Whanganui Chronicle

‘Time to transform Aotearoa for the better’

Ma¯ori Party co-leader makes maiden speech

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Ma¯ori Party co-leader Debbie Ngarewa-packer has pulled no punches in her maiden speech, describing early New Zealand government­s as “monsters, murderers and rapists”.

The party has returned to Parliament after dropping out in 2017, with hundreds of supporters travelling to Wellington for the speeches of Ngarewa-packer and her fellow co-leader, Rawiri Waititi.

Waititi paid tribute to party founder Dame Tariana Turia and called for the Crown to apologise for the wrongs of the past.

“Her courage has inspired a whole generation and her bravery continues to inspire me today.”

Ngarewa-packer accused former MPS of being responsibl­e for the murder and rape of women and children, the imprisonme­nt of Ma¯ori without trial and the confiscati­on of their land.

“I stand here as a descendant of a people who survived a Holocaust, a genocide, sponsored by this House and members of Parliament whose portraits still hang from the walls. Members of Parli ament who sought our exterminat­ion and created legislatio­n to achieve it.”

The t r auma of those days still stayed with her Taranaki whakapapa despite the resolve they had shown to survive, she said.

Her great grandfathe­r was the only s urvivor of t he wha¯nau to return home after being sentenced to life imprisonme­nt in 1869 for fighting to stop the confiscati­on of land.

He was just 16 at the time. Later, after his release from Dunedin Prison he helped build three churches on sites of huge significan­ce to mark where their land had been taken.

Now 150 years later, she said it was important for her to be elected to Parliament to represent her tı¯puna and ensure “this place never ever forgets the impact of racist legislatio­n” and she also wanted to help ensure a future for her mokopuna.

Ngarewa-packer said both her parents instilled the value of education in all the wha¯nau with her mum going from cleaner at the Pa¯tea Primary School to being its principal. She also praised her husband, Neil, who had always encouraged her to further her education overseas and supported her involvemen­t in issues such as the uptake of Ma¯ori babies and the foreshore and seabed.

She said she wanted to repay the support of her wha¯nau and to ensure their voice is heard. “Too many of our wha¯nau are struggling, out of work and unable to survive on benefits set deliberate­ly below the poverty line or working two or three jobs on low wages and still not being able to pay their bills . . .”

She said they were still suffering from institutio­nal racism and the failure to undertake constituti­onal reforms, including in the education sector.

Ngarewa- Packer s ai d s he had embarked on many David and Goliath battles during her lifetime and was committed to continuing the fight for her people.

“In this House we have the power not to repeat the mistakes of the past that caused so much suffering for our people . . . and to transform Aotearoa for the better.”

As other MPS congratula­ted NgarewaPac­ker, many of her wha¯nau who sang on the original Pa¯tea Ma¯ori club hit Poi E broke into a rousing version of the classic song from the gallery.

Crown admit failings’

‘should its

Waititi said 180 years after the signing of the Te Tiriti o Waitangi Ma¯ori were still struggling to keep their identity and language alive in the face of land theft, denial of their tangata whenua status, monocultur­al institutio­ns and many other slights.

He praised media outlet Stuff for its wide- r anging admissions of racism this week and asked when the Crown would own up to its many failings and commit to doing better.

“It is time to transform how we do politics in Aotearoa; it is time for Ma¯ori to look after Ma¯ori as we know what is best for us.”

The Covid-19 pandemic had shown Ma¯ori could do this successful­ly without government interventi­on, he said.

He promised to be a change agent for his people “like a pebble in a shoe” and would be “a constant annoyance” to those hanging on to colonial ways.

He said he wanted a Ma¯ori Parliament, the right for Ma¯ori to switch between the Ma¯ori and general rolls at any time, a Ma¯ori-run replacemen­t for Oranga Tamariki, better funding for Wha¯nau Ora, more water rights and an end to deep sea oil drilling.

“Ma¯ori have had enough of being assimilate­d, and forced to do and look like everyone else. We are not like everyone else, we are unique . . . there’s noone else in the world like us and we need to maintain who we are.”

 ?? PHOTO / FILE ?? Ma¯ori Party co-leader Debbie Ngarewa-packer has pulled no punches in her maiden speech.
PHOTO / FILE Ma¯ori Party co-leader Debbie Ngarewa-packer has pulled no punches in her maiden speech.

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