The Maori Seats-Why We Have Them-Why We Shouldn't
This was posted as a comment. I think it deserves a wider audience.
Anonymous said...
The problem is John Key bringing the Maori Party into the tent by backing off on abolishing the Maori seats until Maori decide they don't want them any more (fat chance of that!)
I'm extremely disappointed that Key seems to put a short-term desire to be seen by the electorate as an all-round "good guy" ahead of the country's long-term interests.
I was hoping for a little more than "politics as usual" -- something which has characterised political dealings with the Maori seats for the last 141 years...
Here's a little commentary on the Maori seats:
THE MAORI SEATS
The Maori Party has stated it wants the Maori Parliamentary seats to be entrenched in law. In a manner chillingly redolent of apartheid-era South Africa, it also wants every New Zealander classified by ethnicity (presumably on the basis of boxes ticked on the census form), and all 18 year olds of even remotely Maori descent placed automatically onto the Maori electoral roll.
Yet there is no such thing as an ethnic Maori. Today, anyone claiming to be “Maori” is actually a person of mixed European-Maori descent rejecting one group of ancestors to adopt the cultural identity of another. The Maori Party’s half-American Tariana Turia is a case in point.
Every census shows more so-called Maori marrying or cohabiting outside the group with which they culturally identify. There has been a corresponding exponential increase in the number of New Zealanders with Maori ancestry.
Should the Maori Party get its way, the number of Maori seats would need to be expanded every election to keep pace with a growing Maori population. Over time, these clever race hustlers are looking to manipulate the mechanisms of representative democracy to engineer a "reverse takeover" of our Parliament.
Before this is allowed to happen, the New Zealand public needs to understand why we have separate Maori seats in the first place, and whether there is a valid argument for their retention. If not, they must be abolished.
When the Maori Representation Act was introduced in 1867, the right to vote rested on a property qualification, and was restricted to property-owning males.
It is now widely held that the Act was introduced because Maori were disenfranchised by their multiple ownership of land. This is incorrect.
Maori in possession of a freehold estate to the value of twenty-five pounds – even if “held in severalty” – were entitled to vote.
The real problem was the disputed ownership of customary Maori land which had not yet become subject to a registrable proprietary title, the proof of the then prevailing electoral requirement.
When the 1867 Act was still at the Bill stage, the view was expressed in Parliament that the Maori Land Court (established in 1865) would have resolved all these questions within five years.
The Maori Seats created by the Act were intended as an interim measure for five years only. It was hoped that by this time enough Maori would hold land under freehold title to remove the need for separate representation.
However, in 1872, the temporary provision was extended for a further five years. Before that period expired, the Maori Representation Continuance Act 1876 decreed that separate representation would continue “until expressly repealed by an Act of the General Assembly.”
In effect, the 1867 Act gave Maori the manhood franchise 12 years before European males were accorded the same right. It was not until 1879 that the Qualification of Electors Act introduced European male suffrage as an alternative to the property qualification.
Universal suffrage in 1893 removed the property qualification. It extended voting rights to all New Zealanders, subject only to an age qualification. Any practical reason for separate Maori seats had altogether disappeared.
However, “politics as usual” has kept the Maori seats in place for 115 years past their use-by date. The bottom line: politicians have always liked the fact that a separate Maori constituency could be pork barrelled in return for political support.
When Parliament finally reviewed the Maori seats in 1953 along with a major re-alignment of Maori electoral boundaries, the vested interests of both Labour and National meant the issue was quietly shelved.
In the 1946 General Election, the two parties were tied for general seats. It was only Labour’s hold on the four Maori seats which enabled it to remain the government. National, for its part, feared that cutting the Maori seats would bring thousand of Labour-voting Maori flooding onto the general roll in its marginal rural electorates.
In the 1980s, the Maori seats were increasingly linked with the independence aspirations of Maori nationalists, and turned into a political hot potato. Pressure exerted by these groups meant that after the MMP electoral system was introduced in 1993, the number of Maori seats became tied to the number of New Zealanders electing to register on the Maori roll.
After several well-publicised taxpayer-funded enrolment drives, these seats have increased in number from four to seven. Yet in the election just held, a mere 53 percent of those registered on the Maori roll even bothered to vote, suggesting non-voters probably only signed up as a throwaway statement of cultural identity after being bailed up in a shopping mall by someone with a clipboard.
If the number of Maori seats depended, not upon the number of people on the Maori roll but upon those who actually voted in the last election, there would be just four Maori seats in 2011.
Under MMP, the existence of the Maori seats gives rise to parliamentary ‘overhang.’ This occurs when a party wins more electorate seats than their party vote entitles them to.
In the 2008 election, the Maori Party gained 2.24 percent of the party vote, which entitled them to three Members of Parliament, but won five Maori seats. That meant that the Maori Party created an overhang of two additional seats, giving us 122 MPs in the present Parliament, not 120.
This ‘overhang’ means the number of confidence votes needed to form a government increases from 61 to 62. The inflated representation of the Maori Party through ‘overhang’ thus gives it disproportionate leverage in coalition talks, should the highest polling party find itself unable to form a government in its own right or with other coalition partners.
It is hardly surprising that the Maori Party wants to set in concrete and expand an institution which gives it an easy ride into Parliament, and (because of the ‘overhang’ effect under MMP) excessive influence once it gets there.
The spectre of the racial tail wagging the majority dog gets worse the more Maori seats there are. For this reason, the Maori Party’s demand for the Maori seats to be entrenched in law with all 18 year olds of Maori descent placed automatically onto the Maori roll poses a serious threat to our representative democracy.
It is today widely believed that the Maori seats have some kind of quasi-constitutional status and should be retained as long as Maori activists want them. This is arrant nonsense.
The Treaty of Waitangi does not provide for separate Maori political representation. Nor is there any constitutional basis for its existence.
What the Treaty does provide for is that all New Zealanders, irrespective of cultural affiliation, ethnicity, religious belief, or indeed any other distinguishing characteristic, will enjoy equality in citizenship. This means the universal suffrage subject only to an age qualification that has been in place since 1893.
In Preferential Policies: An International Perspective, Black American academic, Thomas Sowell records the downstream effect of government policies promoting group rights. Sold to the public as promoting inter-group harmony, Sowell found that wherever such policies had been tried, they invariably expanded over time in scale and scope; benefited already advantaged members of the preference group (those with the smarts to work the system); and led to increased rather than decreased inter-group polarisation. In many places they have brought about decades-long civil wars killing thousands of people.
David Round, a law lecturer at the University of Canterbury, is the latest in a long line of commentators to have preached the danger of identity politics:
“Are we to be a nation, or merely a collection of disparate tribes and cultures all fighting for our own self-interest, heedless of the greater good? Every society has different elements and interests, but for the greater good these interest groups should be encouraged to sink their differences as much as possible and join in the same great common enterprise. The unthinking celebration of diversity which has recently begun to darken our national life carries a very dangerous potential to tear our country apart.”
Entrenching separate Maori political representation permanently embeds a self-anointed racial aristocracy into the fabric of our nation. Whether we should retain the Maori seats is therefore not a matter to be decided on our behalf by politicians. The New Zealand public should be given the opportunity to make a call on this matter by way of binding referendum after hearing both sides of the argument.
Anonymous said...
The problem is John Key bringing the Maori Party into the tent by backing off on abolishing the Maori seats until Maori decide they don't want them any more (fat chance of that!)
I'm extremely disappointed that Key seems to put a short-term desire to be seen by the electorate as an all-round "good guy" ahead of the country's long-term interests.
I was hoping for a little more than "politics as usual" -- something which has characterised political dealings with the Maori seats for the last 141 years...
Here's a little commentary on the Maori seats:
THE MAORI SEATS
The Maori Party has stated it wants the Maori Parliamentary seats to be entrenched in law. In a manner chillingly redolent of apartheid-era South Africa, it also wants every New Zealander classified by ethnicity (presumably on the basis of boxes ticked on the census form), and all 18 year olds of even remotely Maori descent placed automatically onto the Maori electoral roll.
Yet there is no such thing as an ethnic Maori. Today, anyone claiming to be “Maori” is actually a person of mixed European-Maori descent rejecting one group of ancestors to adopt the cultural identity of another. The Maori Party’s half-American Tariana Turia is a case in point.
Every census shows more so-called Maori marrying or cohabiting outside the group with which they culturally identify. There has been a corresponding exponential increase in the number of New Zealanders with Maori ancestry.
Should the Maori Party get its way, the number of Maori seats would need to be expanded every election to keep pace with a growing Maori population. Over time, these clever race hustlers are looking to manipulate the mechanisms of representative democracy to engineer a "reverse takeover" of our Parliament.
Before this is allowed to happen, the New Zealand public needs to understand why we have separate Maori seats in the first place, and whether there is a valid argument for their retention. If not, they must be abolished.
When the Maori Representation Act was introduced in 1867, the right to vote rested on a property qualification, and was restricted to property-owning males.
It is now widely held that the Act was introduced because Maori were disenfranchised by their multiple ownership of land. This is incorrect.
Maori in possession of a freehold estate to the value of twenty-five pounds – even if “held in severalty” – were entitled to vote.
The real problem was the disputed ownership of customary Maori land which had not yet become subject to a registrable proprietary title, the proof of the then prevailing electoral requirement.
When the 1867 Act was still at the Bill stage, the view was expressed in Parliament that the Maori Land Court (established in 1865) would have resolved all these questions within five years.
The Maori Seats created by the Act were intended as an interim measure for five years only. It was hoped that by this time enough Maori would hold land under freehold title to remove the need for separate representation.
However, in 1872, the temporary provision was extended for a further five years. Before that period expired, the Maori Representation Continuance Act 1876 decreed that separate representation would continue “until expressly repealed by an Act of the General Assembly.”
In effect, the 1867 Act gave Maori the manhood franchise 12 years before European males were accorded the same right. It was not until 1879 that the Qualification of Electors Act introduced European male suffrage as an alternative to the property qualification.
Universal suffrage in 1893 removed the property qualification. It extended voting rights to all New Zealanders, subject only to an age qualification. Any practical reason for separate Maori seats had altogether disappeared.
However, “politics as usual” has kept the Maori seats in place for 115 years past their use-by date. The bottom line: politicians have always liked the fact that a separate Maori constituency could be pork barrelled in return for political support.
When Parliament finally reviewed the Maori seats in 1953 along with a major re-alignment of Maori electoral boundaries, the vested interests of both Labour and National meant the issue was quietly shelved.
In the 1946 General Election, the two parties were tied for general seats. It was only Labour’s hold on the four Maori seats which enabled it to remain the government. National, for its part, feared that cutting the Maori seats would bring thousand of Labour-voting Maori flooding onto the general roll in its marginal rural electorates.
In the 1980s, the Maori seats were increasingly linked with the independence aspirations of Maori nationalists, and turned into a political hot potato. Pressure exerted by these groups meant that after the MMP electoral system was introduced in 1993, the number of Maori seats became tied to the number of New Zealanders electing to register on the Maori roll.
After several well-publicised taxpayer-funded enrolment drives, these seats have increased in number from four to seven. Yet in the election just held, a mere 53 percent of those registered on the Maori roll even bothered to vote, suggesting non-voters probably only signed up as a throwaway statement of cultural identity after being bailed up in a shopping mall by someone with a clipboard.
If the number of Maori seats depended, not upon the number of people on the Maori roll but upon those who actually voted in the last election, there would be just four Maori seats in 2011.
Under MMP, the existence of the Maori seats gives rise to parliamentary ‘overhang.’ This occurs when a party wins more electorate seats than their party vote entitles them to.
In the 2008 election, the Maori Party gained 2.24 percent of the party vote, which entitled them to three Members of Parliament, but won five Maori seats. That meant that the Maori Party created an overhang of two additional seats, giving us 122 MPs in the present Parliament, not 120.
This ‘overhang’ means the number of confidence votes needed to form a government increases from 61 to 62. The inflated representation of the Maori Party through ‘overhang’ thus gives it disproportionate leverage in coalition talks, should the highest polling party find itself unable to form a government in its own right or with other coalition partners.
It is hardly surprising that the Maori Party wants to set in concrete and expand an institution which gives it an easy ride into Parliament, and (because of the ‘overhang’ effect under MMP) excessive influence once it gets there.
The spectre of the racial tail wagging the majority dog gets worse the more Maori seats there are. For this reason, the Maori Party’s demand for the Maori seats to be entrenched in law with all 18 year olds of Maori descent placed automatically onto the Maori roll poses a serious threat to our representative democracy.
It is today widely believed that the Maori seats have some kind of quasi-constitutional status and should be retained as long as Maori activists want them. This is arrant nonsense.
The Treaty of Waitangi does not provide for separate Maori political representation. Nor is there any constitutional basis for its existence.
What the Treaty does provide for is that all New Zealanders, irrespective of cultural affiliation, ethnicity, religious belief, or indeed any other distinguishing characteristic, will enjoy equality in citizenship. This means the universal suffrage subject only to an age qualification that has been in place since 1893.
In Preferential Policies: An International Perspective, Black American academic, Thomas Sowell records the downstream effect of government policies promoting group rights. Sold to the public as promoting inter-group harmony, Sowell found that wherever such policies had been tried, they invariably expanded over time in scale and scope; benefited already advantaged members of the preference group (those with the smarts to work the system); and led to increased rather than decreased inter-group polarisation. In many places they have brought about decades-long civil wars killing thousands of people.
David Round, a law lecturer at the University of Canterbury, is the latest in a long line of commentators to have preached the danger of identity politics:
“Are we to be a nation, or merely a collection of disparate tribes and cultures all fighting for our own self-interest, heedless of the greater good? Every society has different elements and interests, but for the greater good these interest groups should be encouraged to sink their differences as much as possible and join in the same great common enterprise. The unthinking celebration of diversity which has recently begun to darken our national life carries a very dangerous potential to tear our country apart.”
Entrenching separate Maori political representation permanently embeds a self-anointed racial aristocracy into the fabric of our nation. Whether we should retain the Maori seats is therefore not a matter to be decided on our behalf by politicians. The New Zealand public should be given the opportunity to make a call on this matter by way of binding referendum after hearing both sides of the argument.
5 Comments:
The Maori Party would have no trouble being elected to parliament without the Maori Seats if not for the 5% threshold.
Of course, without the 5% threshold we would have had an at least two single-issue parties elected to parliament.
The Maori seats exist because of an agreement between National and Labour. All that is needed to get rid of them is for those two partys to agree so.
National knows this, and the Maori Party know this. The moment the Maori Party fall out with National, Key will probably put the seats back on the alter again.
Anyways good to see you back bashing Maori, I was getting real bored of your Bash the Black President campaign.
Sorry to tell you anon 2, but there's lots more to come on America's first red president.
Anon2, your lame comments about "bashing Maori" show you up as a knobspank.
To illustrate, here's a quote from black American Academic, Thomas Sowell:
"Sixty years ago, if you advocated racial equality, you were a radical. Thirty years ago, you were a liberal. Now, you're a 'racist.'"
Hi,
I am doing an assignment at university and was wanting to use that Thomas Sowell quote you have written:
"Sixty years ago, if you advocated racial equality, you were a radical. Thirty years ago, you were a liberal. Now, you're a 'racist.'"
I am struggling to find it on the internet - where about's did you get it from? thank you very much!
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