‘Keep our Māori wards' campaign kicks off with security caution
Photo:
Te Korimako o Taranaki via LDR
A bid to retain Māori representation at Taranaki council tables kicked off on the weekend with a call for whānau-level pushback against what campaigners say is deliberate disinformation.
Speakers at Saturday's organising meeting also warned referendums on Māori wards across New Zealand would spark vitriol - and potentially worse.
New Plymouth councillor Dinnie Moeahu called the hui, saying misinformation was causing misunderstanding and fear, while disinformation was dividing communities.
He represents New Plymouth's five-councillor 'at-large' ward, having topped the poll with general roll voters in 2022.
Likewise, he said, anyone could stand in a Māori ward to be elected by Māori roll voters.
"Non-Māori can also stand in the Māori ward seat. Ōrite: it's the same."
Moeahu said opponents were incorrectly labelling Māori council seats as 'race-based'.
Māori wards were Treaty-based, he said: created to ensure effective representation and help meet Crown obligations under Te Tiriti o Waitangi, as spelled out in the Local Government Act.
Almost all Māori wards and constituencies face being extinguished via referendum at October's local elections, including those at Taranaki's four councils.
The government changed the law a year ago, requiring binding polls on local Māori seats to fulfil National's coalition deals with ACT and New Zealand First.
They said the change was to restore democracy to communities on a significant change to local democracy.
Moeahu said anti-Māori groups were ready with a campaign labelling the wards race-based as soon as the government reintroduced referendums last July.
"It was well-resourced, it was strategised superbly and executed with perfection - and less than 24 hours after the law received Royal Assent."
Former New Plymouth mayor Andrew Judd copped abuse when he backed Māori wards a decade ago - and he warns more is coming.
Photo:
Te Korimako o Taranaki via LDR
Andrew Judd won New Plymouth's mayoralty in 2013, standing down at the next election after his unyielding support for a Māori ward drew persistent, often public abuse - including of his children.
Judd said he predicted more of the same from opponents of guaranteed Māori representation.
"My intel is that they are well geared-up, and they are going to be ... destructive," Judd said.
"Because their hatred is real - and we cannot let hate win."
Te Waka McLeod has agreed Moeahu will accompany her to meetings for fear of confrontation during election season.
Photo:
Te Korimako o Taranaki via LDR
Moeahu said the escalating risk of physical threat prompted him and councillor Te Waka McLeod to agree he would accompany her to public meetings till the election ends.
McLeod is the first councillor for NPDC's new Te Purutanga Mauri Pūmanawa ward.
Despite attracting online and in-person abuse, McLeod said she had been supported by fellow councillors and staff, and the council was building stronger relationships with hapū.
She said supporters from all communities must help family members better understand Māori wards with accurate information.
"It's having those conversations with your nana, with your grandma, with your uncle at your whānau kitchen table," she said.
"They may be sitting on the fence and they just need to hear a little bit of truth."
The meeting drew people keen to join the fight to keep Māori wards.
Photo:
Te Korimako o Taranaki via LDR
Other speakers included Labour MP Glen Bennett and NPDC councillors Amanda Clinton-Gohdes and Sam Bennett, who is running for mayor.
Moeahu plans more meetings to galvanise helpers ahead of a public event when voting gets underway.
Referendums must be held by 37 district and five regional councils.
No other type of ward can be voted down.
At the meeting, Margy-Jean Malcolm told LDR it was crucial to have clear information.
"This is actually institutional racism, when we treat Māori wards differently from say a rural ward or any other ward.
"We don't give the entire population a vote as to whether those wards should exist or not."
Lance Mepham had seen candidates pushing misinformation.
"I went to a few meetings here recently, and I was really surprised at the rhetoric and just some of the nasty things that were being said about the Māori ward."
He said Māori brought good things to the table for everybody.
"Economic and also cultural contributions - there's just so much that Māori can give and offer this community."
EJ Barrett said the wards had already boosted Māori participation in local democracy by 22 percent.
"My children are Māori so I have a vested interest to make sure there's always going to be a space for them in representative democracy - and so they can see themselves in democracy."
"It's just the right thing to do, mate."
LDR is local body journalism co-funded by RNZ and NZ On Air.
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Moeahu said a submission prepared by TRC which expressed concern about the Treaty Principles Bill was abruptly dismissed without discussion. "Let's not mince words that was not governance, that was cowardice hiding behind collusion." He said the offending councillors attempt to brush-off their actions as a miscommunication didn't wash with him. "I was met with contempt, I was made to feel less." Moeahu said the TRC had statuary obligations to take the Treaty of Waitangi into account and it had partnering with Māori explicitly enshrined as a strategic priority in its long-term plan. "This isn't a training issue. It's an absolute failure in governance. When elected members treat Treaty matters as too political or not appropriate you betray your role." He hoped the point of reckoning the report represented could be a turning point for the TRC. "Leadership is a privilege you have been afforded... do better Taranaki Regional Council." Dinnie Moeahu's father Peter - an iwi appointee to the council's Policy and Planning Committee - also made a deputation and took aim at councillors by name. "People who spout democracy but connive behind closed doors to suppress it. "People like councillor (Tom) Cloke, councillor Donald McIntrye and councillor (Neil) Walker who used their privilege position to bully the regional council chair and chief executive into submission at the December 10 meeting." Peter Moeahu said whether the councillors adopted the report or not he would not trust them or forgive them for how they treated his son. He called on them to withdraw from the local government elections. "Our community deserves better, our community deserves people who are open-minded, environmentally focussed ... and willing to have a meaningful and open relationship with hapū, iwi and manuwhenua. "My recommendation? Withdraw from the ballot." At the closing of his deputation, the Moeahu whānau performed an impassioned haka. Council chief executive Steve Ruru then spoke briefly to the report which he authored. He reminded the council of its findings that the Treaty Principles Bill was relevant to TRC business and to make a submission and debate it appropriately. "One of the big learnings coming out of this is that process issue again which is highlighted in there and obviously there are a range of recommendations made." Taranaki Māori Constituency councillor Bonita Bingham believed council had underestimated "the impact of the trampling of our mana" events of December had for Māori. "I really thank Peter and Dinnie for their kōrero today because their words expressed what many of us are feeling. "I would like all councillors to deeply reflect on the actions and collusion and predetermination that lead to the decision on December 10. "This was no miscommunication this was a deliberate attempt to squash our voice." After sitting in stoney silence Donald McIntyre was the only one of the three councillors directly under fire to speak during the meeting. "Obviously I've upset some people with my actions and I'm sorry they feel aggrieved." McIntyre acknowledge that it was correct the Treaty Principles Bill submission was on the December agenda. But he said if Dinnie Moeahu being shunted down the agenda was a problem someone should have raised it at the time. "I have yet to see any reference of standing orders being breached and like I say if they were they weren't highlighted at the time." McIntyre believed the procedures used on the day were appropriate and democratic because they were all voted on in an open meeting. "Morally we may have been better to have discussed the item that is probably something we can reflect on in the future, but I still stand by the decision we made at the time." McIntyre said iwi council relations had not been set back significantly "there hasn't been a good relationship in the first instance". That fired up councillor Susan Hughes. "I find it extraordinary that you are sitting here today trying to justify what wasn't in fact and never could be justified. "You set out to exclude myself and councillor Bingham from being involved in any of this. That was the plan and that was the plan that was executed. "You undermined the integrity of this organisation by behaving as you did." Council voted to adopt the report and all its recommendations with McIntyre voting against the motion. Following the meeting, Walker said he would not be withdrawing from the local government elections in October. "I think we're done with this. We've done our thing and we'd like to draw a conclusion over it and put it aside." He denied any collusion had ever occurred. "As far as I'm concerned there was no meetings or any of those things. There was discussion at meetings like today but not meetings." Walker was not inclined to apologise. "What for?" Cloke declined to comment on whether he would pull out of the election race. McIntyre was not standing for re-election. He accepted councillors had colluded ahead of the December meeting. "What's new about that? Of course we did, like I say, when we elect a chairman we collude before the meeting, is there something wrong with that." McIntyre made an apology of sorts. "I apologise to Bonita (Bingham) and Susan (Hughes) for not discussing it (the submission) but I have not further grounds to apologise."