GUEST BLOG: John Tamihere – Speech accepting Māori Party candidacy

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E aku rau rangatira, ngā karangaranga maha, tēnei ka mihi.

Tēnei mokopuna nā Porou Ariki, nā Tūtāmure, e tuohu ana i runga i te whakaiti mō tēnei hōnore kua taka mai ki au; kia tū hei māngai mōhau ki roto o Tāmaki Makaurau mō tePaati Maori.
E te iwi, kua tae te wā kia tahuri mai tātau ki tō tātau taha Maori.
Me kōkiri tātau i roto i te kotahitanga mō te oranga o wā tātau tamariki mokopuna tetake.
Tahuri mai ki tō whakapapa.
Tukuna mā Maori a Maori e kōrero.
Tukuna mā te mana motuhake tātau e kawe.
Tukuna kia kawea tātau i Te mana nui o te Tiriti o Waitangi ki roto i te whare mīere.

Broken promises – One Nation – Two classes of citizen

180 years ago this year, Māori across Aotearoa signed the Treaty of Waitangi. The nation building moment that saw 2000 non-Māori come together to negotiate with over 100,000 Māori. Māori held the upper hand at the signing of the treaty and our sovereignty was never ceded away.

And that’s why the Māori party is not a race based party but an Indigenous party based on the bedrock constitution of this country, the Treaty of Waitangi. It is the only party that can without fear or favour advocate Maori matters.

The three simple articles acknowledged:
Article 1; that the crown would be granted custodianship. At no time did this mean ownership.

Article 2; that for the avoidance of all doubt, Māori retained total Rangatiratanga, total control and ownership of their lands and all other assets.

Article 3: Asserts that Māori must have equality of opportunity and equality of treatment under the custodianship principle of the treaty.

There was talk and debate at the time of the signing of the treaty about wairuatanga andfaith. All Māori accept the right of all Iwi, hapū and whanau to practice the faith they see fit,and to that extent we rely on our whanaungatanga to deeply respect others’ rights topractice their faith as they see fit.

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One hundred and eighty years from the signing of this constitutional document we ask ourselves, have the promises set out in that treaty been met by the Crown?

I put it to you that the treaty allowed for the evolution of our nation, but instead of having one law for all and one cohesive and connected society, in 2020 New Zealand there are now two classes of citizen.

First class white, second class brown. We are all New Zealanders but we are all not the same.

In light of a Prime Minister who talks about closing the poverty gap, who talks about wellbeing, the Labour Party, the National Party, the Green Party, the New Zealand First Party, the Act Party are a disgrace as to the upholding of standards, ethics, honour, good faith and just plain fairness in overseeing the entrenchment of one nation but two classes of citizen.

So what does a snap shot of one nation but two classes of citizen look like?
Every statement I intend to make is evidence of the existence of two classes of citizen – first class white second class brown.

The facts cannot be denied, they cannot be rejected and that makes their existence totally reprehensible, totally unacceptable.

Across the whole of government, without digging too deeply around matters of justice, there is one law for white folk and one law for brown folk.

 

Let’s have a look at justice

  • Regardless of socio economic status, Māori are four times more likely to be multiply charged.
  • They are 7 times more likely to be incarcerated.
  • They are 9 times more likely to be remanded in custody than a white man from the same socio economic background.
  • Regardless of the charge, Māori are penalised with longer sentences and with less beneficial sentencing options than Pakeha.

 

Let’s have a look at health.

Life expectancy

  • Māori die on average seven years earlier than non-Māori.

Morbidity

  • Māori are two-and-a-half times more likely to die from diseases that are preventable with timely and effective health care.
  • Māori self-rate themselves as having poor health 2.2 times more than non-Māori have.
  • Māori were experiencing 1.9 times more racial discrimination than non-Māori

Mortality

  • Mortality as a result of chronic lower respiratory diseases are 2.8 times more inMāori than non-Māori.

Hospitalisations

  • Māori are more than three times likely to be hospitalised, as well as die because of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD).
  • Māori suffer from diabetes almost two times more than non-Māori.
  • Māori have higher rates of registration for cancer than non-Māori.
  • Mortality as a result of all cancers are 1.7 times more likely in Māori than non- Māori.
  • Lung Cancer is 3.6 time higher in Māori
  • Breast, cervical and lung cancer registration is higher for Māori women than non-Māori.
  • The rate of death for Māori is twice as high in breast cancer.
  • Four times higher in cervical cancer.
  • Five times more in lung cancer.

Suicide

  • The Māori suicide rate in 2019 increased from 23.72 to 28.23 per 100,000.
  • Māori males were about 1.5 times as likely as non-Māori males to be hospitalised for intentional self-harm
  • Māori females were more than twice as likely as non-Māori females to commit suicide

Let’s have a look at housing.

  • Of the 13, 996 who in September applied for social housing 47% were Māori.
  • A further 2,901 (41%) applied for a transfer from one house to another.
  • In 1976, Māori home ownership was at 52%.
  • In 2019, that dropped by a staggering 20% to have Māori home ownership at 32%.

Let’s have a look at eduction.

  • Māori are 13 points behind non-Māori (79.1%) when it comes to obtaining school qualifications.
  • Of the 76,000 15-24 year olds not engaged in employment, education or tertiarytraining 30,000 are Māori who have few options – apart from level entry to gangs or the criminal justice system.

Let’s have a look at work opportunities.

  • Māori in employment represent only 12.0% of total national employment
  • Māori are over-represented in the unemployed – 28.1% or 36,800 And underutilised (79,000 or 23.5%) categories with nearly a third of youth ‘not in employment, education and training’ (NEET).
  • Māori have higher proportion of workers employed in lower-skilled occupations, and in industries particularly vulnerable to changes in technology and economic cycles (eg manufacturing, wholesale and retail trade and construction).
  • The Māori unemployment rate (10.8%) remains the highest and well above thenational unemployment rate (4.9%).
  • The Māori unemployment rate is particularly high for youth (20.4%) and women(12.0%).

When your people, after taking into account all of the above, are living life under the constant pressure of anxiety and stress and are only one incident away from the whanau tipping over through the loss of a job, or one domestic violence issue, or one visit from acrown agency just waiting for Māori failure, or one alcohol and addiction incident.

Within these whanau there is no resilience. It has been beaten out of them and they merely become a feeding frenzy for a state agencies.

There is an old saying, that when poverty walks in the door, love goes out the window.

A third of our families are living on benefits and another 40% can be deemed to be the working poor. First fired last hired. In a constant search for stability, that they are never meant to achieve. Always judged, always put down.

Poverty often plays out by being internalised into the impoverished community. So Māoridifficulties whether they are from violence, petty theft, to having nowhere else to go but into crime to try and make ends meet is internalised.

This is the politics of poverty playing out.

We have become numbed that this is our new normal. We have grown to accept the unacceptable.

The political parties that have had all the power in this country over the last 180 years have treated us with constant disdain.

Over 40 years, I have tried all sorts of avenues and tactics to change the normalisation of the abnormal.

With the election of a Labour led government with 13 Labour Māori MPs, I thought we could finally achieve change.

I have been a member of only one party – the Labour Party – given my grandfather andfather’s total commitment.

The day though, that all 13 of Labour’s Māori MPs have been silenced, and that the only policy programme that can change the difficult position we’re in, is now being destroyed bystealth – by a Māori minister with the support of his Māori caucus and being endorsed 100% in these activities by the Prime Minister – means that change can only come by, through and for Māori by liberating ourselves.

This was the event that triggered my standing for the Māori Party.

That sense of freedom and liberation that sense of clarity, that sense of purpose is one of the most invigorating happenings in my life.

We must always look to redeem our position, make good where we have gone wrong and my continued support of the Labour Party, my continued belief that the goodness in white folk would shine through in retrospect was one of my greatest mistakes.

I hope for my children and grandchildren that they learn deeply from the mistakes of their grandfather and father and that they live a life proud in just being Māori. That they live a life where they care nothing for the views of non-Māori if those views continue to make them second class citizens in their own land.

John Tamihere is the Māori Party candidate for Tamaki Makaurau.

16 COMMENTS

  1. One slight quibble: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_suicide_rate

    If you take a look at countries by suicide rate you’ll see than larger economies suffer higher suicide and lesser economies suffer fewer suicides. In lesser economies there are greater arsholes to blame who just might disappear you before anyone can disappear into a deep depression or something.

    Some think it’s due to people in wealthier economies not having anyone else to blame for misfortune. So if you’re in a wealthy economy and you can’t make it then it’s your fault and bang, there goes another one.

    What has any of this got to do with Māori well first you can’t leave anyone behind and that means liberalising Iwi investment strategy to include Urban Māori instead of 100% of those rural ones you know you need to buy votes from to keep those choice Iwi jobs.

    And another thing is when you sell land and other income producing assets for cash instead of feeding you’re own people to at least minimu nutrition levels then of course there’s a spike in suicide and here I’m talking about running Iwi retirement funds that invests in future consumption in the Māori economy. To avoid the worse aspects of suiced rates that is.

  2. Looking at a number of those statistics (suicide, life expectancy, incarceration, education and blue collar jobs) men are over represented in NZ compared to women.
    However, there is a clear acceptance among many on the left that somehow men are the oppressors. Julie Anne Genter anyone?
    Why not so for Maori?
    To be clear, this is not an argument for or against improving the situation of either group as I am not sure whether or not intervention is the right thing to do.
    However the left smacks if hypocrisy when it bleeds for Maori but admonishes men.

    • the left smacks if hypocrisy when it bleeds for Maori but admonishes men.

      That would only be so if, by some twisted logic, males were considered the victims of their own propensity to enact violent abuse and death on women and children. NZ Family Violence

      • I’m afraid you missed the point by an incredibly wide margin.
        Both groups are over represented I suicide etc and yet one is vilified while the other embraced because one of those groups are oppressors and the other victims according to the woke left’s identity politics.
        A decent human being would want to improve the situation of both groups.

        • I’m afraid you missed the point by an incredibly wide margin.

          Jays, I am sorry about that. As a result of your 2nd comment I went and looked up the rates, and they are quite horrifying.
          “When it comes to gender, for every woman that dies by suicide, three men do.” I was not aware of that. NZ Shocking Annual Suicide Stats

          A decent human being would want to improve the situation of both groups.
          Absolutely.

  3. John show political ambition and has a track record of being involved with community.
    But he is switching to a party that has shown they will get into bed with National and Act.
    During his attempt at being Mayor of Auckland he revealed that he was not opposed to privatisation of some community assets.
    My trust of John has been severely shaken.
    There is a silent class war raging in NZ and the victims are many Kiwis and Tau Iwi who need to unite and face the change needed.

    • Yes political ambition but with little if anything to go with his political ambitions.

      I am puzzled as to why this is being promoted on the Daily Blog. Remember this is the man whose comments on gay women will never be forgotten, he loathes them especially if they are in power.

      The Maori party were so keen to be part of the table that they took the crumbs from the floor.

      I think he is arrogant and desperate to get back into parliament and Labour wouldn’t have him. Plus he didn’t make it to be mayor. He is another capitalist neo liberalist.

      He needs to take a page out of Jeanette Fitzsimons book. Learn some humility.

      And I would be at the front of the queue saying successive governments have totally failed Maori! But the Maori Party has never been the answer. The answer is to give some balls – seeing as they don’t appear to have any – to those representing Maori in the Maori electorates, that is where real change should be pushed from.

  4. Can’t argue with the stats. Post colonial fall out around the world involves such degradation and institutionalised racism for the colonised descendants.

    BUT…what ya gonna do about it? Unless Mr Tamihere promptly says NO to going with Nashnull–should the MP win a return to Parliament–then he is full of shit and indulging in right opportunism. Michelle Boag is on his team these days apparently so really do we need to ask that question.

  5. I think John has a good chance of taking the Tamaki Makaurau seat. I find Peeni Henare to be weak, indecisive and a show pony doing a no show. To be honest we need someone in there that will stand up for our people warts and all (which is why I use to vote for Hone) and I believe John is the man to do this. He is now pitching to a new audience and I know many of our people embrace confrontation, its part of our DNA. I listened carefully to John speak on Q & A and I was happy, why? because he admitted he has been wrong in the past something we don’t hear from our current crop of politicians. We all make mistakes god knows the last two governments elected have made many and still are. Our Maori seats and the seven we elected to represent us and look after our best interest they have a tape over their mouths and their hands are bound and we cant have this. I don’t know much about the candidate in the area I vote in Ikaroa Rawhiti but if the Maori party can win two seats and gain some party votes which I believe they can then we will see a true battle.

  6. Oh dear! Labour are in the pooh! 2017: 29 electorates won and 7 Maori seats. 36 in total. They definitely can’t afford to lose any of them ay, or give any away to get a mate across the line ay? Who does the boundary changes help in the Tamaki electorate and the Waikato electorate boarder in Manurewa and in Te Atatu Sth?

  7. I work in public health not the Ministry and my understanding is the Ministry of Health has more foreigners working there than Maori. Now some of those working for our Health Ministry might be calling themselves NZers cause that is easy nowadays cause just about anyone can come here and get NZ residency/citizenship.
    Why do you think our Maori stats are so bad and we aren’t the only ones that have terrible stats the PI stats are also appalling. NZ as a country should be ashamed but too many people do the blame game.

  8. Agree with Tiger Mountain and John W. John’s bid for Auckland mayor showed up shonky policies and this latest foray is a turnaround from Labour to National. All those statistics show up the national shame for Maori that needs to be a priority for government. But for once I disagree with you Michelle.

    As a Pakeha I am privileged compared with Maori – except for my MS which is highly unusual for Maori to have. Just one serious health condition that Maori largely escape.

  9. We can’t have everything Janio but we do have many yes MS is one of them we don’t suffer from are we to be thankful for that.

    • Yes Michelle, bloody awful to have a condition with no cure, disrupts your nervous system and will result in paralysis if you live long enough. It makes me very happy that Maori don’t get it when you suffer from every other serious health condition.
      I don’t think John T. is going to be a saviour (I thought he was once) for the problems he lists. Good to admit mistakes but does that mean he’s not going to make any more? Even in Labour, he was conservative and self promoting. Seems like a lot of other men in suits.

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