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Saturday, April 5, 2025

JC: The Time Is Now


If Christopher Luxon, Nicola Willis and Chris Bishop, the top three branches on National’s political tree, mused over whether there is ever a good time to ditch the Māori seats, their answer, due to their reticence on these types of matters, would probably be never. But there is a good time and it has arrived courtesy of the Māori Party themselves.

Their refusal to turn up at the Privileges Committee to get the dressing down they deserve is inviting just such an action. In fact, I wouldn’t be at all surprised if they were hoping it will happen. (It won’t.) Just think of the Pandora’s Box that would open for them.

Another haka in parliament, which they have already threatened, would be just the beginning. Their racist minority would be out in force. There would be hīkoi for Africa, although many would be there just to enjoy a ‘big day out’. The thought of that possibility must have the saliva glands of those in the Māori Party working overtime.

Seriously, this is the time for such a move. The whole of our government is being toyed with by these racist idiots. They contribute nothing apart from promoting division and hatred. That is their raison d’être. As I have said before, they are not in parliament for the good of the country, their people or anyone else other than themselves.

They are wasting parliament’s time and taxpayers’ money. They are a self-centred bunch that have no place in the corridors of power. I have no doubt they would love to be in power but are destroying any hope of that by their own actions. And, they are destroying any hope Labour and the Greens have of winning the Treasury benches. The fact they can’t see it speaks volumes about their intellectual capacity.

The political events of the last week have been quite extraordinary: first the Benjamin Doyle scandal and now this fiasco. Both the Green and the Māori parties seem to be operating under the mistaken belief that this sort of incomprehensible behaviour is going to win public support. It won’t. The majority of the public will not put up with this kind of nonsense.

The media, though, would be in lockstep with the Māori, covering each and every hīkoi with gusto, laced with their usual bias and inflated numbers of those taking part. That would only serve to justify the figures released by David Farrar recently showing trust in the media in this country is practically lower than anywhere else in the world. Not that they will care: their opinions are more important to them than pride in their work. Most journalists today are nothing more than a clique of leftist activists.

The Māori Party have been given another chance to appear at the hearing. Why? They have no intention of doing so. Judith Collins, the chair of the committee, talks of serious consequences for not abiding by the rules. I suspect that whatever they are they won’t be enough to satisfy the general public. If a referendum were held, those seats would be gone. As with the Greens, the country and the parliament would be better off without them.

I’m picking a poll bump for NZ First on the back of Winston exposing the Benjamin Doyle deviancy. Here’s his chance to boost his party’s popularity even further. I thought Luxon’s reaction to the Doyle catastrophe was overly cautious and lukewarm at best, so it will be up to one of the other parties in the coalition to decide to take the bull by the horns on the abolition of the Māori seats and there are votes galore to be had by taking such action.

The media provide the spin but the politicians need to provide the spine. The question is: will they?

JC is a right-wing crusader. Reached an age that embodies the dictum only the good die young. This article was first published HERE

12 comments:

Robert Bird said...

There is a petition on the governments website asking for the abolition of these Maori seats. Sign it and spread the word.

MH said...

JC makes a good point but.... we all know abolishing the Maori seats will be the single most effective method of feeding the Maori grievance machine.

The Luxon Government's steady as she goes, follow the plan, take the time necessary to implement change; is the best method for constructive permanent change.

Knee jerk law changes will cause expensive social unrest (who wants to invest in a country with protests and land occupations) and will be reversed when the next Clark advised axis of evil takes charge.

So.... stick with the coalition agreement (The Coalition Government will not advance policies that seek to ascribe different rights and responsibilities to New Zealanders on the basis of their race or ancestry.) and stay the course with Luxons strategic plan for permanent solutions to most of NZs enduring problems.

And if my gut feeling is right, wait for your chance to vote in the TOWP bill referendum in 7.5 years..... what better way to secure an unprecedented 4th term than support a bill approxa 2/3 of NZers want.

Anonymous said...

A politician with a spine?
These pissant blouses won't cross the floor for their voters-once 'their' arses get a seat at bellamys, the constituent is no longer listened to.

Anonymous said...

Excellent article, JC !!
Clear and simple - well said !

Basil Walker said...

I absolutely concur with David Seymour that there have been NO real reasons not to make everyone in NZ equal. I really wish Luxon would open his eyes and mind . Just tell us what is his problem with the TPB and give NZ some direction instead of assurance he is just weak and woke. A TPB referendum was the least we should get.

anonymous said...

Mr Hanley - you remain totally unconvincing.
In stopping the ACT Bill - using unethical methods - , Luxon just insulted every NZer who values democracy. He is unfit for office. Meanwhile, his determination to rapidly advance and embed the He Puapua agenda is patently obvious.
Your fanciful forecasting is ludicrous.

MH said...

Crikey anon... you are a busy boy!

Did you miss the excerpt from the coalition agreement......

The Coalition Government will not advance policies that seek to ascribe different rights and responsibilities to New Zealanders on the basis of their race or ancestry

Anonymous said...

MH, why do have we 89 pieces of Legislation give Maori exceptional rights ?
Luxon has even contemplated removing them.
Hos much time does Luxon and co need to just voice his concerns, or maybe that just indicates that he isn't concerned at all?
A total failure as a PM and has to go ASAP.

MH said...

Crikey anon... you are a busy boy with another unreferenced "fun fact" for me to riposte...

Rawiri Waititi doesnt agree with you.... here's what Rawiri had to say about the Luxon governments race based actions....
- removed the maori heath authority
- removed maori mumbo jumbo from curriculum'
- cut $600m targeted maori funding,
- rejected the un rights of indigenous people
- defunded section 27 reports
- banned gang patches
- gave police more gang policing powers
- white washed the treaty of Waitangi tribunal
- demoted te reo maori
- returned 3 strikes
- boot camps
- building a mega prison
- repealed section 7aa of the orange tamariki act which forced maori children into maori carers
- entrenching public ownership and enjoyment of coast lines through the marine and coastal areas act

anonymous said...

Mr H. : Mr Rawhiti is wrong oln the MACA issue.
As all citizens know, this is " paused" as the SC intefered with a judgement in late 2024 - allowing radical judges to carry on finding in favour of tribal claims (over 600 filed). These areas are disappearing as the people " wait " for Coalition action.

Basil Walker said...

I was an Interested party in opposition at the Marine and Coastal -MACA Ruapuke Island hearing last week in Invercargill. My evidence included that Matariki holiday was NZ law being a celebration of Maori travelling to New Zealand by ocean guided by stars , the CEO of Ngai Tahu from a prominent part Irish family agreed in cross examination that Maori travelled by Waka to NZ and did NOT challenge my evidence against Maori indiginiety. neither did the Attorney General Counsel It is a significant step towards repudiating the Maori mindset that is strangling the nation.

Mark Hanley said...

Basil. I always furrow my brow at the Indigenous claim. But I never comment on it because it's immaterial. I read the UN indigenous rights agreement and as John Key said at the time his government signed it.... we already comply.

The Coalition agreement that there will be no race based policies suffices whilst Luxon is in charge, then the eventual adoption of the TOWP referendum / bill before the McNaulty axis of evil takes control, will make the indigenous argument even more insignificant amd unworthy of comment.