The New Zealand Herald

Urgent Covid legislatio­n tone deaf to Ma¯ori

- Jane Kelsey comment Professor Jane Kelsey is a Professor of Law at University of Auckland

The Government has largely carried people with it since the outbreak of Covid-19 and earned a high degree of trust and compliance. Of necessity, it has made things up as it went along. That, in turn, has raised questions of the legal powers it was relying on. Several legal challenges are now under way.

As the country moved into level 2, the Government needed legislatio­n to continue enforcing restrictio­ns without extending the state of emergency. Hence, the Covid-19 Public Health Response Bill that was passed through the House under urgency on Wednesday.

That, too, was inevitably written under pressure. To a large degree the powers in the Bill mirror those that exist in some other legislatio­n, including the Health Act the Government has relied on. That does not make them right.

Exceptiona­l coercive powers, especially powers of entry without warrant, need to be highly circumscri­bed and tailored to the contexts where they may be applied. Getting buy-in to them requires the utmost sensitivit­y to fears of how they may be used and abused. Unfortunat­ely, the Bill falls short of that mark. That is especially so in relation to Ma¯ori.

Urgency is never a good way to make good law, let alone this kind of legislatio­n. The Bill was repeatedly revised on the hoof. Some changes were good. The initial term of two years has been reduced to renewal after 90 days, with a sunset after two years. But changes made by Supplement­ary Order Paper in response to Ma¯ori concerns have made the legislatio­n worse.

Despite the urgency, the Government should have found a way to test it before a Select Committee. Apparently, various people were asked for comment on an exposure draft of the legislatio­n. It is not yet clear who they were, what they said and how far their concerns were addressed.

However, National MP Alfred Ngaro revealed in the House that Ma¯ori who were consulted said the Bill needed to reference the Treaty principles and framework to guide the exercise of these powers in relation to Ma¯ori and their operation on the ground. All the

Government did was include a clause that restricted entry on to marae to police officers, rather than all enforcemen­t agents, on the same basis as private dwellings.

The failure to take that advice on board was a serious miscalcula­tion.

Ma¯ori are in a unique situation, not just because of the Treaty relationsh­ip.

There is a long and shameful history of coercive “emergency” powers being abused.

Government­s have only just apologised for the invasions of Parihaka and Maungapo¯hatu that relied on similarly worded powers. Memories of the police raids in Te Urewera remain raw.

The sledgehamm­er of coercive legislatio­n was used in place of dialogue and peaceful resolution, and filters on the sweeping powers in the Terrorism Suppressio­n Act were ineffectua­l or ignored.

The good will that seemed to be building between police and iwi around the checkpoint­s has dissipated.

The Minister’s reaction to the groundswel­l of Ma¯ori anger at the Bill was to amend it by removing the limitation­s for entry on marae, rather than improving protection­s for Ma¯ori.

Yes, the Minister was tired and frustrated. Hopefully, he regrets his kneejerk response to deep-felt Ma¯ori concerns.

The Government now needs to move rapidly into damage control to avoid this Bill escalating into their version of the Seabed and Foreshore debacle.

That includes adopting the original advice, and amending the Bill to recognise the Treaty partnershi­p is different and unique, and provides a framework for achieving the objectives of the legislatio­n by co-operation without resort to coercive powers that have such a shameful history.

Urgency is never a good way to make good law, let alone this kind of legislatio­n.

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