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Friday, October 27, 2023

Point of Order: Buzz from the Beehive - 27/10/23



Oh, look- the founder of the Maori Party has expressed support for the Nats on the health issue

It’s all quiet – yet again – on the Beehive front.

Nothing has been posted on the government’s official website since Grant Robertson (performing his duties as Minister of Sport and Recreation rather than Minister of Finance) announced his travel plans under the heading Sport Minister to represent Govt at RWC final.

Point of Order found the pickings are meagre on another site we monitor to keep an eye on who is doing what to whom.

At Scoop, nothing has been recorded on the “Parliament” section of the website since October 18 when Maori Party co-leaders Rawiri Waititi and Debbie Ngarewa-Packer were demanding that the New Zealand Government expel the Israeli ambassador if Israel does not immediately implement a ceasefire and open safe humanitarian aid corridors for Gaza.

But politicking has not been abandoned in favour of rugby since the general election on October 14 and we can report that Ele Ludemann has recorded support for National – yes, National – from the founder of the party which Waititi and Ngarewa-Packer now lead.

Her Homepaddock blog reports…

Another endorsement

National has got an endorsement from a former coalition partner :

Dame Tariana Turia says she would rather see funding being given directly to iwi to enable iwi to resource their own health needs.

“Because in all the years that I’ve worked in the health sector, I’ve never seen the change that we needed,” the former politician said.

“I would definitely support whānau, hapū and iwi having their own resource so they get bulk funding to do so much for a population. You know, if you take Rātana for instance, where you’ve got a settled population, then they should be funded to do their own. I mean, nobody knows their people better than themselves.”

When Turia was associate health minister from 1999 to 2004, the Māori health directorate was powerful and He Korowai Oranga – Māori Health Strategy was established, she said.

National’s health spokesman Shane Reti has said a Māori health directorate within the ministry would be strategic and not operational. Iwi-Māori partnership boards would be the regional operational entities.

“Personally, I believe that the money should go as close as possible to the people,” Turia said. “You know, we’ve got to learn to be an authority to ourselves and not for other people, to be having authority over us. And I think it’s really important that our people are really clear about what it is that we need to be doing for ourselves. Or do we always want to be beholden to a government or someone else?”

Labour has a government-knows-best attitude and it’s wrong.

It’s far better to help people to help themselves than to have politicians and bureaucrats deciding what’s best.


Turia believes that more was accomplished for Māori health working with a National government.

“I have to be honest and say that John Key and Bill English were amazing to work with. They didn’t want to manage us, they wanted to know what we wanted for ourselves. I liked the freedom to be. I’ve never liked to be under somebody. They were more lateral thinkers, more believing in people to do for themselves. I really liked them.”

And Turia is happy to see a change in government.

“Labour’s a very interesting animal. You know, it wants to keep everybody in the same boat. And thinks that if they treat everybody the same everything will come out fine. And they don’t take into account the differences in the way people view things. For a party that actually enjoyed the Māori vote for so many years, they learned nothing. All they learned was to try and have more authority over us.” . .

Labour has spent more and accomplished less.

It has fed the bureaucracy and starved the frontline.

The National-led government faces a health crisis. Solving it won’t be easy but it will have a much greater chance of success if it trusts local people to solve local problems.


Point of Order is a blog focused on politics and the economy run by veteran newspaper reporters Bob Edlin and Ian Templeton

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