Te Pāti Māori has issued a declaration of political independence with the intention of starting a Māori Parliament, coming off the back of a mass protest against the Government.
Tens of thousands of people took to the streets around the country on Thursday morning to protest against the Government’s policies affecting Māori, with vehicle convoys advancing along the country’s biggest cities’ motorways.
And as the Government announced its Budget, Parliament’s front lawn was awash with the red, white and black of Tino Rangatiratanga flags waved by protesters voicing their anger against a perceived attack on Māori.
About 150 police officers monitored gatherings in Auckland, where people met at three locations on the city’s outskirts about 6am and converged on the CBD about lunchtime.
The vehicle convoys were dubbed “carkois” by protest organisers, a portmanteau of car and hīkoi (march or walk).
Protest organisers maintained disciplined convoys, with those joining in urged not to stop on motorways. Some protest leaders claimed motorists disrupted by the convoys supported them by waving and beeping their horns.
Commute times were more than tripled in Auckland, with hour-long delays reported on Thursday morning. Buses leaving the central city were also disrupted about midday.
A police headquarters statement says protesters were “well behaved” with no incidents of note reported.
“Police are in attendance and are focused on maintaining public safety while recognising the right to peaceful protest.”
Elsewhere in New Zealand, marches and convoys descended on Waikato University in Hamilton, some 500 people gathered at the Hastings Clocktower, crowds met at four locations around Rotorua, people congregated at Heipipi Park in Gisborne and protesters in Wellington assembled at Parliament at 2pm.
There were many more protests, including in smaller towns and in the South Island.
In Wellington, Te Pāti Māori co-leaders spoke to the crowd.
Co-leader Rawiri Waititi says: “This House set out to exterminate us 100 years ago. They failed. We are 20 per cent of the population. We are one million strong”.
In a statement on Thursday, May 30, Te Pāti Māori says: “We have mobilised our people in a matter of days in a beautiful harmonious activation against this Government. What we have witnessed today is te iwi Māori across Aotearoa telling this Government that enough is enough.
“We will no longer let decisions made by this House determine our oranga [health, welfare or livelihood], the oranga of our people, our mokopuna [grandchildren], the land and te iwi Māori katoa [all the Māori people].
Te Pāti Māori co-leaders Debbie Ngarewa-Packer (left) and Rawiri Waititi want to see a Māori Parliament established, issuing a declaration of independence. Photo / Mark Mitchell.
“We now begin the process of establishing our own Parliament. Our people will design what this looks like for us, nobody else.”
Te Pāti Māori dubbed its declaration of independence Te Ngākou o Te Iwi Māori (the heart of Māori).
The party says its declaration asserted Māori sovereignty as outlined in He Whakaputanga, the Declaration of Independence signed by Māori chiefs in 1835, and as affirmed in the Treaty of Waitangi.
It says the hypothetical parliament would be “anchored in our tikanga (customs) and kawa (protocols); focussed entirely on mokopuna livelihood; [and] established as part of transforming Aotearoa into a nation which represents the tino rangatiratanga of tangata whenua, and creates a safe home for all peoples”.
“This is the type of transformation our people have been waiting for,” the party says.
‘This Budget tells us Māori don’t matter’ – Waititi
Waititi says the Government’s Budget should be focused on the future, but it did not.
“What this Budget tells us is that Māori don’t matter, that we signed Te Tiriti o Waitangi but we continuously allow this House to assume that it has sovereignty and absolute superiority over Māori.”
Waititi says Te Pāti Māori’s independence declaration challenged the assumption Parliament had superiority over Māori.
“We now make up a million people. One in five people here in Aotearoa are Māori,” he says.
“I am 20 per cent of this country. I expect nothing less than 20 per cent of the total Budget in this country. That’s what I expect in a kāwanatanga [governance] space.”
Waititi then says Māori should receive the Budget proportion that their population makes up in prisons and Oranga Tamariki.
“This is what a Budget should look like for Māori in a kāwanatanga space. We’re all taxpayers, we’re all ratepayers and remember that this Government continues to make its funds and its money and its ability to have a Budget on stolen Māori land, assets and resources.”
Waititi says there was no mention of Māori within the Government’s Vote Health or Vote Education policies.
He says the coalition Government was giving less to national kapa haka festival Te Matatini than the previous government.
“We want by Māori, for Māori, to Māori, kaupapa. Not by Pākehā to Māori, we’ve had enough of that.”
Waititi says it was time to have a serious conversation about how the Government supported tangata whenua.
“We have been made to feel like second-class citizens in our own country for far too long.”
12 comments
Go for it
Posted on 31-05-2024 23:08 | By Saul
And we will stop paying taxes!
Hmmm
Posted on 31-05-2024 23:16 | By Let's get real
It's just not funny any longer.
We demand this, we demand that and everyone else must pay for it.
How about we start to demand that Maori enterprise starts paying rates and standard taxes and we have places allocated in universities based solely on educational abilities. We have general wards back in every hospital and stop funding race-based ideology and environmental management strategies.
I enjoy working alongside Maori and spending time in their company, but I'm starting to get totally sick of the noise coming from a minority that believes that the world owes they a living.
Earn respect, don't expect it to be given to you...
So 20 percent
Posted on 01-06-2024 08:58 | By an_alias
How many of that % voted for your party ?
I guess the only real solution is to cancel your MP pay cheques and let you run your affairs by taxing your supporters.
I for one dont wish my taxes to be wasted on racial division.
Seperate Society?
Posted on 01-06-2024 09:00 | By Rob .
The arrival of the first European contact and later settlement brought with it a vast new knowlege base accumulated globally over centuries of exploration. Access to this knowlege enabled a bypassing of major evolutionary developmental milestones, e.g. the invention of the wheel, written language, the metal ages, the industrial revolution etc. This major shift in evolutionary development elevated a stone age canibalistic society to a modern industrial society. Such a rapid ascension without adaption to change over time exposes several issues such as the perpetuation of the perceived relevence of stone age myths and superstitions in modern society, tribalism and an inherent predisposition to violence.
One in Five
Posted on 01-06-2024 09:20 | By FRANKS
What this means is that maybe 1 in 5 have some % of Maori blood..........not that 1 in 5 are Maori.
What is the definition of a Maori ? There is no such thing. There are New
The Master
Posted on 01-06-2024 14:25 | By Ian Stevenson
A separate parliament is effectively treason... think of Guy Fawkes. No different to that attempt to blow up parliament is intended to have the same affect.
Good oh.......
Posted on 01-06-2024 14:34 | By Bruja
Off you go then. You've already broken your Oaths of Allegiance so you shouldn't be in Parliament any longer. No one is stopping you setting up your own parliament but you can do it WITHOUT public money. See ya.
What a joke…
Posted on 01-06-2024 14:58 | By Shadow1
these people are. They’re totally out of step with the mainstream Maori people who like the rest of NZ are looking for unity and prosperity.
I think the rules about “hate speech “ and racism apply to everyone, including Te Pati Maori.
Shadow1.
One Word
Posted on 01-06-2024 15:17 | By Yadick
Treason
@Let's Get Real
Posted on 03-06-2024 12:58 | By morepork
This is the best post I have seen (including my own) on Sun Live for a long time. It says what needs to be said and you saved me saying it. I think the general chaos in the world and the collapse of order is making some extremists think there is an opportunity to grab a result that they would have no chance at under normal circumstances. TPM lost the election, and the population (including the Maori part of it) decided they want Democracy and a say in the future. NOBODY (apart from some covert opportunist extremists) wants the country divided along racial (or any other...) grounds. We are stronger together than we are separately, and the future for our nation is a united diversity, not a divided Apartheid, which implies a second class citizenry.
@Yadick
Posted on 03-06-2024 13:11 | By morepork
You chose a good word. But these people don't see it as treason, because they have no commitment or allegiance to the current Government or the rest of the nation. They will sit back and foment unrest and division, while they enjoy the privileges that the Democratic system affords them. Then pretend that they are working for "our people" and completely ignore the fact that "our people" are part of a bigger picture that involves 200 different types of people, as well as their own proud Maoritanga. They claim they have been offended as second class citizens for too long, and now they seek to correct that by putting non-Maori into that same position. NOBODY, in a just society, needs to be a second class citizen. TPM is looking for retribution and revenge... does it sound familiar? They are making themselves irrelevant by their actions.
@Shadow1
Posted on 03-06-2024 13:26 | By morepork
I wish I could laugh about this, but it isn't funny. I, like you, would like to think that the majority of Maori are not taken in by the posturing of TPM and see it for the divisive faction that it is. But the fact is that, on a day of action, thousands of people came out and protested by disrupting the society. It shows they are not feeling like they are part of that society. Many of the protesters had no idea what they were protesting, but were there simply because they were Maori, never realizing that such a demonstration, instigated by extremists, was doing nothing to help the cause of Maori and was bringing it into disrepute. There is no mana in being part of a mindless rabble who don't know they are being manipulated, but see it as a chance to be part of SOMETHING.
Leave a Comment
You must be logged in to make a comment.