tamihere, the Te Whānau Waipareira Trust and the National Urban Māori Authority, for financing his 2020 election campaign. According to the Charities Register, Te Whānau o Waipareira Trust Group had loaned Tamihere NZ$385,307 to support his 2020 election campaign while the National Urban Māori Authority had paid NZ$82,695 to support his 2020 election campaign and Te Pāti Māori aspirations. Under existing legislation, charities are not allowed to donate and endorse political parties and candidates or allow them to use a charity's resources. In response, Tamihere accused the Charities Services of discriminating against Te Pāti Māori and Māori causes. Tamihere and Te Pāti Māori also confirmed that they would litigate against the Charities Service if the agency ruled against them.[60][61][62] Tamihere also criticised The New Zealand Herald journalist Matt Nippert's coverage of the two charities' donations to his campaigns, accusing the newspaper of racism and announcing that Te Pāti Māori would boycott the Herald.[59]

Hate Speech Task Force, 2021 edit

In June 2021, Te Pāti Māori called for a joint task force between the New Zealand Security Intelligence Service and New Zealand Police targeting right-wing extremists and rising anti-Māori hate speech in response to a YouTube video featuring a masked man calling for the slaughter of Māori and for a civil war. The video was later removed by YouTube for a breach of its community guidelines.[63] In a tweet, the party said that the video contained threats against its MPs, marae and Māori.[64] Police arrested a man after receiving multiple complaints about the video and a day after Te Pāti Māori laid a complaint with the Independent Police Conduct Authority (IPCA).[65] A 44-year-old male was charged with making an objectionable publication.[65]

In the complaint to the IPCA, the party accused the police of having double standards when dealing with death threats made against Pākehā and Māori.[66] It compared the police's response to the video with the treatment of those who made death threats against National MP Simeon Brown.[66] Party co-leader Debbie Ngarewa-Packer stated, "Communication and response time was inadequate, the police have continued to minimise the nature of the threat against us and our people".[66]

Racial discrimination edit

On 29 August 2023, Te Pāti Māori made a series of tweets apologizing to refugee and migrant communities for "harmful narratives" of "xenophobia and racism" on their official party website.[67][68] Te Pāti Māori said they had removed words for their website and was rewriting policy documents. An example of policy rewriting included the "Indigenous First" framework in the party's Whānau Build policy.[67][68] The policy indicated the intent to place Māori housing needs before all others.[67][68] In 2022, Te Pāti Māori also removed a reference from its sports policy that said Māori genetic makeup was stronger than others.[68] The now removed statement read, "It is a known fact that Māori genetic makeup is stronger than others."[69]

Whaitiri joins party edit

On 3 May 2023 sitting minister Meka Whaitiri announced that she had left the Labour Party to join Te Pāti Māori. Speaker of the House Adrian Rurawhe confirmed that Whaitiri would serve the remainder of her 2020–2023 term as an independent member of Parliament under standing order 35.5, which avoids invoking the "waka-jumping" provisions of the Electoral (Integrity) Amendment Act 2018.[70] Whaitiri does not sit with her party in Parliament. She will recontest the Ikaroa-Rāwhiti electorate as a Māori Party candidate.[71]

On 10 May, Ngarewa-Packer and Waititi held a haka (dance) during Parliamentary proceedings to welcome Whaitiri to the Māori Party. In response, Rurawhe ordered Ngarewa-Packer and Waititi to leave Parliament since they had not obtained the permission of the Speaker or other parliamentary parties to hold the haka.[72][73]

Name change edit

On 12 July, the party formally changed their name with the electoral commission from the Māori Party to Te Pāti Māori.[74]

2023 election edit

Te Pāti Māori launched its 2023 general election campaign at Te Whānau O Waipareira's Matariki event in Henderson, Auckland on 14 July. The party campaigned on advancing the interests of the Māori people, combating racism, and the "second-rate" status of Māori, as Ngarewa-Packer labelled it.[75]

On 27 July, the party announced several redistributive tax policies including a zero tax policy on those earning below NZ$30,000, a new 48% tax on those earning above NZ$300,000, raising the companies tax rate back to 33% and a wealth tax on millionaires.[76][77] On 2 August, the party campaigned on ending state care for Māori children and replacing the present Oranga Tamariki (Ministry for Children) with an independent Mokopuna Māori Authority that would network with Māori organisations, iwi (tribes), and hapu (sub-groups) to ensure that Māori children remained connected with their whakapapa (genealogies).[78]

Te Pāti Māori won six electorate seats and 3.08% of the popular vote.[24] Meka Whaitiri stood as the party's candidate in the Ikaroa-Rāwhiti electorate but was defeated by Labour's candidate Cushla Tangaere-Manuel.[79] Despite Whaitiri's unseating, the 2023 election outcome was Te Pāti Māori's most successful election result.[80]

2023–present: In opposition edit

Ngarewa Packer stated that the party would serve as "the only true opposition" in Parliament for the next term, adding that their plans were "to shake Parliament up and normalise it for Māori."[80] During the opening of the 54th New Zealand Parliament on 5 December 2023, Te Pāti Māori organised a series of nationwide protests known as the National Māori Action Day to protest against the National-led coalition government's policies on co-governance and the Treaty of Waitangi.[81] The party's MPs also modified their oaths of allegiances to reference the Treaty of Waitangi.[82]

Principles and policy edit

The party is committed to advancing what it sees as the rights and interests of the Māori, the indigenous people of New Zealand. Increasingly since the beginning of colonisation, Māori have been marginalised and the group is now a minority within New Zealand alongside Pacific Islanders.[83] Te Pāti Māori policy focuses particularly on affordable housing,[84] Māori recruitment into tertiary institutes[85] and a living wage for all workers,[86] based on the premise that Māori are among the low-socioeconomic communities in New Zealand who are the most economically disadvantaged.[87] During the 2020s, Te Pāti Māori has been widely described as progressive,[88][16][13] and further to the political left than Labour by Al Jazeera[89] and Newshub.[13] (Previously, during its years in alliance with National, the party had been described as centrist.[90][91])

The Māori Party was formed in response to the 2004 foreshore and seabed controversy, a debate about whether Māori have legitimate claim to ownership of part or all of New Zealand's foreshore and seabed. The founders of the party believed that:

  • Māori owned the foreshore and seabed before British colonisation;
  • Te Tiriti o Waitangi made no specific mention of foreshore or seabed;
  • No-one has subsequently purchased or otherwise acquired the foreshore or the seabed; and
  • Māori should therefore still own the seabed and the foreshore today.[92][93]

The kaupapa (policy platform) of Te Pāti Māori is based on four principles or pillars:[94]

  • Whānau (includes policies regarding affordable housing,[95] strengthening employment-support for Māori beneficiaries[96] and te reo Māori)[97]
  • Te Tiriti o Waitangi principles (includes holding the Crown accountable to their obligations under Te Tiriti o Waitangi, and policies on immigration)[98]
  • Rangatiratanga (includes policies on climate change in the Pacific and scholarships for Māori and Pasifika education to advance Māori and Pasifika as a collective)[99]
  • Kāwanatanga (includes policies on growing iwi economic resources[100] and to protect freshwater as a taonga)[101]

These principles enable Te Pāti Māori to be held accountable for the maintenance and furthering of Māori concepts in the decision-making process. These concepts are not reflected in the traditional Westminster system and Māori customary law is excluded from the New Zealand general legal system.[102]

Other Māori-rights-specific party policies have included the upholding of "indigenous values"[103] and compulsory "heritage studies" in schools.[104] In 2022 on Waitangi Day, the party called for Queen Elizabeth II to be removed as New Zealand's head of state and for the return of land to iwi and hapū.[105][106]

The party is also committed to a mixture of socially progressive and environmentalist policy through a "Titiri-centric" Māori lens.[107] The party is committed to eradicating Goods and Services Tax on food, opposing deep sea drilling, organising and funding a Māori health authority and reducing homelessness in Māori communities.[108]

Renaming New Zealand campaign edit

In September 2021 the party launched an online petition to:

In its statement is mentioned Article 3 of the Treaty of Waitangi which gave the Māori language equal status with English.[110] By 17 September 2021, 51,000 had signed the petition.[112]

By early June 2022, a petition from Te Pāti Māori to rename New Zealand as "Aotearoa" had received over 70,000 signatures. On 2 June, the petition was submitted before Parliament's petitions committee. Waititi argued that the proposed name change would recognise New Zealand's indigenous heritage and strengthen its identity as a Pacific country. He opposed the idea of a referendum, claiming it would entrench the "tyranny of the majority".[113]

Foreign policy issues edit

In May 2021, Te Pāti Māori co-leaders Ngarewa-Packer and Waititi supported Green Member of Parliament Golriz Ghahraman's push for New Zealand to recognise the State of Palestine.[114]

During the 2023 Israel-Hamas War, Te Pāti Māori advocated the expulsion of the Israeli Ambassador if Israel did not implement a ceasefire or open a humanitarian corridor in Gaza.[115] The party's stance on Israel was criticised by pro-Māori leaders like Rātana āpotoro rēhita (Apostle) Kereama Pene and Indigenous Coalition for Israel spokeswoman Dr Sheree Trotter.[116]

Electoral results edit

Parliament edit

Election # of candidates nominated
(electorate/list)
# of Māori seats # of seats won # of party votes % of popular vote (PR) Government or opposition
2005 42 / 51
4 / 7
4 / 121
48,263 2.12% Crossbenches
2008 7 / 19
5 / 7
5 / 122
55,980 2.39% Supported Fifth National Government
2011 11 / 17
3 / 7
3 / 121
31,982 1.43%
2014 24 / 24
1 / 7
2 / 121
31,850 1.32%
2017 17 / 17
0 / 7
0 / 120
30,580 1.18% Extra-parliamentary
2020 7 / 21
1 / 7
2 / 120
33,632 1.17% Crossbenches
2023 16 / 15
6 / 7
6 / 123
87,937 3.08%

Leadership edit

As of 2020, the constitution of Te Pāti Māori states that it must have two leaders, that its co-leaders must be drawn from its MPs first, and that one must be female and one male.[51] These requirements have been in place since at least 2013.[117]

The party's first leaders were Tariana Turia and Pita Sharples. In December 2012, Turia announced she would resign as party co-leader before the 2014 general election. Te Ururoa Flavell announced his interest in a leadership role, but as the Māori Party constitution required male and female co-leaders, he could not take Turia's place.[117] Shortly after this, in July 2013, Sharples resigned as co-leader, saying he would quit politics altogether come the next general election in 2014. He went on to say that "Our supporters deserve a unified party" which indicated that the leadership tension influenced his decision to resign as party co-leader.[118] Flavell replaced him as the party's male co-leader. In the 2014 general election, Marama Fox became the party's first list MP, and – as the party's only female MP – under the party rules automatically became female co-leader.

Following Rawiri Waititi's successful campaign for Waiariki at the 2020 New Zealand general election, he was confirmed as male co-leader, replacing John Tamihere, at a special general meeting of the Māori Party on 28 October.[119]

Female co-leader Male co-leader
Name Portrait Term of Office Parliamentary seat Name Portrait Term of Office Parliamentary seat
1 Tariana Turia
 
 
7 July 2004 September 2014 Te Tai Hauāuru 1 Pita Sharples   7 July 2004 13 July 2013 Tāmaki Makaurau
(from 5 October 2005)
2 Te Ururoa Flavell   13 July 2013 July 2018 Waiariki
(until 23 September 2017)
2 Marama Fox   September 2014 August 2018 List MP
(until 23 September 2017)
Offices vacant
3 Debbie Ngarewa-Packer 15 April 2020[1] Incumbent List MP
(17 October 2020 – 14 October 2023)
Te Tai Hauāuru
(since 14 October 2023)
3 John Tamihere   15 April 2020[1] 28 October 2020
4 Rawiri Waititi 28 October 2020 Incumbent Waiariki

The party also has a president:

Name Portrait Term of office
1 Whatarangi Winiata 2004 2009
2 Pem Bird   2010 2013
3 Naida Glavish   2013 2016
4 Tuku Morgan   2016 2017
5 Che Wilson   2018 2022
6 John Tamihere   2022 present[120]

See also edit

References edit

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  2. ^ Butler, Jesse Waiariki Temanava Butler, ed. (2007). The Maori Party: The Rise of Indigenous Liberalism: an Evolution of Will Kymlicka's Theory of Liberal Culturalism in Maori Politics: a Thesis Submitted in Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Master of Arts, Department of Political Studies, University of Auckland (Thesis). University of Auckland.
  3. ^ "'Incredible result': Māori Party returning to Parliament". NZ Herald. Retrieved 17 July 2022.
  4. ^ "Kelston candidates". Vote NZ. Retrieved 29 September 2023.
  5. ^ "Te Pāti Māori candidate tops informal audience poll at chamber event". Te Ao Māori News. Retrieved 29 September 2023.
  6. ^ "Te Pāti Māori announces Merepeka Raukawa-Tait will fight general electorate seat". Newshub. Retrieved 29 September 2023.
  7. ^ "Mana Motuhake". Te Pāti Māori. 6 August 2021. Retrieved 26 June 2022.
  8. ^ "New Zealand's next kingmakers: who are the Māori party?". the Guardian. 31 May 2022. Retrieved 26 June 2022.
  9. ^ "Te Pāti Māori". Te Pāti Māori. Retrieved 26 June 2022.
  10. ^ "NZ Māori party rules out right-wing coalition after next election". the Guardian. 31 May 2022. Retrieved 26 June 2022.
  11. ^ "NZ Māori party rules out right-wing coalition after next election". the Guardian. 31 May 2022. Retrieved 17 July 2022.
  12. ^ "New Zealand's next kingmakers: who are the Māori party?". The Guardian. 31 May 2022. Retrieved 26 June 2022.
  13. ^ a b c d "NZ Election 2020: John Tamihere picks unlikely preferred coalition partner for Māori Party". Newshub. Retrieved 27 January 2023.
  14. ^ Johnson, Glen. "Ardern vs Collins: New Zealand is at a crossroads". www.aljazeera.com. Retrieved 27 January 2023.
  15. ^ "At the 2023 election New Zealand will face the starkest choice between left and right in decades". The Guardian. 17 November 2022. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 4 July 2023.
  16. ^ a b c "'Incredible result': Māori Party returning to Parliament". NZ Herald. Retrieved 27 January 2023.
  17. ^ Godfery, Morgan. "Metro — Is Labour hostage to its centrist base?". www.metromag.co.nz. Retrieved 27 January 2023.
  18. ^ "New Zealand's next kingmakers: who are the Māori party?". the Guardian. 31 May 2022. Retrieved 27 January 2023.
  19. ^ Marsh, Ian; Miller, Raymond (2012). Democratic Decline and Democratic Renewal: Political Change in Britain, Australia and New Zealand. Cambridge University Press. p. 284. ISBN 9781139537018.
  20. ^ Eparaima-Hautapu, Kiriana. "Metro — The Rise and Rise of Te Pāti Māori". www.metromag.co.nz. Retrieved 27 January 2023.
  21. ^ a b "2017 General Election – Official Result". New Zealand Electoral Commission. Retrieved 24 September 2017.
  22. ^ Eparaima-Hautapu, Kiriana. "Metro — The Rise and Rise of Te Pāti Māori". www.metromag.co.nz. Retrieved 27 January 2023.
  23. ^ a b "Special votes: National loses two MPs, one each to Labour, Māori Party". Radio New Zealand. 6 November 2020. from the original on 6 November 2020. Retrieved 6 November 2020.
  24. ^ a b "2023 General Election – Official Result". Electoral Commission. 3 November 2023. from the original on 4 November 2023. Retrieved 17 November 2023.
  25. ^ a b Morgan Godfery, "Chapter 4.4: The Māori Party," pp. 240–241.
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Further reading edit

  • Godfery, Morgan (2015). "Chapter 4.4: The Māori Party". In Hayward, Janine (ed.). New Zealand Government and Politics, Sixth Edition. Oxford University Press. pp. 240–250. ISBN 9780195585254.

External links edit

  • Official website

pāti, māori, māori, pronunciation, ˈpa, ˈma, also, known, māori, party, political, party, zealand, advocating, māori, rights, with, exception, handful, general, electorates, contests, reserved, māori, electorates, which, main, rival, labour, party, presidentjo. Te Pati Maori Maori pronunciation tɛ ˈpa ti ˈma ori also known as the Maori Party is a political party in New Zealand advocating Maori rights 2 3 With the exception of a handful of general electorates 4 5 6 Te Pati Maori contests the reserved Maori electorates in which its main rival is the Labour Party Te Pati MaoriPresidentJohn TamihereCo leadersDebbie Ngarewa Packer 1 Rawiri WaititiFounderTariana TuriaFounded7 July 2004 19 years ago 2004 07 07 Split fromNew Zealand Labour PartyIdeologyMaori rightsTino rangatiratangaProgressivismPolitical positionLeft wingColoursBlack red and whiteMPs in the House of Representatives6 123Websitewww wbr maoriparty wbr org wbr nzPolitics of New ZealandPolitical partiesElectionsUnder the current leadership of Rawiri Waititi and Debbie Ngarewa Packer it promotes the following policies the upholding of tikanga Maori the dismantling of systemic racism and the strengthening of the rights and tino rangatiratanga 7 8 promised in Te Tiriti o Waitangi 9 10 The party is also committed to a mixture of socially progressive and green policy through a Tiriti centric lens 11 This includes eradicating Goods and Services Tax on food opposing deep sea drilling organising and funding a Maori health authority lifting the minimum wage to 25 an hour returning Department of Conservation land to Maori kaitiaki and reducing homelessness 12 Since Waititi and Ngarewa Packer s leadership began the party has been described as left wing 13 14 15 progressive 16 13 17 and unapologetically Maori 16 18 Tariana Turia founded the Maori Party in 2004 after resigning from the governing Labour Party in which she served as a minister over the foreshore and seabed ownership controversy She and Pita Sharples a high profile academic became the first co leaders The party won four Maori seats in the 2005 election and went into Opposition After the 2008 2011 and 2014 elections where the party won five three and two Maori seats respectively it supported a government led by the centre right National Party 19 with the Maori Party co leaders serving as ministers outside cabinet During this time the party advocated more moderate politics 20 The party won no seats in the 2017 election 21 which was analysed as being backlash for their support of National 22 Under new leadership they returned at the 2020 general election when Rawiri Waititi won the Waiariki electorate Although the party s share of the country wide party vote declined from 1 18 in 2017 to 1 17 in 2020 winning Waiariki gave the party the right to full proportional representation giving it two MPs with Debbie Ngarewa Packer subsequently becoming a list MP 23 As of 2021 update the party s two MPs are also its co leaders In the 2023 general election the Maori Party won six electorate seats and 3 08 of the popular vote 24 Contents 1 History 1 1 Formation 1 2 2005 election 1 3 First term 2005 2008 1 4 2008 election 1 5 2011 election 1 6 2014 election 1 7 2017 election 1 8 2020 election 1 9 2020 2023 parliamentary term 1 9 1 2020 election donations investigation 1 9 2 Hate Speech Task Force 2021 1 9 3 Racial discrimination 1 9 4 Whaitiri joins party 1 9 5 Name change 1 10 2023 election 1 11 2023 present In opposition 2 Principles and policy 2 1 Renaming New Zealand campaign 2 2 Foreign policy issues 3 Electoral results 3 1 Parliament 4 Leadership 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksHistory editFormation edit nbsp Tariana Turia resigned from the Labour government in 2004 becoming a founding co leader of the Maori Party The origins of Te Pati Maori can be traced back to the 2004 foreshore and seabed controversy a debate about whether the Maori have legitimate claim to ownership of part or all of New Zealand s foreshore and seabed that arose during the Fifth Labour Government A court judgement stated that some Maori appeared to have the right to seek formal ownership of a specific portion of seabed in the Marlborough Sounds This prospect alarmed many sectors of New Zealand society however and the Labour Party foreshadowed legislation in favour of state ownership instead This angered many Maori including many of Labour s Maori MPs Two MPs representing Maori electorates Tariana Turia and Nanaia Mahuta announced an intent to vote against the legislation 25 Turia a junior minister after being informed that voting against the government would appear incompatible with holding ministerial rank announced on 30 April 2004 her intention to resign from the Labour Party Her resignation took effect on 17 May and she left parliament until she won a by election in her Te Tai Hauauru seat two months later After leaving the Labour Party Turia later joined by Sharples began organizing a new political party They and their supporters agreed that the new organisation would simply use the name of the Maori Party They chose a logo of black and red traditional Maori colours incorporating a koru design also traditional The leaders of the Maori Party indicated that they wished to unite all Maori into a single political movement 25 The party was formally established on 7 July 2004 26 2005 election edit In the 2005 election the Maori Party won four out of seven Maori seats and 2 12 of the party vote The latter entitled the party to only three list seats so the fourth electorate seat caused an overhang seat In the election night count the party vote share was under 2 and the Maori Party would have got two overhang seats when the overhang was reduced to one National lost a list seat that they appeared to have won on election night Tariana Turia held Te Tai Hauauru Pita Sharples won the Tamaki Makaurau electorate Hone Harawira son of Titewhai Harawira won Te Tai Tokerau and Te Ururoa Flavell won Waiariki 27 First term 2005 2008 edit In the post election period the Maori Party convened a series of hui to decide whether to support Labour or National though some party leaders indicated they preferred to deal with Labour That day however Turia and Prime Minister Helen Clark met privately and ruled out a formal coalition Coupled with the support of the New Zealand First Greens and Progressives Maori Party support would have given Clark just enough support to govern without the support of other parties However in the end no deal was done and the Maori Party stayed in Opposition citing that they were not prepared to compromise their positions 28 Gerry Brownlee Deputy Leader of the National Party claimed after the election that Labour and National each could rely on 57 seats out of the 62 required in the 2005 election to govern This implied that National had received support from United Future 3 Act 2 and the Maori Party 4 in addition to National s own 49 seats 29 Brash himself later supported this statement and claimed he had witnesses to it 30 This came after the National Party tried to woo the Maori Party in attempts to both see if a coalition arrangement was feasible and to counter any attempts which may have been made by Helen Clark 31 Tariana Turia denied this claim citation needed On 24 January 2006 the Maori Party s four MPs were jointly welcomed to Ratana pa with the leader of the National Party Don Brash together with his delegation of eight MPs They had been intended to be welcomed on half an hour apart but agreed to be welcomed and sit together Turia disputed claims that this was pre arranged saying We re here for a birthday We re not here for politics 32 However critics said this would have reminded onlookers of how the Maori Party and National were said to be in coalition or confidence and supply talks This may also have served to reinforce the Labour Party s election campaign statement that a vote for the Maori Party is a vote for National One Ratana kaumatua elder said this was deliberate and deserved after the talks 33 2008 election edit In the 2008 general election the Maori Party retained all four of the seats it won in 2005 and won an additional seat when Rahui Katene won Te Tai Tonga from Labour Two seats were overhang seats The party s share of the party vote rose slightly to 2 39 34 The Labour Party won the party vote by a large majority in every Maori electorate meaning that the typical Maori voter had split their vote voting for a Maori Party candidate with their electorate vote and the Labour Party with their party vote 35 The National Party won the most seats overall and formed a minority government with the support of the Maori Party ACT New Zealand and United Future Sharples was given the Minister of Maori Affairs portfolio and became an Associate Minister of Corrections and Associate Minister of Education Turia became Minister for the Community and Voluntary Sector Associate Minister of Health and Associate Minister for Social Development and Employment 36 Hone Harawira was critical of the alliance with the National Party and was suspended from the Maori Party in February 2011 He left the party and formed the left wing Mana Party in April 2011 37 2011 election edit In the 2011 general election the Maori Party was reduced from five seats to three as the party vote split between it and Harawira s Mana Party The Maori Party won three electorate seats With 1 43 of the party vote the party was entitled to two seats resulting in an overhang of one seat The three MPs were Pita Sharples in Tamaki Makaurau Tariana Turia in Te Tai Hauauru and Te Ururoa Flavell in Waiariki Rahui Katene lost the Te Tai Tonga seat to Labour s Rino Tirikatene and Hone Harawira won the Te Tai Tokerau seat for the Mana Party The National Party again formed a minority government with the support of the Maori Party ACT New Zealand and United Future Pita Sharples again became Minister of Maori Affairs and Sharples and Turia were ministers outside cabinet With the retirement of Pita Sharples in 2014 Te Ururoa Flavell became the male co leader of the party Tariana Turia also retired in 2014 38 2014 election edit Further information 51st New Zealand Parliament Final results from the 2014 general election gave the Maori Party two seats in Parliament Te Ururoa Flavell won the Waiariki electorate seat and the party was entitled to one further list seat to be occupied by the next person on the party list Marama Fox as they received 1 32 of the party vote 39 2017 election edit Prior to the 2017 general election the Maori Party formed an electoral pact with the Mana Movement leader and former Maori Party MP Hone Harawira The Maori Party agreed not to contest Te Tai Tokerau as part of a deal for the two parties to try to regain the Maori electorates from the Labour Party 40 In the election they failed to take any seats with Labour capturing all seven of the Maori electorates 21 41 Party co leader Te Ururoa Flavell expressed sadness at the loss of seats and announced he would be resigning from politics 42 Fellow co leader Marama Fox expressed bitterness at the party s defeat remarking that New Zealand had chosen to return to the age of colonization and attacked the two major parties National and Labour for their alleged paternalism towards Maori 43 Fox commented that Maori have gone back like a beaten wife to the abuser in regards to Labour s sweep of the Maori seats 44 Metro Magazine described the Maori Party s poor results as being part of backlash against them for helping National form a government 45 Within the following 12 months the party s senior figures resigned Flavell and Fox stepped down from the co leadership as well as party president Tukoroirangi Morgan This opened the field for a new generation of party leaders namely Rawiri Waititi and Debbie Ngarewa Packer 2020 election edit The party announced John Tamihere as its candidate for the Tamaki Makaurau electorate in March 2020 Tamihere had held the electorate from 2002 to 2005 but for the Labour Party He had also run for Mayor of Auckland in 2019 without success 46 Tamihere s mayoral campaign was more right wing and he said the Maori Party could happily work with the National Party This contradicted Maori Party President Che Wilson who had set out a clear preference to work with Labour and had said if we ever do talk to National it will have to be a big deal for us to move that way again 47 On 15 April 2020 the party announced that John Tamihere and Debbie Ngarewa Packer were the new party co leaders 48 The party received a broadcasting allocation of 145 101 for the 2020 election 49 At the 2020 general election held in October the Maori Party s Rawiri Waititi captured the Waiariki electorate defeating Labour MP Tamati Coffey by a margin of 836 votes This allowed the Maori Party to enter Parliament and with its party vote of 1 2 it was entitled to two MPs 50 After Waititi Debbie Ngarewa Packer entered Parliament as the highest ranked person on the party list 23 Under the Maori Party s constitution its co leaders must be drawn from its MPs first and one must be female and one male 51 As the only male Maori Party MP Waititi replaced Tamihere as a co leader 52 53 54 On 11 November former party co leader Tamihere requested a vote recount in the Maori electorates of Tamaki Makaurau and Te Tai Hauauru alleging Maori voters had encountered discrimination during the 2020 election Tamihere claimed that the recount was intended to expose discriminatory laws such as the five yearly Maori Electoral Option which limited the ability of Maori to switch between the general and Maori rolls for a period five years He also alleged longer wait times for Maori voters at election booths and some Maori not being allowed to vote on the Maori roll 55 2020 2023 parliamentary term edit On 26 November 2020 Te Pati Maori MPs Waititi and Ngarewa Packer walked out of Parliament after the Speaker of the House Trevor Mallard did not allow them to speak due to parliamentary procedures limiting the speaking time by smaller parties Waititi had attempted to pass a motion that their party leaders be allowed to give a 15 minute address in reply but Mallard had blocked the motion on the grounds that MPs from smaller parties were not scheduled to give their maiden speeches until the following week Waititi described Mallard s decision as unfair while Ngarewa Packer claimed that this was another example of the Maori voice being silenced and ignored 56 2020 election donations investigation edit On 12 April 2021 the Electoral Commission referred Te Pati Maori to the Police for failing to disclose about NZ 320 000 worth of donations within the required timeframe These donations came from several individuals and organisations including former party co leader Tamihere NZ 158 223 72 the Urban Maori Authority NZ 48 879 85 and the Aotearoa Te Kahu Limited Partnership NZ 120 000 Party President Che Wilson attributed the late disclosure to the fact that the party was staffed by volunteers and rookies who were unfamiliar with electoral finance laws 57 On 29 April the Police referred the investigation into the Maori Party s undeclared donations to the Serious Fraud Office 58 By late September 2022 the Serious Fraud Office had closed the investigation and decided not to pursue prosecutions against the individuals and parties involved 59 In late September 2022 Charities Services general manager Natasha Weight confirmed that the agency was investigating two charities headed by Party President Tamihere the Te Whanau Waipareira Trust and the National Urban Maori Authority for financing his 2020 election campaign According to the Charities Register Te Whanau o Waipareira Trust Group had loaned Tamihere NZ 385 307 to support his 2020 election campaign while the National Urban Maori Authority had paid NZ 82 695 to support his 2020 election campaign and Te Pati Maori aspirations Under existing legislation charities are not allowed to donate and endorse political parties and candidates or allow them to use a charity s resources In response Tamihere accused the Charities Services of discriminating against Te Pati Maori and Maori causes Tamihere and Te Pati Maori also confirmed that they would litigate against the Charities Service if the agency ruled against them 60 61 62 Tamihere also criticised The New Zealand Herald journalist Matt Nippert s coverage of the two charities donations to his campaigns accusing the newspaper of racism and announcing that Te Pati Maori would boycott the Herald 59 Hate Speech Task Force 2021 edit In June 2021 Te Pati Maori called for a joint task force between the New Zealand Security Intelligence Service and New Zealand Police targeting right wing extremists and rising anti Maori hate speech in response to a YouTube video featuring a masked man calling for the slaughter of Maori and for a civil war The video was later removed by YouTube for a breach of its community guidelines 63 In a tweet the party said that the video contained threats against its MPs marae and Maori 64 Police arrested a man after receiving multiple complaints about the video and a day after Te Pati Maori laid a complaint with the Independent Police Conduct Authority IPCA 65 A 44 year old male was charged with making an objectionable publication 65 In the complaint to the IPCA the party accused the police of having double standards when dealing with death threats made against Pakeha and Maori 66 It compared the police s response to the video with the treatment of those who made death threats against National MP Simeon Brown 66 Party co leader Debbie Ngarewa Packer stated Communication and response time was inadequate the police have continued to minimise the nature of the threat against us and our people 66 Racial discrimination edit On 29 August 2023 Te Pati Maori made a series of tweets apologizing to refugee and migrant communities for harmful narratives of xenophobia and racism on their official party website 67 68 Te Pati Maori said they had removed words for their website and was rewriting policy documents An example of policy rewriting included the Indigenous First framework in the party s Whanau Build policy 67 68 The policy indicated the intent to place Maori housing needs before all others 67 68 In 2022 Te Pati Maori also removed a reference from its sports policy that said Maori genetic makeup was stronger than others 68 The now removed statement read It is a known fact that Maori genetic makeup is stronger than others 69 Whaitiri joins party edit On 3 May 2023 sitting minister Meka Whaitiri announced that she had left the Labour Party to join Te Pati Maori Speaker of the House Adrian Rurawhe confirmed that Whaitiri would serve the remainder of her 2020 2023 term as an independent member of Parliament under standing order 35 5 which avoids invoking the waka jumping provisions of the Electoral Integrity Amendment Act 2018 70 Whaitiri does not sit with her party in Parliament She will recontest the Ikaroa Rawhiti electorate as a Maori Party candidate 71 On 10 May Ngarewa Packer and Waititi held a haka dance during Parliamentary proceedings to welcome Whaitiri to the Maori Party In response Rurawhe ordered Ngarewa Packer and Waititi to leave Parliament since they had not obtained the permission of the Speaker or other parliamentary parties to hold the haka 72 73 Name change edit On 12 July the party formally changed their name with the electoral commission from the Maori Party to Te Pati Maori 74 2023 election edit Te Pati Maori launched its 2023 general election campaign at Te Whanau O Waipareira s Matariki event in Henderson Auckland on 14 July The party campaigned on advancing the interests of the Maori people combating racism and the second rate status of Maori as Ngarewa Packer labelled it 75 On 27 July the party announced several redistributive tax policies including a zero tax policy on those earning below NZ 30 000 a new 48 tax on those earning above NZ 300 000 raising the companies tax rate back to 33 and a wealth tax on millionaires 76 77 On 2 August the party campaigned on ending state care for Maori children and replacing the present Oranga Tamariki Ministry for Children with an independent Mokopuna Maori Authority that would network with Maori organisations iwi tribes and hapu sub groups to ensure that Maori children remained connected with their whakapapa genealogies 78 Te Pati Maori won six electorate seats and 3 08 of the popular vote 24 Meka Whaitiri stood as the party s candidate in the Ikaroa Rawhiti electorate but was defeated by Labour s candidate Cushla Tangaere Manuel 79 Despite Whaitiri s unseating the 2023 election outcome was Te Pati Maori s most successful election result 80 2023 present In opposition edit Ngarewa Packer stated that the party would serve as the only true opposition in Parliament for the next term adding that their plans were to shake Parliament up and normalise it for Maori 80 During the opening of the 54th New Zealand Parliament on 5 December 2023 Te Pati Maori organised a series of nationwide protests known as the National Maori Action Day to protest against the National led coalition government s policies on co governance and the Treaty of Waitangi 81 The party s MPs also modified their oaths of allegiances to reference the Treaty of Waitangi 82 Principles and policy editThe party is committed to advancing what it sees as the rights and interests of the Maori the indigenous people of New Zealand Increasingly since the beginning of colonisation Maori have been marginalised and the group is now a minority within New Zealand alongside Pacific Islanders 83 Te Pati Maori policy focuses particularly on affordable housing 84 Maori recruitment into tertiary institutes 85 and a living wage for all workers 86 based on the premise that Maori are among the low socioeconomic communities in New Zealand who are the most economically disadvantaged 87 During the 2020s Te Pati Maori has been widely described as progressive 88 16 13 and further to the political left than Labour by Al Jazeera 89 and Newshub 13 Previously during its years in alliance with National the party had been described as centrist 90 91 The Maori Party was formed in response to the 2004 foreshore and seabed controversy a debate about whether Maori have legitimate claim to ownership of part or all of New Zealand s foreshore and seabed The founders of the party believed that Maori owned the foreshore and seabed before British colonisation Te Tiriti o Waitangi made no specific mention of foreshore or seabed No one has subsequently purchased or otherwise acquired the foreshore or the seabed and Maori should therefore still own the seabed and the foreshore today 92 93 The kaupapa policy platform of Te Pati Maori is based on four principles or pillars 94 Whanau includes policies regarding affordable housing 95 strengthening employment support for Maori beneficiaries 96 and te reo Maori 97 Te Tiriti o Waitangi principles includes holding the Crown accountable to their obligations under Te Tiriti o Waitangi and policies on immigration 98 Rangatiratanga includes policies on climate change in the Pacific and scholarships for Maori and Pasifika education to advance Maori and Pasifika as a collective 99 Kawanatanga includes policies on growing iwi economic resources 100 and to protect freshwater as a taonga 101 These principles enable Te Pati Maori to be held accountable for the maintenance and furthering of Maori concepts in the decision making process These concepts are not reflected in the traditional Westminster system and Maori customary law is excluded from the New Zealand general legal system 102 Other Maori rights specific party policies have included the upholding of indigenous values 103 and compulsory heritage studies in schools 104 In 2022 on Waitangi Day the party called for Queen Elizabeth II to be removed as New Zealand s head of state and for the return of land to iwi and hapu 105 106 The party is also committed to a mixture of socially progressive and environmentalist policy through a Titiri centric Maori lens 107 The party is committed to eradicating Goods and Services Tax on food opposing deep sea drilling organising and funding a Maori health authority and reducing homelessness in Maori communities 108 Renaming New Zealand campaign edit In September 2021 the party launched an online petition to change the country s official name to Aotearoa and officially restore Te Reo Maori names for all towns cities and other place names 109 110 111 In its statement is mentioned Article 3 of the Treaty of Waitangi which gave the Maori language equal status with English 110 By 17 September 2021 51 000 had signed the petition 112 By early June 2022 a petition from Te Pati Maori to rename New Zealand as Aotearoa had received over 70 000 signatures On 2 June the petition was submitted before Parliament s petitions committee Waititi argued that the proposed name change would recognise New Zealand s indigenous heritage and strengthen its identity as a Pacific country He opposed the idea of a referendum claiming it would entrench the tyranny of the majority 113 Foreign policy issues edit In May 2021 Te Pati Maori co leaders Ngarewa Packer and Waititi supported Green Member of Parliament Golriz Ghahraman s push for New Zealand to recognise the State of Palestine 114 During the 2023 Israel Hamas War Te Pati Maori advocated the expulsion of the Israeli Ambassador if Israel did not implement a ceasefire or open a humanitarian corridor in Gaza 115 The party s stance on Israel was criticised by pro Maori leaders like Ratana apotoro rehita Apostle Kereama Pene and Indigenous Coalition for Israel spokeswoman Dr Sheree Trotter 116 Electoral results editParliament edit Election of candidates nominated electorate list of Maori seats of seats won of party votes of popular vote PR Government or opposition2005 42 51 4 7 4 121 48 263 2 12 Crossbenches2008 7 19 5 7 5 122 55 980 2 39 Supported Fifth National Government2011 11 17 3 7 3 121 31 982 1 43 2014 24 24 1 7 2 121 31 850 1 32 2017 17 17 0 7 0 120 30 580 1 18 Extra parliamentary2020 7 21 1 7 2 120 33 632 1 17 Crossbenches2023 16 15 6 7 6 123 87 937 3 08 Leadership editAs of 2020 update the constitution of Te Pati Maori states that it must have two leaders that its co leaders must be drawn from its MPs first and that one must be female and one male 51 These requirements have been in place since at least 2013 117 The party s first leaders were Tariana Turia and Pita Sharples In December 2012 Turia announced she would resign as party co leader before the 2014 general election Te Ururoa Flavell announced his interest in a leadership role but as the Maori Party constitution required male and female co leaders he could not take Turia s place 117 Shortly after this in July 2013 Sharples resigned as co leader saying he would quit politics altogether come the next general election in 2014 He went on to say that Our supporters deserve a unified party which indicated that the leadership tension influenced his decision to resign as party co leader 118 Flavell replaced him as the party s male co leader In the 2014 general election Marama Fox became the party s first list MP and as the party s only female MP under the party rules automatically became female co leader Following Rawiri Waititi s successful campaign for Waiariki at the 2020 New Zealand general election he was confirmed as male co leader replacing John Tamihere at a special general meeting of the Maori Party on 28 October 119 Female co leader Male co leaderName Portrait Term of Office Parliamentary seat Name Portrait Term of Office Parliamentary seat1 Tariana Turia nbsp 7 July 2004 September 2014 Te Tai Hauauru 1 Pita Sharples nbsp 7 July 2004 13 July 2013 Tamaki Makaurau from 5 October 2005 2 Te Ururoa Flavell nbsp 13 July 2013 July 2018 Waiariki until 23 September 2017 2 Marama Fox nbsp September 2014 August 2018 List MP until 23 September 2017 Offices vacant3 Debbie Ngarewa Packer 15 April 2020 1 Incumbent List MP 17 October 2020 14 October 2023 Te Tai Hauauru since 14 October 2023 3 John Tamihere nbsp 15 April 2020 1 28 October 2020 4 Rawiri Waititi 28 October 2020 Incumbent WaiarikiThe party also has a president Name Portrait Term of office1 Whatarangi Winiata 2004 20092 Pem Bird nbsp 2010 20133 Naida Glavish nbsp 2013 20164 Tuku Morgan nbsp 2016 20175 Che Wilson nbsp 2018 20226 John Tamihere nbsp 2022 present 120 See also edit nbsp New Zealand portalMaori politics Maori protest movement Mana Motuhake Treaty of Waitangi claims and settlementsReferences edit a b c New Maori Party Co leaders of the Maori Party Announced Scoop News The Maori Party Scoop 15 April 2020 Archived from the original on 21 July 2020 Butler Jesse Waiariki Temanava Butler ed 2007 The Maori Party The Rise of Indigenous Liberalism an Evolution of Will Kymlicka s Theory of Liberal Culturalism in Maori Politics a Thesis Submitted in Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Master of Arts Department of Political Studies University of Auckland Thesis University of Auckland Incredible result Maori Party returning to Parliament NZ Herald Retrieved 17 July 2022 Kelston candidates Vote NZ Retrieved 29 September 2023 Te Pati Maori candidate tops informal audience poll at chamber event Te Ao Maori News Retrieved 29 September 2023 Te Pati Maori announces Merepeka Raukawa Tait will fight general electorate seat Newshub Retrieved 29 September 2023 Mana Motuhake Te Pati Maori 6 August 2021 Retrieved 26 June 2022 New Zealand s next kingmakers who are the Maori party the Guardian 31 May 2022 Retrieved 26 June 2022 Te Pati Maori Te Pati Maori Retrieved 26 June 2022 NZ Maori party rules out right wing coalition after next election the Guardian 31 May 2022 Retrieved 26 June 2022 NZ Maori party rules out right wing coalition after next election the Guardian 31 May 2022 Retrieved 17 July 2022 New Zealand s next kingmakers who are the Maori party The Guardian 31 May 2022 Retrieved 26 June 2022 a b c d NZ Election 2020 John Tamihere picks unlikely preferred coalition partner for Maori Party Newshub Retrieved 27 January 2023 Johnson Glen Ardern vs Collins New Zealand is at a crossroads www aljazeera com Retrieved 27 January 2023 At the 2023 election New Zealand will face the starkest choice between left and right in decades The Guardian 17 November 2022 ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 4 July 2023 a b c Incredible result Maori Party returning to Parliament NZ Herald Retrieved 27 January 2023 Godfery Morgan Metro Is Labour hostage to its centrist base www metromag co nz Retrieved 27 January 2023 New Zealand s next kingmakers who are the Maori party the Guardian 31 May 2022 Retrieved 27 January 2023 Marsh Ian Miller Raymond 2012 Democratic Decline and Democratic Renewal Political Change in Britain Australia and New Zealand Cambridge University Press p 284 ISBN 9781139537018 Eparaima Hautapu Kiriana Metro The Rise and Rise of Te Pati Maori www metromag co nz Retrieved 27 January 2023 a b 2017 General Election Official Result New Zealand Electoral Commission Retrieved 24 September 2017 Eparaima Hautapu Kiriana Metro The Rise and Rise of Te Pati Maori www metromag co nz Retrieved 27 January 2023 a b Special votes National loses two MPs one each to Labour Maori Party Radio New Zealand 6 November 2020 Archived from the original on 6 November 2020 Retrieved 6 November 2020 a b 2023 General Election Official Result Electoral Commission 3 November 2023 Archived from the original on 4 November 2023 Retrieved 17 November 2023 a b Morgan Godfery Chapter 4 4 The Maori Party pp 240 241 Ngatai George 16 July 2013 George Ngatai Standing for President of Maori Party Speech Press release Scoop co nz Retrieved 17 August 2019 Morgan Godfery Chapter 4 4 The Maori Party pp 243 244 Maori Party stays in opposition The New Zealand Herald 18 October 2005 Crewdson Patrick 16 October 2005 Coalition talks in chaos as Nats accuse Clark of failure The New Zealand Herald Young Audrey 19 October 2005 Brash I had the 57 votes The New Zealand Herald Tony Gee Audrey Young and Ruth Berry 7 October 2005 National courts the Maori Party The New Zealand Herald Dewes Haydon 25 January 2006 Taking partners for Ratana waltz The Dominion Post Stokes Jon 25 January 2006 Parties forced to share stage at Ratana marae The New Zealand Herald Chief Electoral Office Official Count results Overall status See Maori electorate results at Chief Electoral Office Official Count results Electorate details Key s Government The New Zealand Herald 17 November 2008 Retrieved 19 October 2011 Morgan Godfery Chapter 4 4 The Maori Party pp 246 247 Morgan Godfery Chapter 4 4 The Maori Party pp 247 248 New Zealand 2014 General Election Official Results Electoral Commission Archived from the original on 13 June 2018 Retrieved 8 October 2017 Moir Jo 20 February 2017 Hone Harawira gets clear Te Tai Tokerau run for Mana not running against Maori Party in other seats Stuff Retrieved 7 October 2017 Graham Charlotte 23 September 2017 Center Right Party Hangs on in New Zealand Election The New York Times Retrieved 25 September 2017 A major upset in Saturday s results was the vanquishing of the Maori Party a group which grew out of protest action about indigenous rights to New Zealand s foreshore and seabed Formed in 2004 the party won two seats at the 2014 election in the next Parliament it will have none Trevett Claire 24 September 2017 Maori Party leader Te Ururoa Flavell leaving politics The New Zealand Herald Retrieved 7 October 2017 Satherley Dan 24 September 2017 NZ voted for return to the age of colonisation Marama Fox Newshub Retrieved 7 October 2017 Maori have gone back like a beaten wife to the abuser defiant Marama Fox says Stuff Retrieved 18 April 2018 Eparaima Hautapu Kiriana Metro The Rise and Rise of Te Pati Maori www metromag co nz Retrieved 27 January 2023 John Tamihere to run for Maori Party in Tamaki Makaurau Radio New Zealand 6 March 2020 Retrieved 9 March 2020 Power play Maori Party strategy already undermined by Tamihere Radio New Zealand 9 March 2020 Retrieved 9 March 2020 Forbes Stephen 15 April 2020 John Tamihere and Debbie Ngarewa Packer selected as new Maori Party co leaders Stuff Retrieved 15 April 2020 2020 Broadcasting Allocation Decision Released Electoral Commission 29 May 2020 Retrieved 29 May 2020 2020 General Election and Referendums Official Result Electoral Commission 6 November 2020 Retrieved 6 November 2020 permanent dead link a b Maori Party Constitution PDF 12 October 2019 Retrieved 27 October 2020 Maori Party s Rawiri Waititi replaces John Tamihere as co leader RNZ 29 October 2020 Retrieved 29 October 2020 KiwiPoll 17 October 2020 John Tamihere confirms that Rawiri Waititi will take over the co leadership MaoriPol nzpol Decision20 YourVote2020 Tweet Archived from the original on 19 October 2020 Retrieved 19 October 2020 via Twitter NZ Election 2020 Waiariki s Rawiri Waititi will become Maori Party co leader Newshub 19 October 2020 Archived from the original on 19 October 2020 Retrieved 19 October 2020 Burrows Matt 13 November 2020 NZ Election 2020 Maori Party asks for recount in two electorates pushes for Electoral Act reform Newshub Archived from the original on 13 November 2020 Retrieved 13 November 2020 Patterson Jane 26 November 2020 Maori Party MPs walk out of Parliament in protest Radio New Zealand Archived from the original on 29 November 2020 Retrieved 5 December 2020 Trevett Claire 12 April 2021 Election donations Maori Party referred to police over 320 000 in undeclared donations The New Zealand Herald Retrieved 12 April 2021 Manch Thomas 29 April 2021 Police refer Maori Party to Serious Fraud Office over 328 000 in undeclared donations Stuff Archived from the original on 28 April 2021 Retrieved 29 April 2021 a b Edwards Bryce 30 September 2022 Political Roundup Te Pati Maori and vested interests Democracy Project Victoria University of Wellington Archived from the original on 30 September 2022 Retrieved 5 October 2022 McConnell Glenn Piper Denise 28 September 2022 John Tamihere defends his charities payments and loans to his political campaigns Stuff Archived from the original on 28 September 2022 Retrieved 29 September 2022 Dine Jonty 28 September 2022 Te Pati Maori president claims party demonised by political donations investigation Radio New Zealand Archived from the original on 28 September 2022 Retrieved 29 September 2022 Tamihere John 28 September 2022 Tamihere responds to NZ Herald allegations Waatea News Archived from the original on 28 September 2022 Retrieved 29 September 2022 Call for taskforce targeting right wing extremists with rise in anti Maori talk Stuff 2 June 2021 Archived from the original on 13 August 2021 Retrieved 8 June 2021 Maori Party 2 June 2021 Following violent online threats which targeted our MP s marae and te iwi Maori Te Pati Maori have called for the Tweet Retrieved 8 June 2021 via Twitter a b Arrest made over online death threat video that prompted Te Pati Maori complaints Newshub 3 June 2021 Archived from the original on 10 June 2021 Retrieved 8 June 2021 a b c Maori Party lay complaint over police investigation into white supremacist video Newshub 10 June 2021 Archived from the original on 10 June 2021 Retrieved 8 June 2021 a b c Te Pati Maori apologises to refugees and migrant communities for harmful narratives RNZ 29 August 2023 Retrieved 28 October 2023 a b c d Te Pati Maori apologises for harmful narratives about refugees and migrants on party website NZ Herald 28 October 2023 Retrieved 28 October 2023 Maori Sports MaoriParty2021 26 January 2022 Archived from the original on 26 January 2022 Retrieved 30 October 2023 Palmer Russell 3 May 2023 Speaker rules Meka Whaitiri not affected by waka jumping law RNZ Retrieved 4 May 2023 Milne Jonathan 3 May 2023 Minister Meka Whaitiri quits Govt to become Te Pati Maori s first big name election candidate Newsroom Retrieved 4 May 2023 Palmer Russell 9 May 2023 Whaitiri decries censure after Te Pati Maori leaders ejected from Parliament Radio New Zealand Retrieved 11 May 2023 Speaker blunts celebration of Meka defection Waatea News com Waatea News 10 May 2023 Retrieved 11 May 2023 Change to Te Pati Maori party name Electoral Commission New Zealand 19 July 2023 Scott Matthew 14 July 2023 Te Pati Maori kicks off campaign with Matariki block party Newsroom Archived from the original on 27 July 2023 Retrieved 16 July 2023 Neilson Michael 27 July 2023 Maori Party wealth tax plan Over 98 per cent of NZers get tax cut GST off kai and higher top rates The New Zealand Herald Archived from the original on 31 July 2023 Retrieved 2 August 2023 Palmer Russell 27 July 2023 Te Pati Maori proposes suite of changes in new tax policies Radio New Zealand Archived from the original on 29 July 2023 Retrieved 2 August 2023 Neilson Michael 2 August 2023 Election 2023 Maori Party vows to take Maori children out of state care replace Oranga Tamariki with Mokopuna Maori Authority The New Zealand Herald Archived from the original on 2 August 2023 Retrieved 2 August 2023 Ikaroa Rawhiti Official Result Electoral Commission 3 November 2023 Archived from the original on 23 November 2023 Retrieved 26 November 2023 a b Dexter Giles 18 November 2023 Te Pati Maori plans for future as it reflects on success in Maori seats Radio New Zealand Archived from the original on 20 November 2023 Retrieved 21 December 2023 National Maori Action Day Te Pati Maori protests in pictures Radio New Zealand 5 December 2023 Retrieved 21 December 2023 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint url status link Maori dissent sets the scene as Parliament returns Radio New Zealand 8 December 2023 Archived from the original on 16 December 2023 Retrieved 21 December 2023 Pearson David 5 May 2011 Ethnic Inequalities in New Zealand Te Ara Retrieved 9 May 2018 Maori Party Housing Policy 2017 Maori Party Retrieved 9 May 2018 Maori Party Education Policy 2017 Maori Party Retrieved 9 May 2018 Maori Party Employment Policy 2017 Maori Party Retrieved 9 May 2018 Pollock Kerryn 5 May 2011 Health and Society in New Zealand Socio economic status ethnicity and health inequality Te Ara Retrieved 9 May 2018 Godfery Morgan Metro Is Labour hostage to its centrist base www metromag co nz Retrieved 27 January 2023 Johnson Glen Ardern vs Collins New Zealand is at a crossroads www aljazeera com Retrieved 27 January 2023 Morgan Godfery ed 2018 Maui Street Bridget Williams Books p 43 ISBN 9781988545455 of the centrist Maori Party told media that her party cannot support Clark s nomination for Secretary General Dann Liam 29 April 2011 Disenchanted Right finds a voice at last NZ Herald Retrieved 12 February 2023 a pretty sensible and centrist Maori party Hickford Mark Law of the foreshore and seabed Maori rights e Ara the Encyclopedia of New Zealand Retrieved 8 October 2017 Hickford Mark Law of the foreshore and seabed Challenge and controversy Te Ara the Encyclopedia of New Zealand Retrieved 8 October 2017 Maori Party Kaupapa Maori Party Retrieved 9 May 2018 Maori Party Housing Policy 2017 Retrieved 9 May 2018 Maori Party Employment Policy 2017 Retrieved 9 May 2018 Maori Party Te Reo Maori Policy 2017 Retrieved 9 May 2018 Maori Party Immigration Policy 2017 Retrieved 9 May 2018 Maori Party Pasefika Policy 2017 Retrieved 9 May 2018 Maori Party Economic Policy 2017 Retrieved 9 May 2018 Maori Party Environment Policy Retrieved 9 May 2018 Jackson Moana 1990 Criminality and the Exclusion of Maori Victoria University of Wellington Law Review 20 27 29 Election Policy 2008 Maori Party Archived from the original on 16 February 2013 Retrieved 5 October 2011 Our commitment to you is that we will uphold indigenous values to ensure our country maintains its natural beauty for all who call this land home Election Policy 2008 Maori Party Archived from the original on 16 February 2013 Retrieved 5 October 2011 Primary and secondary schools will be required to teach heritage studies which will include a history of the Pacific in line with the aspirations of Pacific people Te Pati Maori seek divorce from Britain s monarchy Stuff 6 February 2022 Retrieved 7 February 2022 Waitangi Day Te Pati Maori calls for divorce from British monarchy The New Zealand Herald 5 February 2022 Retrieved 7 February 2022 NZ Maori party rules out right wing coalition after next election the Guardian 31 May 2022 Retrieved 17 July 2022 New Zealand s next kingmakers who are the Maori party The Guardian 31 May 2022 Retrieved 26 June 2022 Maori Party 14 September 2021 This is MASSIVE we have hit 12 000 signatures on our PETITION Change the official name to Aotearoa Nga mi Tweet via Twitter a b Change our official name to Aotearoa Maori Party Archived from the original on 17 September 2021 Retrieved 19 September 2021 Guy Jack 15 September 2021 Maori Party campaigns to change New Zealand s name to Aotearoa CNN Archived from the original on 18 September 2021 Retrieved 19 September 2021 Numbers top 50 000 for petition on name change to Aotearoa Radio New Zealand 17 September 2021 Archived from the original on 17 September 2021 Retrieved 19 September 2021 McConnell Glenn 2 June 2022 Maori Party petition to officially call the country Aotearoa gets 70 000 supporters Stuff Archived from the original on 4 June 2022 Retrieved 3 June 2022 Small Zane 19 May 2021 Te Pati Maori co leader Debbie Ngarewa Packer shuts down heckler at pro Palestine march Newshub Retrieved 31 October 2023 Te Pati Maori 18 October 2023 Te Pati Maori Demand NZ Government Expel Israeli Ambassador If There Is No Immediate Ceasefire Humanitarian Aid Scoop Retrieved 31 October 2023 Harawira Tumamao 26 October 2023 Te Pati Maori facing criticism for demanding Israeli ambassador be expelled The New Zealand Herald Retrieved 31 October 2023 a b Ratana unveiling for Turia s successor The Dominion Post 13 January 2013 Pita Sharples stands down Flavell likely successor One News 2 July 2013 Retrieved 31 August 2014 Maori Party s Rawiri Waititi replaces John Tamihere as co leader RNZ News 29 October 2020 Retrieved 8 November 2020 Neilson Michael 9 June 2022 Te Pati Maori elects John Tamihere as new president replacing Che Wilson The New Zealand Herald Further reading editGodfery Morgan 2015 Chapter 4 4 The Maori Party In Hayward Janine ed New Zealand Government and Politics Sixth Edition Oxford University Press pp 240 250 ISBN 9780195585254 External links editOfficial website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Te Pati Maori amp oldid 1191206013, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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