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Zealand
New Zealand: tensions erupt over preferential
policies for Maori
By John Braddock
26 February 2004
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A recent speech by New Zealands opposition leader, Don
Brash, opposing preferential policies for Maori, the
countrys indigenous inhabitants, has triggered a far-reaching
shake-up within the official political establishment.
Brash, who was only recently installed as leader of the National
Party, gave a keynote address to an Auckland Rotary Club in January,
demanding an end to all forms of ethnic separatism
and exclusive rights. Insisting on one rule
for all, he committed his party to a series of policies,
including closing the non-performing Maori Affairs
ministry, abolishing the seven Maori electorate seats in parliament
and scrapping the ministerial position.
On the back of an overwhelmingly favourable media response,
Brash promptly expanded on his theme. In employment matters, he
said, racial equity policies and special rights, such
as extended leave provisions for Maori tangi (funerals),
should be ignored or over-ridden. He went on to criticise the
provision of dedicated seats for Maori on statutory bodies such
as local councils and health boards and demanded that affirmative
action quotas for tertiary education be done away with.
Brashs speech followed an announcement by the New Zealand
Labour government late last year that it would legislate to nullify
a decision by the Court of Appeal that the Maori Land Court could
hear claims relating to the recognition of Maori customary interests
to the foreshore and seabed. Responding to media alarm that such
claims might eventually form the basis of establishing legal title,
Prime Minister Helen Clark proclaimed the need to guarantee open
access and use of the foreshore for all New Zealanders.
A series of specially convened consultation meetings
with Maori leaders before Christmas revealed deep hostility to
the proposed government legislation among Maori. The press stirred
up the spectre of beach occupations by angry Maori radicals
and predicted widespread demands for exclusive Maori ownership
over the foreshore.
Twenty years of biculturalism
The moves by both Labour and National signal the end of a 20-year
period in which the ruling class has pursued policies of biculturalism.
These were promoted as the means for overcoming the extreme social
and economic deprivation among Maori, who make up nearly 20 percent
of the population. The main vehicle for this program was the Treaty
of Waitangi, signed in 1840 by the main Maori Chiefs and the British
colonial governor to formally established British rule in New
Zealand.
The treaty, which ostensibly promised Maori the right to maintain
their lands and customs and to govern their own affairs, had been
all but ignored for nearly 150 years, as Maori were subjugated
by force of arms and systematically dispossessed. However, in
the mid-1980s the Labour government exhumed it, elevating it to
the status of the countrys founding document.
The treaty was promoted as the basis of a social partnership
between the present-day heirs of the original Maori inhabitants
and European settlers, which would see the historical grievances
of Maori resolved.
The government opened up a treaty claims process,
whereby Maori tribes could claim compensation for the alienation
of their lands by the early colonial authorities. Laws were enacted
to ensure Maori representation on official bodies covering all
aspects of state operations. In health and education, affirmative
action programs were established, the Maori language received
official status and Maori religious observances given pride of
place on formal occasions. A host of Maori consultancies emerged
to advise on treaty obligations in business, the public
sector and the arts.
Brash is now challenging this entire process by signalling
a major of revision of the status of the Treaty of Waitangi, declaring
that it is not an adequate substitute for a constitution.
Further, according to Brash, it is a serious mistake
to imply the treaty involves an on-going partnership between
two parties as though Maori were a distinct group of New Zealanders
and the rest of us were, of some sense, exactly equal weight.
The tensions generated by Brashs speeches erupted to
the surface on February 6 during state observances for Waitangi
Day, New Zealands national holiday. Prime Minister Helen
Clark was jostled by a large crowd as she entered one of the two
marae (meeting grounds) that form the traditional venue
for the proceedings. Members of her entourage received blows from
angry demonstrators as they sought to protect her from the milling
crowd.
In a separate incident, furious protesters denounced Brash
as a racist, while one protester threw a lump of dirt, hitting
Brash across the face. The main celebrations saw a large protest
crowd gather at a flagpole outside the meeting house, with scuffles
breaking out between protesters and police, resulting in several
arrests.
Clark initially responded by accusing Brash of playing the
race card and fomenting division in order
to elevate his partys poll ratings. The media, however,
commended Brash for opening up the issue, claiming it had been
left to fester, causing popular resentment. Dr. Brashs
approach ... has been based on rational argument that has struck
a chord with a sizeable section of the community, proclaimed
the New Zealand Herald. The National Party immediately
surged in the polls, leaping 17 points and, for the first time
since its loss to Labour in the 1999 election, opening up a lead
over Labour by a margin of 45 to 38 percent.
Not all commentators have lined up behind Brash. Some regard
his positions as a reckless manoeuvre that will exacerbate racial
tensions. Nevertheless, Labouruntil now regarded as virtually
unassailablehas been given an unequivocal message that its
place as the favoured party of New Zealands ruling elite
is under threat.
The prime minister has responded with signs of panic, announcing
a number of major concessions to Brash in an effort to ward off
mounting criticisms. She recently declared that the prevailing
consensus over Maori issues had been shattered,
and that a new balance on Maori policy must be found.
The government has promised an independent review of its spending
on Maori initiatives to ensure they are meeting needs,
and not purely driven by race criteria.
In an attempt to arrest the drop in the polls, Clark has ordered
all ministers to address policy areas where the government is
exposed. As a result, a massive school closures program
has been temporarily halted and a meagre rise granted in the minimum
wage, from $8.50 to $9 per hour. The government has also announced
extra help will be forthcoming for all low and middle-income
earners in the budget.
A populist campaign
Brash is directly articulating the new requirements of a section
of the financial elite that is most determined to further integrate
itself into global capital markets. Special rights and observances,
particularly continuing multi-million dollar land claims, are
increasingly regarded as an unnecessary fiscal burden. The difficulties
faced by Labour in reigning in compensation paymentsbrought
to a head by the courts finding on the foreshoreis
seen as a barrier to prosecuting a renewed assault on the living
conditions and social position of the working class.
In parliament for little more than a year, Brash was recruited
from his position as Reserve Bank governor just before the 2002
elections. He was elevated almost immediately to opposition finance
spokesman and then, last October, to party leader in an internal
coup. His entire career has been devoted to implementing the demands
of global finance capital. A professional economist, Brash worked
in the World Bank in the late 1960s, before returning to New Zealand
to a series of private sector directorships and as head of a number
of government authorities. He was appointed Reserve Bank governor
in 1988 and played a pivotal role in administering the pro-market
economic program launched by the Lange-Douglas Labour government.
Brash is notorious in the working class for advocating the
stifling of wage rises in order to meet the banks inflation
targets of less than 2 percent per annum, and insisting that unemployment
be pushed over 5 percent to aid economic recovery.
His deeply reactionary views include support for work-for-the
dole schemes, the sale of state assets, the return to vouchers
and private provision in health and education, and a reduction
in taxes for the wealthy.
Brash has launched his attack on Maori privileges
with the slogan that all New Zealanders should be treated on the
basis of need, not race. His populist
demagogy is aimed at setting non-Maori workerswhose living
standards and access to social facilities have continued to deteriorate
under Labouragainst their Maori counterparts and thus diverting
deepening resentment and anger away from the real culprits: the
New Zealand ruling class and the entire official political establishment.
The beneficiaries of biculturalism were never ordinary
Maori, but a small layer of petty bourgeois entrepreneurs, bureaucrats
and political leaders who were specifically cultivated to placate
and suppress the legitimate strivings of the majority of the Maori
population. Most Maori, along with other oppressed sections of
the working class, received no special preferences
at all.
After two decades of bicultural policies Maori
deprivation remains as entrenched as ever. Unemployment among
Maori is officially 10 percent, twice the national average, while
Maori continue to figure disproportionately in every social statistic
relating to low household income, poor health, low levels of education
and high levels of crime. Figures released recently by the Social
Development Ministry show that of 18 key social indicators comparing
the position of Maori with the rest of the population, six areas
had recorded no change, five had no clear trend, while
seven showed the chasm widening.
Like all forms of identity politics, which fundamentally accept
the framework of the capitalist profit system, seeking to elevate
one or other secondary characteristic such as race, sex, skin
colour or ethnic origin above class interests, the politics of
biculturalism and Maori self determination
have proven to be a dead-end.
Having been utilised throughout the 80s and 90s to weaken and
divide the working class, they are now being jettisoned in favour
of a far more direct offensive against the last remaining remnants
of national reformism and the welfare statean offensive
that will affect the wages and conditions of every worker.
A decent and secure life for all, with the right to well paid
jobs and full access to high quality health care, education, housing
and care for the aged can only be ensured through the development
of an independent and unified movement of the working class as
a wholewhite, black, Maori, Islanderin a common struggle
against the profit system itself.
See Also:
A revealing saga: New Zealand
Maori MP faces charges over misuse of funds
[29 January 2004]
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