Hawke's Bay Today

Beware unthinking judges and witless lawmakers

- Shane Jones is a former Labour MP and NZ First MP and was the first Minister for Regional Economic Developmen­t.

It is said time and reflection deepen insight and produce understand­ing. Sadly, such folksy learnings seem absent from our Supreme Court. Its view that 16-year-old tamariki should be voting in parliament­ary elections reveals a paucity of reflection and understand­ing.

Recently, an amendment to our Bill of Rights was made and the Supreme Court can now make declaratio­ns as to whether a law is incompatib­le with this Act. This is a retrograde move that gnaws at the robe of parliament­ary sovereignt­y.

Such declaratio­ns are not mandatory or binding on legislator­s. But jurists weighing in on tikanga and voting age while other competent institutio­ns also toil away on these matters shows irrational thinking, or worse. Just as 16-year-olds are often given a Road Code book, a constituti­onal equivalent should be sent to our judges, stay in your lane.

The Prime Minister obviously relishes the prospect of 16-year-olds voting. New standard bearers presumably, given her support base has become a wasteland.

In contrast to her inertia regarding crime and teenage ram raiding, she told us legislatio­n to change the voting age will be swiftly tabled in Parliament — further evidence of labouring under a delusion.

Witless lawmaking seems to be escalating. Three Waters is a key example. The arm-twisting of Nanaia Mahuta to make tribal, Mana o te Wai statements binding on the new water corporatio­ns is akin to creating a taniwha

veto.

The recipe for these foggy edicts will depend on the political diet of the local hapu. Some will be reasonable, others polemical, and a few will be helpful for infrastruc­ture delivery purposes. None will give precedence to the public interest but, rather, will be advanced in the interest of tribal ownership of water.

Perversely, these mana statements

may prove to be the most potent accountabi­lity mechanisms facing the new water corporatio­ns as such an outcome will be tested in court. Multiple tribal declaratio­ns will create disputes, a la the current legal infighting between Hauraki iwi and Ngati Whatua in Auckland.

The Three Waters legislatio­n places onerous Treaty/Tiriti obligation­s on future directors and managers. This will also lead to litigation as iwi claimants seek court declaratio­ns as to whether the Ma¯ori language version of the Treaty, the Tiriti, has more force.

Labour MP Duncan Webb has taken this governance offensive beyond political targets into the Companies Act. His Member’s Bill was drawn in 2021 from the parliament­ary ballot. It states that when determinin­g the best interests of a company a director may recognise the principles of the Treaty of Waitangi. Apparently, this is designed to modernise governance. It boosts directors’ obligation­s beyond shareholde­rs to other stakeholde­rs. It is obvious such a provision will feed litigation against private companies by Ma¯ori claimants. Given partnershi­p is a key Treaty principle, the mind boggles.

The folly of our Supreme Court has been eclipsed by the political dottiness of the Green Party. During the Three Waters legislativ­e process their MP Eugenie Sage moved an amendment requiring 60 per cent of a future parliament to support any move to privatise the new water corporatio­ns. Labour’s Chief Whip, Duncan Webb erred by getting his party to vote for it.

This is chaotic evidence, as if we needed it, that some lawyers as well as judges should stay away from politics.

Sadly, National MPs do not appear to have appreciate­d the gravity of this harebraine­d stunt.

This mess can only be fixed by Labour revisiting the Three Waters legislativ­e process. Stand by for opposition howls of delight.

Perhaps this malfeasanc­e should not surprise us, given both of these parties are hellbent on panel-beating democracy.

These blunders reinforce the sense that our political and judicial top shelf is out of touch. Households and employers fear they cannot bear the burden of rising costs. The constituti­on they worry about is of an economic character.

Ardern may not be a Marxist but her Government seems to appraise Treaty matters with the doctrine of permanent revolution. Ma¯ori/Crown relations are changed through a continuous internal struggle to establish iwi hegemony.

Next year, they will learn more Kiwis vote than iwi.

From the suburban malls to the farm gate, voters will flock to the polling booths for our foundation­al values of selfrelian­ce, service, law-abiding respect and indivisibl­e nationhood.

"The Three Waters legislatio­n places onerous Treaty/Tiriti obligation­s on future directors and managers."

Shane Jones

 ?? PHOTO / MARK MITCHELL ?? Make It 16 campaigner­s at the Supreme Court in Wellington.
PHOTO / MARK MITCHELL Make It 16 campaigner­s at the Supreme Court in Wellington.

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