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Sunday, May 31, 2026

Geoff Parker: English Isn't Endangered—but Its Place In Public Life Is


According to critics of the English Language Bill, English doesn't need legal recognition because it isn't endangered. The argument goes that since almost every New Zealander speaks English, there is nothing to protect.

That completely misses the point.

Nobody is suggesting English is about to vanish. The question is whether the language that unites almost every New Zealander should remain the clear and undisputed language of government, public services, law, education and national communication.

The answer should be obvious.

For decades, English functioned as New Zealand's common language without controversy. It allowed people from every background, ethnicity and culture to communicate with one another. Whether your ancestors arrived from Britain, China, India, Samoa, South Africa or anywhere else, English was the shared language that enabled participation in society.

Today that principle is increasingly being challenged.

Government agencies have been rebranded with Māori names unfamiliar to much of the public. Official communications increasingly contain Māori words, phrases and terminology without translation. Public servants are encouraged to use te reo regardless of whether their audience understands it. Acronyms, department names, programmes and services are being renamed in ways that often require explanation before people even know what organisation is being discussed.

The issue is not hostility toward te reo Māori. People are free to learn it, use it and celebrate it.

The issue is whether taxpayers should be expected to navigate public services through language they do not necessarily understand.

Critics claim there is "no evidence" of confusion. Yet confusion is precisely why government communication traditionally relied on plain English in the first place. The purpose of public information is clarity, not cultural messaging.

When an ambulance is needed, when a benefit is applied for, when a government department is contacted or when an emergency warning is issued, communication should be instantly understood by the greatest number of people possible. That language is English.

Supporters of the status quo argue that making English official is merely symbolic. Perhaps it is. But symbolism cuts both ways.

The relentless elevation of te reo Māori throughout public institutions has also been symbolic. It sends a message about identity, priorities and the future direction of the country. If symbolic recognition matters for one language, it is entirely reasonable that it should matter for the language spoken by more than 96 percent of New Zealanders.

The claim that official-language status exists only for endangered languages is equally weak. Official languages are not merely about preservation; they are about establishing standards and expectations. They define how a country communicates with itself.

New Zealand's reality is simple. English is the language of commerce, law, education, science, media and everyday life. It is the language that allows millions of people from vastly different backgrounds to function together as one society.

Recognising that reality in legislation should not be controversial.

What is truly unusual is the growing insistence that acknowledging English somehow threatens inclusion.

In fact, the opposite is true.

A common language is one of the most inclusive tools a nation can possess. It allows newcomers to integrate, citizens to communicate and public institutions to operate efficiently. It creates social cohesion rather than division.

The real question is not "What needs protecting?"

The real question is why some people become uncomfortable whenever English is recognised as the foundation of New Zealand's public life.

No one is banning te reo Māori. No one is abolishing Māori language education. No one is preventing anyone from speaking, learning or promoting it.

What many New Zealanders are asking for is far simpler than that.

They want the language spoken by virtually the entire population to be clearly recognised as the country's primary language of public communication.

That is not radical. - It is common sense.

Geoff Parker is a passionate advocate for equal rights and a colour blind society.

3 comments:

anonymous said...

As expected. Stealth tactics used to undermine official status for English. Without status, easy to ban, ignore, sideline or relegate the language to a minor place.

Anonymous said...

Great article, except you contradict yourself. Your article is written in English, but when you refer to the maori language you pronounce it in maori, not English.

Allen Heath said...

One language is uniting; two or more are divisive, especially in the way a process of introducing gobbledegook is being brought about. As I see it, the drive to enforce use of maori is a losing game except for those who want to maintain their cultural links, links that for non-part-maori have no relevance and even less importance. What is telling bout the utility of English is that in countries that have their own 'native' language, facility with English is encouraged and relatively fluent users are common. I have travelled enough to have experienced this phenomenon. Keep maori for the marae and home, it has no place in the everyday life of the 87% of us who claim alternative heritage.

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