The Northern Advocate

Whaitiri staffer ‘had bruised arm’

Inquiry hears minister ‘grabbed’ press secretary during incident

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The incident involving former minister Meka Whaitiri and a staff member allegedly left bruising to the upper right arm of the staffer and photos of the bruises were produced to the inquiry, a report leaked to the NZ Herald shows.

The incident occurred because Whaitiri was allegedly unhappy at not having been alerted to a photo opportunit­y at a media standup with Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern during a lunch break at a function in Gisborne.

Other ministers were standing behind Ardern but Whaitiri wasn’t because no one had told her it was happening.

There is no dispute Whaitiri had words with her staffer for missing the event.

The staff member claims that Whaitiri came up behind her in the foyer of the building and grabbed her arm hard and took her outside when she saw Ardern having the standup.

But Whaitiri denies physically touching her staff member at any stage. There were no witnesses.

David Patten, the Wellington lawyer who conducted the inquiry for Ministeria­l Services, the employer of ministeria­l staff, found on the balance of probabilit­ies that the staff member’s version was the more likely explanatio­n.

He found that Whaitiri did not pull or drag the press secretary outside from the foyer of the building where the meeting was taking place.

But he found it more probable that Whaitiri approached the staffer from behind and grabbed her by the arm and that Whaitiri spoke in a raised voice to the staffer.

In evidence to the inquiry, the staff member said Whaitiri had blamed her for missing the media standup with the Prime Minister.

“It was during intermissi­on, during the break so I’d gone out into the hallway, gone to bathroom and I’d just gone out into the hallway into the vestibule for a bit of a breather and that’s when she came over,” the staff member said.

“She grabbed me by the arm and pulled me outside and said she needed to talk to me and when we were outside she raised her voice.

“I wouldn’t say yelled but she did raise her voice to me and asked me if I knew what I was doing in my job and did I realise I’d missed a media opportunit­y and that that was embarrassi­ng to her because it was her electorate and she should have been in that camera shot.”

The staffer originally told the inquiry that Whaitiri had pinched her arm but changed that to grabbed.

“It was hard and it scared the living daylights out me actually,” she said.

“It freaked me out. I didn’t know what to say because I haven’t been grabbed like that before.”

In other parts of her evidence, she said: “She was definitely angry, and was definitely mad that I had screwed up. It scared me a lot and I didn’t want to return to that workplace, that work environmen­t.”

Ardern sacked Whaitiri last Thursday, a day after seeing the final report, saying she had lost confidence in Whatitiri at this time, but did not rule out a return at some point.

Ardern said she would not release the report to protect the privacy of the staff member but the Herald is publishing some of the evidence outlined in a draft of the final report in the public interest.

Whaitiri remains the MP for the eastern Maori electorate of IkaroaRawh­iti and Labour’s Maori MPs maintain support in her as co-leader of the Labour Maori caucus.

In Whaitiri’s evidence to the inquiry, she said that when she saw the standup taking place she went looking for the press secretary and saw her coming towards her. She did not grab her. She asked her to go outside with her.

“She was coming towards me and all I wanted was for her to go outside so she could see the standup and because there were so many people around the dining hall it was hard to have a conversati­on cos people were talking over lunch. I thought it would be best to take her out to see it and for her to talk outside where there were less people.”

Once they were outside, Whaitiri pointed to Jacinda Ardern’s standup and asked what was wrong with that picture they were looking at.

“I was pointing at the situation and asking very direct questions and then being really clear — ‘this is your role’.”

Whaitiri said the press secretary was apologisin­g, and Whaitiri said: “This is your job, this is what you are supposed to watching out for.”

“All of that discussion happened outside because I wanted her to see what was going on and I wasn’t there.”

The whole thing had taken about two minutes, Whaitiri said “because while I was doing that . . . the standup was over . . . the film crew walked right into our conversati­on and it completely stopped.”

The incident occurred on August 27 at the Ngati Porou summit attended by Ardern and several ministers — Kelvin Davis, Nanaia Mahuta, Carmel Sepuloni, Eugenie Sage and Whaitiri, according to the ministeria­l media diary.

Whaitiri was suspended by Ardern as a minister on August 30, while Ministeria­l Services, the employer of ministeria­l staff, conducted an inquiry.

The draft report also makes it clear that a member of the Prime Minister’s staff, press secretary Leah Haines, was closely involved in events after the incident.

Haines had accompanie­d Ardern to Gisborne, and had seen Whaitiri’s press secretary after the standup had ended and they were all back inside.

“She looked traumatise­d,” Haines told the inquiry. “She looked extremely upset. She wasn’t crying but she just looked stunned and upset so I was concerned about her.”

They decided to talk about it when they got back to Wellington.

Haines met the staffer two days later in Haines’ Beehive office and Ardern’s chief of staff Mike Munro attended part of it. Munro contacted Whaitiri that day as well.

The next day, August 30, Haines also attended a meeting with the general manager of ministeria­l and secretaria­t services, Morag Ingram, who took a photograph of the staff member’s upper arm.

Patten questioned the staff member about the bruises, why it took three days to see them and whether they could have been caused by something else such as a door handle.

She said it wasn’t until she was at a meeting with ministeria­l services on August 30 that they asked if there were any marks and until then she hadn’t thought to look.

Patten’s finding in the draft report is: “The photograph­s taken by Morag Ingram on August 30 2018 of [ the press secretary’s] upper right arm showing a bruise on that arm . . . are consistent, in my view, with someone being approached from behind and grabbed by a right-handed person.”

— NZ Herald

It freaked me out. I didn’t know what to say because I haven’t been grabbed like that before. Ministeria­l staff member’s evidence

 ?? Photo / Hawke’s Bay Today. Herald graphic ?? Meka Whaitiri
Photo / Hawke’s Bay Today. Herald graphic Meka Whaitiri

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