The New Zealand Herald

Can this man save the Māori Party?

The Maori Party will meet in Whanganui this weekend. If it wants to return to Parliament, its hopes may rest with its president

- Claire Trevett

Late on election night 2017, as then Maori Party co-leader Te Ururoa Flavell shed tears over the end of the party’s 12 years in Parliament, Che Wilson got out his laptop at his Hamilton home and started listing what had gone wrong.

Six months later, Wilson put his hand up to be the party’s president, replacing Tukoroiran­gi Morgan.

“We didn’t listen. We stopped listening to our people, and that’s why we lost. It’s that simple,” Wilson says of that loss.

Now the 43-year-old is the party’s public face, and his shoulders bear a large part of the burden of trying to secure a comeback for the party after a resurgent Labour Party recaptured all the Maori electorate­s. He has a lot of work ahead. About a year out from the election, the Maori Party has no co-leaders, no candidates and presumably very little funding.

The party’s remaining team will meet at Whangaehu Marae, near Whanganui, this weekend as it sets about rebuilding its base.

It is Maori Party co-founder Dame Tariana Turia’s marae.

The media have usually been welcomed to the Maori Party’s annual meetings, but this one is a closed-doors event.

Wilson said that it is a nuts and bolts meeting. New co-leaders will not be appointed at that meeting, although he expects that to happen by the time politician­s roll up to Ratana in January next year.

“We wanted to tidy up shop and make sure that we aren’t just jumping to the first personalit­y that might get us a few votes. Because we need to win, and we need to have a clear strategy over a number of elections, not just this election.”

Getting back into Parliament will require three things: the right candidates, the right electorate­s, and Labour making a blunder.

Wilson may also be hampered by the fallout of former co-leader Marama Fox’s company going into liquidatio­n — saying he is simply focussing on rebuilding the party and its policies.

Wilson himself seems an obvious candidate for the leader and as a candidate in the Te Tai Hauauru electorate.

However, he has committed to staying in Hamilton at least while his two children are at school.

“I haven’t ruled [standing] out, but at the moment I’m comfortabl­e in the place I am in.”

Wilson has identified Te Tai Hauauru and Waiariki as the two electorate­s in which the Maori Party might stand the best chance. Those were held by Turia and Flavell until 2014 and 2017 respective­ly. Others reckon Tamaki Makaurau could be the chance, especially if there is discontent over Ihumatao.

The third factor that would help the Maori Party is a Labour blunder on an issue that affects Maoridom.

There is no shortage of issues on which that blunder could happen: Ihumatao, water reforms, and Oranga Tamariki come to mind.

Wilson has been proactive in speaking out on all those issues, coming to hui at Parliament over the Oranga Tamariki practice of taking children, and challengin­g Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern to front up to Maori on Ihumatao during anniversar­y celebratio­ns for the coronation of the Maori King.

Wilson regards Ardern highly, saying she was “a rock star” internatio­nally.

“She does some pretty cool stuff for us internatio­nally and she was amazing at Christchur­ch. But she is part of the beast, which doesn’t really like dealing with the challenges associated with Maori.”

He says the Crown buying the land at Ihumatao and returning it to Maori is the only viable option to settle that issue.

“All Labour needs to do is do nothing and that will help us massively. The problem is, it doesn’t help our people with them doing nothing.”

Labour has already learned the hard way from the Foreshore and Seabed Act that one issue is enough to complete change the landscape in Maori politics. It will be more careful now.

As for the National Party, if it is hoping a comeback by the Maori Party will provide it with a potential government partner, it could be disappoint­ed.

The Maori Party was booted out of Parliament in 2017 after three terms as a support party for the National Party. Wilson has learned from that.

Asked now whether he would prefer to side with National or Labour, Wilson says he is

We didn’t listen. We stopped listening to our people, and that’s why we lost. It’s that simple. Che Wilson

comfortabl­e with both.

“It’s really just what the political climate is. But I think the most important thing is our people would prefer us to go with Labour. So, it’s whether Labour would be interested in working with us.”

Wilson is one of those annoying people to profile about whom nobody has a bad word to say.

He laughs when he is told this, and suggests the Herald speak to one of his eight siblings for a contrary view. He was, he admits, rather spoiled as the youngest child of nine.

Well connected, he has respect of both National and Labour MPs. He used to work with Meka Whaitiri and is fond of her. He knows Willie Jackson well, and National MPs regard him highly.

NZ First MP Shane Jones says Wilson is a very strong speaker on the marae, and could be a danger if the Government mis stepped on an issue such as Ihumatao.

Treaty Negotiatio­ns Minister Andrew Little has a great deal of respect for him, describing him as “a really impressive guy.” He adds, only half-jokingly, that it was a pity Wilson was in the wrong political party.

He was less certain about whether Wilson could save the Maori Party. “They’ve got their own challenges about what they stand for. [After the foreshore and seabed] They never worked out ‘where next for them?”’

National MP Todd Muller first met Wilson some years ago after they both did a short course at Stanford University.

“He’s one of these remarkable Maori leaders who pour the best of their energy into progressin­g the interests of their iwi and wider whanau and hapu.

“There’s a sort of steely humility about him, a generosity of time with people like myself.”

He said Wilson could easily adjust to the role of a politician. “The same test of judgment and applicatio­n, and the ability to frame an argument and bring people with you has been what he has lived and breathed for the last 10 — 15 years.”

Wilson is of course also well connected in Maoridom, serving as one of the Maori King’s 12 tribal advisers and working with the iwi leaders grouping.

In March 2018, Wilson stood next to Treaty Negotiatio­ns Minister Andrew Little at Raketapaum­a Marae to sign the Ngati Rangi settlement deed.

On his hip was an old axe. “That’s a patıtı. And the patıtı, I chose to wear that as a sign of not forgetting our fight.

“That’s why I wore my blankets for our signing agreement and at the last reading at Parliament, just to remember there have been so many broken promises against such a loyal, willing and far too forgiving partner.”

The blankets represente­d the exchange of land for beads and blankets. He said for the Whanganui river tribes, those blankets were sometimes laced with arsenic.

Wilson was young for a chief Treaty negotiator, chosen by the iwi elders for the role.

His iwi is based in Ohakune, at the foot of Ruapehu.

It was there Wilson grew up, the youngest in a family of nine children and at least nine (Maori adoption) whangai siblings.

“When I was being raised there were 14 of us at home, including Mum and Dad. It was a staunch Catholic family.”

His father was a carpenter who worked at the pulp mill and in forestry, his mother was an early childhood teacher.

Wilson’s interest in Maori politics and rights started when he was 12.

“I was in a Rotary speech competitio­n. It was an English speech competitio­n but I was the only student from my school in it and we were hosting it, so the principal asked me to do a brief mihi before I did my speech. I got disqualifi­ed.

I was just really embarrasse­d but I realised later that was what triggered the fire in my belly.”

He took part in the annual Whanganui River journey a few months later in which iwi travel along the river to assert their authority over it.

There is a hut on that river halfbuilt over a Maori burial site.

“I was shocked because you could see the marked graves under the building. That triggered a whole sense of injustice.

“That was the first formal, political event I engaged in.”

Wilson has an eclectic arrangemen­t of achievemen­ts. They include a children’s book on the uses for the pikopiko (fern shoots).

He is also a composer of waiata. He wrote the waiata for the Ngati Rangi settlement.

He has also contribute­d one to the British Museum. Called E noho nei au,

(Waiting for Warmth) the chant was displayed in a 2006 exhibition at the museum and it mourns the taonga held in overseas museums.

“There are only two people in the world who have ever written a song for the British Museum. One is myself and the other is a guy called Mozart Amadeus.”

He has long had political ambitions and he and his two friends had talked about a Maori party.

Then along came the Maori Party, set up by Wilson’s aunt, Turia after her walkout from the Labour Party over the Foreshore and Seabed Act.

Wilson was living in London when the foreshore and seabed hıkoi happened in 2004.

He joined the Maori Party from afar and has since helped develop policies and strategy.

He stayed in the background until that night of the 2017 election, when the Maori Party lost its last seat.

Soon after he put his hand up to be president, telling Turia he would do so.

“I knew it would be make or break and it could be my own political suicide if we lose, but I’ve seen so many benefits and because I understand our political system, I think it’s a no-brainer.

“But politics is a fickle game.” He has less than a year to come out on the “make” side of that scenario.

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 ??  ?? Che Wilson with Sir John Key.
Che Wilson with Sir John Key.
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 ??  ?? Che Wilson’s Ma¯ ori Party has no co-leaders, no candidates and presumably very little funding. Can he help secure its return to Parliament?
Che Wilson’s Ma¯ ori Party has no co-leaders, no candidates and presumably very little funding. Can he help secure its return to Parliament?

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