Nelson Mail

Together at Waitangi

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Many New Zealanders, including many Ma¯ori, would probably prefer a Waitangi Day free of excessive aggravatio­n.

That wouldn’t have to mean a bland or meaningles­s official day, where Pollyanna rules and the crimes of history are forgotten. It would mean a brutally frank exchange of views, but minus any physical threats.

Whether she can pull it off, even after an extended visit to the north to meet a variety of interest groups, remains to be seen. It’s worth pointing out that she also has the strongest party-political reasons for succeeding.

The Ma¯ori seats, after all, have all returned to Labour and the Ma¯ori Party has died. Jacinda Ardern must know that Ma¯ori voters won’t now put up with sops or soothing words. They will expect from her Government real and lasting benefits for Ma¯ori.

It is Ma¯ori, after all, who too often remain at the bottom of the heap despite all the Treaty settlement­s and all the changes in Ma¯ori political representa­tion in MMP government­s.

Labour knows that they don’t hold a mortgage on Ma¯ori votes. It has to compete for them.

Waitangi Day is the day when we ask who we are. The answer to that is very complex. We are a collection of ethnic, economic and social minorities with very different views of the world and this country.

So no official celebratio­n or ritual will satisfy everyone. There are divisions within the minorities themselves, as Ma¯ori politics continuall­y reminds us.

The Treaty settlement­s won’t necessaril­y change that. They might even aggravate the difference­s between the developing Maori middle class and the underclass.

National leader Bill English says scornfully that Ardern is deluded if she thinks she can fix these problems ‘‘with a bit of Labour love’’. And he’s right.

Perhaps there is a new attitude developing in National since its dependence on Ma¯ori Party votes has disappeare­d.

English was wrong to say that the Government isn’t responsibl­e for saving ‘‘someone else’s language’’ (by which he meant Ma¯ori).

In fact, the Ma¯ori language, an official language of New Zealand, belongs to all of us. And that’s a fact worth rememberin­g on our national day.

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