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A revealing saga: New Zealand Maori MP faces charges over
misuse of funds
By John Braddock
29 January 2004
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New Zealand Maori MP, Donna Awatere Huata, last November appeared
in court to face charges brought by the Serious Fraud Office (SFO),
after a nine-month investigation into the use of public funds
by private businesses and trusts associated with her family. Just
before Christmas, with court proceedings pending, she survived
an unsuccessful attempt by her own partythe Association
of Consumers and Taxpayers (ACT)to have her removed from
parliament. She was however expelled, with considerable fanfare,
from the party caucus but rejected demands to resign her seat.
The SFO launched an investigation into Huatas affairs
following claims that she had defrauded more than $92,000 from
the Pipi Foundation, a government-funded trust she had established
to improve reading among predominantly working class Maori children.
A former employee supplied the Dominion Post with a series
of documents, which it used in a relentless six-month campaign
against Huata, alleging misuse of public monies. The allegations
prompted an inquiry by the Auditor General, who confirmed that
nearly $2 million in public funds had gone to organisations associated
with Huata, and identified two instances in which she had used
her position as an MP for financial gain.
Prior to the scandal, Huata had been the fifth-ranked list
MP for ACT, a right-wing opposition party, which advocates the
most extreme free market policies, including tax breaks for the
rich, the removal of all restraints on business and the dismantling
of essential social services. It makes a populist appeal by posturing
as the defender of taxpayers money and opponent
of government waste, thereby encouraging sharper attacks
on public services. Huata had been ACTs spokeswoman for
education and Maori affairs.
Following Huatas axing, party leader Richard Prebble
turned on her with a vengeance, using parliamentary debates to
force the spotlight on her as often as possible. While there has
been considerable embarrassment for his own party throughout the
affair, ACTs response has been to carry out its own witch-hunt.
If the courts convict Huata, she will be forced to resign her
seatthe first MP to do so in such circumstances since Labour
MP Paddy Webb lost his seat during World War I after receiving
to two years hard labour for being a conscientious objector.
On the basis of the Auditor Generals report, the Labour
government has itself launched a crackdown on sections of the
public servicein particular the funding of contracts to
non-government organisations (NGOs). State Services Minister Trevor
Mallard has demanded the Audit Office run the ruler
over NGO contracts to ensure the practices exposed
in the Huata-related loans are stamped out. The report had criticised
three government entitiesthe Ministry of Education, Te Puni
Kokiri and the Community Employment Groupfor inadequate
oversight of contracts. As a result the government is now demanding
greater emphasis on cutting costs while placing increasingly stringent
demands on such organisations.
By the usual standards of bourgeois politics the sordid details
of the scandal are not especially remarkable. Rather, the significance
of Huatas rise and fall lies in what it reveals about the
exhaustion of protest politics and the perspective of advancing
the interests of the Maori people through piecemeal reform. Along
with a number of other recent developments, it signals a shift
in policy with regards to the Maori question among
sections of the New Zealand ruling elite.
The promotion of bi-culturalism
The Labour Party when it held office between 1984 and 1990
consciously promoted ethnic politics, in the form of bi-culturalism,
at the same time as it was launching its extensive pro-market
reforms that made profound inroads into the position of the working
class. Both policies were part of a common political agenda bound
up with the globalisation of production and the demands of international
finance capital for the removal of all restraints on its operations.
Labour justified bi-culturalism as necessary to reduce social
and economic disadvantage, but its real purpose was to establish
a privileged Maori elite, with definite interests rooted in the
profit system. The aim was to divide the working class along ethnic
lines by promoting the view that the problems confronting ordinary
Maori can be solved by a return to Maori culture and language.
Maori form about 20 percent of the New Zealand population and
are among the most oppressed sections of the working class.
The process, initiated by Labour and expanded by subsequent
governments, allowed Maori tribes to claim compensation for land
seizures and other oppressive acts by the early British colonial
authorities. A narrow layer of aspiring Maori lawyers, bureaucrats,
entrepreneurs, union officials and political leaders seized the
opportunity to cash in on the previous 150 years of dispossession,
exploitation and impoverishment of the Maori people.
The principal instrument for implementing this policy was the
previously unused Treaty of Waitangia document signed in
1840 by the main Maori chiefs and the British colonial governor,
William Hobson. It purported to give Maori the rights of British
subjects while protecting their own traditional interests, including
their tribal lands, and promising Maori the right to govern their
own affairs. The treaty was, in reality, a worthless piece of
paper, behind which the colonial authorities launched a series
of military campaigns against the Maori tribes, subjugating them
and seizing millions of acres of land.
Following a series of landmark Treaty of Waitangi claims, which
have still not run their course, millions of dollars was paid
to newly-revived tribal entities and used to launch extensive
business ventures. Accompanying this, a campaign was carried out
to establish the treaty as the countrys founding document.
A host of laws, statutes and regulations were enacted to give
effect to the suddenly-discovered treaty obligations
covering the entire range of official lifelaw, education,
business, health care, public services and the unions. A Maori
cultural renaissance was promoted in tourism, media
and the arts.
Far from resolving the social crisis confronting Maoris, the
process widened the social gulf between rich and poor. Bi-culturalism
and the Waitangi settlements has created a small but relatively
wealthy and influential elite which boasts assets worth $NZ5 billion.
At the same time, Maori workers like the rest of their class brothers
and sisters have suffered the consequences of two decades of economic
restructuring that have produced high levels of unemployment and
poverty and gutted public welfare, education and health services.
Recently, however, there have been increasing concerns in ruling
circles that Maori ventures and the somewhat uncontrolled assertion
of indigenous rights have become a fetter on New Zealand business
as it struggles to compete on the world stage. The traditional
tribal structures are viewed as incompatible with the operations
of private enterprise and the market and special Maori rights
and observancesparticularly land rightsare increasingly
regarded as an unnecessary burden.
While the Huata affair was dominating the press, the New Zealand-based
filming of The Last Samurai, was briefly interrupted by
demands from local Maori leaders that their tribal interests in
the films location required special consideration and financial
compensation. Expressing mounting alarm that the countrys
film industryrecently boosted by the success of The Lord
of the Rings filmswas about to be undermined, ACT deputy
leader Ken Shirley denounced the Maori claims as extortion.
Shirley complained that the practice was similar to those usually
found in corrupt, Third World societies.
More significantly, the current Labour government is also beginning
to reverse the agenda begun by its predecessors by moving to cut
off claims by the Maori elite to establish ownership rights over
large areas of the countrys foreshore and seabed. It has
announced its intention to introduce legislation to ban any extension
of indigenous rights over the inter-tidal zone, proclaiming the
need to guarantee open access and use for all New Zealanders.
The proposed legislation is in response to a decision by the
Court of Appeal last year which found that the Maori Land Court
could hear such claims. The issue arose after South Island tribes
mounted a legal case to challenge the expanding and lucrative
marine farming industry. The tribes claimed it was having a serious
impact on their customary fishing rights as well as blocking their
own ambitions in the aquaculture business. In moving to abruptly
block such a case, Labour was responding to definite business
interests which insist that the Maori compensation process has
gone far enough and has to be brought to a close.
Huatas evolution
The place of the Huata scandal in these developments has a
particular significance as it underscores the evolution of a layer
of young Maoris who were radicalised in the late 1960s and 1970s.
Huata first came to attention as a land-rights protester, before
assuming prominence in the demonstrations against the 1981 South
African rugby tour. But like other Maori leaders, Huata remained
wedded to the limited and ultimately reactionary perspective of
Maori politics and Maori self-determinationa process that
was actively aided and abetted by the Stalinist Communist Party
of New Zealand and various opportunist groups.
In her 1997 autobiography My Journey, Huata described
how the emerging layer of young Maoris were courted by various
pseudo-socialists, who actively promoted identity politics and
never challenged its reactionary class character. Huata was among
the most strident in calling for Maori sovereignty
or self-rulethereby encouraging Maori workers to identify
on the basis of race and tribal affiliation rather than class.
Her writings became de rigueur among the left
middle class radical milieu in New Zealand, with the feminist
magazine Broadsheet among the first to publish her essays.
With the turn to bi-culturalism in the 1980s, these
Maori leaders found themselves in demand. Far from being a fundamental
challenge to the political establishment, the logic of Maori
self-determination encouraged its proponents to carve out
a special niche for themselves in business and politicsall
in the name of assisting Maori people as a whole.
Huata herself was quickly tapped on the shoulder by the political
and corporate elite and went further than most in openly expressing
the inherently anti-working class character of all identity politics.
By the late 1980s, she was advocating vicious attacks on workersdemanding
that the already meagre minimum wage be slashed as a means of
creating jobs and solving chronic Maori unemployment. When Labours
former finance minister Roger Douglas set up ACT to continue the
market restructuring he oversaw in the 1980s, he had no hesitation
in recruiting Huata and parading her as one of his partys
most prized converts. Huata became an unabashed, well-heeled mouthpiece
forin her wordsthe flowering of capitalism
and in 1996 was elected to parliament.
Huatas political troubles are a sharp indication that
the political tide has changed. Having exploited the services
of a small elite they themselves created, sections of the ruling
class are seeking to, at the very least, temper the extent of
Maori claims and influence. Some go considerably further. Opposition
leader Don Brash, a former Reserve Bank Governor with close connections
to big business, recently called for an end to ethnic separatism
and exclusive rights for Maori, the closure of the
non-performing Maori Affairs ministry and the abolition
of the seven Maori electorate seats in parliament. It is probably
no accident that ACT, which has ties to the same layers as Brash,
has decided that their prized convert has now become something
of an embarrassment.
See Also:
New Zealand: Maori
Labour MP delivers vicious attack on social welfare
[17 March 2003]
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