A written constitution overrides parliamentary sovereignty and gives un-elected judges the final say on all the line-drawing choices related to abortion, same-sex marriage, how to deal with those claiming to be refugees, where tobacco companies can advertise, and myriad other such debatable, highly disputed issues, constitutional law expert James Allan has warned.
James Allan is the Garrick Professor of Law at the University of Queensland, who spent 11 years teaching constitutional law at the University of Otago. He was commenting on the Maori Party initiated constitutional review, part of which considers the role of the Treaty of Waitangi within New Zealand's constitutional arrangements.
“I think it
would be a disaster for New Zealand to move to a written constitution of the
sort almost certain to be offered. And I would run a mile from incorporating or
entrenching the treaty into any such instrument, not least because
overwhelmingly no one knows what it means when applied to any specific issue.
So all you will be buying is the views of the top judges, instead of your own,
the voters. That’s not a trade I would
ever make,” he wrote.
He described
how constitutions are vulnerable to being “filled up” with new meanings by
judges, and how they are increasingly regarded as a “living tree”, in that
their “words stay the same, but their meaning can change over time”.
“The exact same
thing can be said of the Maori Party’s push to have a written constitution that
incorporates the Treaty of Waitangi”, he wrote. “The latter has little content
in its few short paragraphs. Talk of its
‘principles’ inherently involves a lot of ‘stuffing it full of latter day
content that no one at the time imagined or intended’.”
Professor
Allen’s full article “A written constitution for NZ?” can be viewed HERE.
Professor
Allen is a member of the Independent Constitutional Review Panel (ICRP), a
diverse group of New Zealanders who share a common concern that an
out-of-control Treaty industry threatens not just New Zealand's prosperity but
its very survival as a nation. The ICRP supports the Declaration of Equality
which:
1. Rejects
any reference to the Treaty of Waitangi or its principles in any constitutional
document.
2. Requires
that such references be removed from all existing legislation.
3. Requires
that race-based parliamentary seats be abolished.
4. Requires
that race-based representation on local bodies be abolished.
5. Requires
that the Waitangi Tribunal, which has outlived any usefulness it may have had,
be abolished.
The ICRP
Panel is chaired by Canterbury University law lecturer David Round and consists
of Auckland University Associate Professor Elizabeth Rata, Massey University
Emeritus Professor Martin Devlin, Queensland University Professor James Allan,
New Zealand Centre for Political Research Associate Mike Butler, and NZCPR
Founder and Director Dr Muriel Newman.
For more
information please contact:
David
RoundChairman Independent Constitutional Review Panel
2 comments:
I just cannot understand this government. John Key appears to be completely naive in that he fails to understand how he is being led by the nose by Maori activists. You'd think that the Att. Gen. Chris Finlayson would open Key's eyes to what is going on. But he appears to be complicit in the Maori machinations and is quite happy to see us, the average Kiwis who want a united New Zealand, sold down the river to Maori superiority.
hmm bob marley would turn in his grave over this.
he believed in love and peace.
power is rotting peoples minds and hearts!
we are all equal!
we should be working together to build a new earth!
not destroy it!!!!!!
laice june bennett.
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