Pages

Monday, December 15, 2025

Mike Butler: Councillors who prefer the local tribe


“Gross misjudgement and disrespect” was the lead headline in the Hawke’s Bay Today on Friday after a meeting of the Napier City Council when the new mayor proposed not to include “mana whenua voices and voting rights” on standing committees.

In response, a new Maori ward councillor, Shyann Raihania, proposed an amendment which would retain two “Nga Manukanuka o te iwi” councillors voting to represent tribal interests on those committees.

This amendment was passed six votes to four with two abstaining.

The “Nga Manukanuka o te iwi” last term was the Napier council’s 15-member Maori committee which included a representative from each of Napier’s nine maraes, the council’s kaumatua, plus the mayor and four councillors.

Elected councillors from the Maori committee represent tribal interests on standing committees.

Those who voted for the amendment were new Maori ward councillors Shyann Raihania and Whare Isaac-Sharland, deputy mayor Sally Crown, plus councillors Keith Price, Ronda Chrystal, and Graeme Taylor.

Mayor McGrath, as well as councillors Craig Morley, Nigel Simpson, and Roger Brownlie voted against.

Councillors Te Kira Lawrence and Greg Mawson abstained.

Amendment proponent Raihania is listed as one of the two Nga Manukanuka o te iwi representatives on the Napier City Council. Councillor Taylor is the other.

The “gross misjudgement and disrespect” quote came from Deputy Mayor Sally Crown.

With an average cumulative rates increase over the past three-year council term of an astonishing 34.4 percent, the time spent voicing outrage over tribal involvement in council decision making could be more wisely used to curb council spending.

The use of undefined Maori words in an English language newspaper helps mask what is actually happening. What are the “mana whenua voices”?

The Napier City Council defines “mana whenua voices” as the voices of “the indigenous Maori people who have territorial rights over the land” in the region.

The phrase “territorial rights over the land” is nebulous considering the Crown bought the Ahuriri block which includes the site of Napier in 1851.

Everything you see in and around the pretty tourist destination that is now Napier was created by settlers from Britain since then.

A group named Te Taiwhenua o Te Whanganui a Orotu turns out to be Napier’s “mana whenua” group which claims a 40-year partnership with the Napier City Council.

Ngati Kahungunu ki Te Whanganui-a-Orotu is a tribal division within the Ngati Kahungunu tribe. It’s claimed territory stretches from Wairoa to Wairarapa.

This group signed a treaty settlement of $115-million in October of 2021.

Once such groups receive their treaty settlement money, they are entitled to buy property and set up businesses which may trade as charities without having to pay tax.

Ngati Kahungunu said in the August 25, 2025, edition of the Hawke’s Bay Today that their aim is to advance Maori sovereignty through council representation and has a 25-year plan to do so.

Included a two-page advert in that edition were the names and photos of 63 candidates for eight councils.

Napier’s deputy mayor Sally Crown, new Maori ward councillors Shyann Raihania and Whare Isaac-Sharland, as well as Napier Central general councillor Te Kira Lawrence, were all named in that advert as “inspiring leaders”.

The takeaway from this episode is that tribal preference voting is supported by councillors both in the Maori ward and in general wards who are affiliated with the local treaty settlement recipients but passed by general councillors with no tribal affiliation.

What were the two general councillors with no tribal affiliation who voted for an extra layer of representation for the local tribe thinking?

Source

Deputy mayor hits out at Napier mayor at fourth full meeting of new council: ‘Gross misjudgment and disrespect’. https://www.nzherald.co.nz/hawkes-bay-today/news/deputy-mayor-hits-out-at-napier-mayor-at-fourth-full-meeting-of-new-council-gross-misjudgment-and-disrespect/CKJ5SKMDAVAYHFPTXYLRMVEVTU/

John McLean: Critical Social Justice "Criticisms Of Reforms


A Woke battle for victimhood supremacy drowns out mature debate on resource management reforms

The current Government has proposed legislation designed to reform New Zealand’s resource management laws. National Party Government Minister Christopher Bishop is leading the reforms.

David Harvey: Tikanga and the law - evolution or a quiet revolution?


In a recent paper, Ellis v R: A Revolution in Aotearoa New Zealand, Emeritus Professor Peter Watts KC argued that the Supreme Court’s decision in Ellis v R marked a revolutionary break from New Zealand’s constitutional foundations.

By declaring tikanga relevant to any issue of common law or statutory interpretation, he says, the court has fundamentally transformed our legal system without democratic mandate.

Damien Grant: Outside the headlines, a cohort of outstanding ministers is actually delivering


When I am in the beating heart of Auckland, although it has a distinct atrial flutter these days, I like to admire the old Central Post Office. The CPO was built over a century ago; before electrification, cranes, building consents and Worksafe improved construction.

Across Quay St we have the Ferry Building, a similar vintage, but the real magic lies beneath.

Centrist: Government unveils app, but next year it becomes New Zealand’s digital ID platform


The government has launched its new Govt.nz app, marketed as a convenient place to find information, bookmark services, and receive emergency alerts.

However, the real transformation arrives next year. Minister for Digitising Government Judith Collins told RNZ’s Morning Report that digital driver’s licences and other identity credentials will be added once legislation passes early in 2026.

Duggan Flanakin: The U.S. re-enters the rare-earths race


Hardly anyone in 1972 saw President Nixon’s decision to reopen diplomatic relations with the Peoples’ Republic of China as the beginning of a half-century of America surrendering its mining and manufacturing superiority to the fledgling Communist regime.

Successive administrations did little or nothing to halt the export of American skilled labor jobs, or even to promote skilled American labor as vital to national security. Unlike his predecessors, President Trump determined to promote American labor and restore mining and manufacturing as the pathway to a stronger nation and a prosperous economy.

Melanie Phillips: The humanitarian front against Israel


Mass murder has been branded as conscience to mess with people’s minds

Amazing news: Amnesty International has now acknowledged that night follows day!

Well, almost. In a report just published, Amnesty has stated for the first time that Hamas and other Palestinian armed groups committed war crimes and crimes against humanity, including murder and torture, on and after the October 7, 2023 attack on Israel.

Brendan O'Neill: It is not racist to tell the truth about Britain’s rape gangs


Why is the left so hell-bent on burying the truth of what was done to working-class girls?

Here’s a surefire way to know if you’ve lost the moral plot – you get angrier about the public discussion of mass rape than you do about the mass raping itself. Your moral conscience gets more fired up by people talking about the industrial-scale abuse of working-class girls than it does by the abuse itself. You’re more horrified by the phrase ‘Pakistani rape gang’ than you are by the existence of Pakistani rape gangs. If any of that applies to you, then your morals have been well and truly shattered on the wheel of cultural relativism, classism and cowardice.

James Alexander: America’s National Security Warning to Europe


There is value in following Trump’s comments. I wanted to see the recent interview in which he said “Europe is weak”, and this led me to something more serious, more apparently serious, I should say (since they are related): the recent publication of the ‘National Security Strategy of the United States of America‘. A primary document. I found it, and printed it out: 30 pages. And it is a good read: well-written, lacking the sort of matron-in-the-asylum-in-denial tone that afflicts the style in which HM Government documents are written.

Sunday December 14, 2025 

                    

Sunday, December 14, 2025

Geoff Parker: New Zealanders Aren’t “Leaving the Government Behind” - They’re Pushing Back


Jack McDonald says voters are “looking forwards, not backwards.” He’s partly right. New Zealanders are looking forward — but what they’re leaving behind is a decade of cultural and ideological overreach that crept into public policy with little public consent.

Peter Williams: The Silence After the Scoop


One of the curiosities of modern journalism is not how often stories are missed, but how often they are found, laid bare — and then quietly abandoned.

A week ago, the Otago Daily Times published what I regard as the most substantial piece of investigative journalism produced by a New Zealand newspaper this year. Across four full pages, with a front-page splash, the ODT examined allegations of serious governance and financial failings at Te Kaika, a Dunedin health hub operated by Otepoti Health Limited, a Māori health and social services trust. The sums involved run into many millions of dollars of taxpayer funding. The issues raised went to conflicts of interest, board oversight, accountability, and the blurred line between public money and private control.

Breaking Views Update: Week of 14.12.25







Sunday December 14, 2025 

News:
Māori rock art one of a dozen research areas to get $1.16m funding boost

Māori rock art is one of a dozen research areas chosen by the Royal Society to get a funding boost.

Net Zero Watch Samizdat: Net Zero is structurally doomed











UK

New NZW reports: Net Zero is structurally doomed


This week, Net Zero Watch published two new reports and fresh polling that exploring public attitudes towards Net Zero.

Insights From Social Media: Compulsory Tikanga In Law School - When Cultural Ideology Replaces Legal Education


Tom Henry re-writes > New Zealand’s law schools have been re-engineered. All law students must pass a dedicated course on Tikanga Māori as a core component of their law degree to meet the requirements for legal practice. Advocates call it progress, a justice system “reflecting us all.” In reality, it’s an ideological project packaged as reform.

Tikanga Isn’t a Legal System — And Never Was.

Ani O'Brien: A week is a long time - 13 December 2025


Could RMA reform being the defining moment of this term of parliament?

The Government’s unveiling of the twin laws to replace the universally loathed Resource Management Act: Planning Bill and Natural Environment Bill, could end up being the defining policy legacy of this term.

Dr Oliver Hartwich: Greyhound racing law change is legal overreach


Let me state this clearly at the outset: I have never placed a bet on a greyhound. I have never owned a greyhound. If I were a dog, I would likely prefer a soft sofa to a hard track.

I am not writing this because I have a passion for racing, either. I am writing this because I have a passion for the Rule of Law.

Kerre Woodham: Willis and Richardson debating would be a pointless waste of time


Do you see any advantage or benefit to the country in having a former Finance Minister and the current one debating fiscal policy?

The current Finance Minister, Nicola Willis, has challenged the former Finance Minister, Ruth Richardson, to a debate. Now, that is misguided in my view, but to be fair, she was grievously provoked. Ruth Richardson is the chair of the Taxpayers' Union. The Taxpayers' Union is a pressure group, a ginger group, founded in 2013 to scrutinise government spending, publicise government waste, and promote an efficient tax system.

Bob Edlin: Kaipara champions the rights of Māori women in prison....


Kaipara champions the rights of Māori women in prison – and is given a reminder of what our voting laws demand

Māori Party MP Oriini Kaipara went out to bat for democracy – hurrah! – at Question Time in Parliament yesterday. But her mission, more pointedly, was to expose the discrimination against Māori which (she would have us believe) will result from government proposals to change electoral legislation.

In the upshot, she was reminded of what the law now requires.

Saturday December 13, 2025