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Annie Te One
Victoria University of Wellington
In his maiden speech to parliament in 2020, te Pati Maori co-leader Rawiri Waititi told his fellow MPs:
You know what it feels like to have a pebble in your shoe? That will be my job here. A constant, annoying to those holding onto the colonial ways, a reminder and change agent for the recognition of our kahu Maori.
Three years later, most would agree that he and fellow co-leader Debbie Ngarewa-Packer have been just that – visible, critical, combative, prepared to be controversial.
The question in 2023, however, is how does the party build on its current platform, grow its base, and become more than a pebble in the shoe of mainstream politics?
Recent polls suggest te Pati Maori could win four seats in parliament in October. But its future doesn’t necessarily lie in formally joining either a government coalition or opposition bloc, even if this were an option.
The National Party has already ruled out working with the party in government. And te Pati Maori has indicated partnership with either major party is not a priority.
Such are the challenges for a political party based on kaupapa Maori (incorporating the knowledge, skills, attitudes and values of Maori society) in a Westminster-style parliamentary system.
Focusing on Maori values
These tensions have existed since 2004, when then-Labour MP Tariana Turia and co-leader Pita Sharples established te Pati Maori in protest against Labour’s Foreshore and Seabed Act.
Under that law, overturned in 2011, the Crown was made owner of much of New Zealand’s coastline. Turia and others argued the government was confiscating land and ignoring Maori customary ownership rights.
As a kaupapa Maori party, te Pati Maori bases its policies and constitution on tikanga (Maori values), while advocating for mana motuhake and tino rangatiratanga. That is, Maori self-determination and sovereignty, as defined by the Maori version of te Tiriti o Waitangi/Treaty of Waitangi.
A tikanga-based constitution has helped shape policies advocating for Maori rights. But it has also, at times, sat at odds with the rules of parliament. Waititi, for example, called pledging allegiance to Queen Elizabeth II “distasteful”. He also refused to wear a tie, breaching parliamentary dress codes.
Between left and right
Over the years, the party’s Maori-centred policies have enabled its leaders to move between left and right-wing alliances.
Under the original leadership of Turia and Sharples, te Pati Maori joined with the centre-right National Party to form governments in 2008, 2011 and 2014. This was a change from traditional Maori voting patterns that had long favoured Labour.
During it’s time in coalition with National, te Pati Maori helped influence a number of important decisions. This included finally signing the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, the development of Whanau Ora (a Maori health initiative emphasising family and community as decision makers), and repealing the Foreshore and Seabed Act.
However, internal fighting over the decision to align with National led to the resignation of the Te Tai Tokerau MP at the time, Hone Harawira. Harawira later formed the Mana Party.
The relationship with National proved unsustainable when Labour won back all the Maori electorates at the 2017 election. Notably, Labour’s Tamati Coffey beat te Pati Maori co-leader Te Ururoa Flavell in the Waiariki electorate.
Rebuilding te Pati Maori
Waiariki was front and centre again in the 2020 election, where despite Labour’s general dominance across the Maori electorates, new te Pati Maori co-leader Rawiri Waititi reclaimed the seat. The party also managed to win enough of the party vote to bring co-leader Ngarewa-Packer into parliament with him.
Sitting in opposition this time, the current party leaders have been vocal across a range of issues. The party has called for the banning of seabed mining, removing taxes for low-income earners, higher taxes on wealth, and lowering the superannuation age for Maori.
It hasn’t all been smooth sailing. Some policies, such as 2020’s “Whanau Build” have caused discomfort. Aimed largely at addressing the housing crisis, Whanau Build identified immigration as the root of Maori homelessness.
It was a sentiment more often associated with the extreme right, and the party has since apologised for that part of the policy.
Contesting more seats in 2023
Those bumps and missteps notwithstanding, recent polls show just how competitive te Pati Maori has become in the Maori electorates.
Ex-Labour MP Meka Whaitiri – an experienced politician who has held the Ikaroa-Rawhiti electorate since 2013 but left to join te Pati Maori this year – is in a tight race to regain her seat against new Labour candidate Cushla Tangaere-Manuel.
Co-leader Ngarewa-Packer is also running a close race against Labour candidate Soraya Peke-Mason for the Te Tai Hauauru electorate – a Labour stronghold.
But te Pati Maori has also shifted from its previous focus on the Maori electorates, with Merepeka Raukawa-Tait standing in the Rotorua general electorate.
The Maori Electoral Option legislation, which came into effect this year, now allows Maori voters to change more easily between electoral rolls. In future, te Pati Maori may find it can best to serve Maori by standing candidates in general electorates.
Broader social change across New Zealand has also likely been an important contributor to the success of te Pati Maori, with greater understanding of te Tiriti o Waitangi, tikanga and te reo Maori among voters.
Indeed, the current party vision of an “Aotearoa Hou” (New Aotearoa), includes reference to tangata tiriti, a phrase being popularised to refer to non-Maori who seek to honour partnerships based on te Tiriti o Waitangi.
According to the most recent polling, te Pati Maori may not be the deciding factor in who gets to form the next government come October.
But the party’s resilience and growth after its electoral disappointments in 2017 and 2020 show an ability to rebuild. In doing so, it is carving out its place in New Zealand’s political landscape.
And if te Pati Maori is not the kingmaker in 2023, it is still on the path to influence – and potentially decide – elections in the not-too-distant future.
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.