Lisa Owen interviews incoming Green MP Marama Davidson
Lisa Owen interviews incoming Green MP Marama Davidson
New Green MP wants to improve
party’s connection with Maori, saying it traditionally
hasn’t had a strong presence in Maori communities Wants “every decision we make” to “put children
front and centre”. Opposed to any new mining, but
says transition from existing mines needs to protect
families On parental consent for abortions, says
“the final decision has to rest with the young
woman” Asked if Maori should be able to access NZ
Super before the age of 65, she replies: “Both of my own
grandparents didn't make it past 65, and so we need to look
at how to make things more equal for those
discriminations.”
Lisa Owen: Well,
Green Party leader Russel Norman is jumping ship to
Greenpeace, paving the way for social justice advocate and
Nation panellist Marama Davidson to surface as the party’s
14th MP. She joins me this morning. Good
morning.
Marama Davidson: Kia
ora.
Last election you said that you might
need a thicker skin to be an MP, so how hard do you expect
this job to be?
I think that as a public
person and as an activist I’ve had to grow a thicker skin,
but I also don’t think that being a politician or being
anybody is any excuse for anyone to be rude to you, so I
think it’s really good to stick to the issues and leave
the rudeness completely out of it.
When you
got the call-up, did you have a moment when you thought,
‘Ooh’?
As I was saying, I had to keep it
completely to myself for quite some time, because, you know,
even though we’ve known this was coming for a little
while, when it actually came it, it was a little bit like a
bus crash running me over, and so I just had to sit with it
and settle it in my head a bit. There was both nerves and
anxiety and, underneath that, some excitement as
well.
All right. Well, you say that your
passions are for Maori and environmental issues, so why do
you think that the Greens are struggling to connect with
Maori?
Yeah, so I hope to be able to help
with that and support that. So traditionally I don’t think
the Green Party has had a strong presence in Maori
communities and in Maori politics, which is hard for me,
because with our policies and with our kaupapa, we’ve
absolutely stood next to Maori political aspirations, for
example, foreshore and seabed, opposing Statoil and deep-sea
oil drilling. So in my belief—
But you’ve
not won those votes from the Maori or the poor, have you?
Because, I mean, just looking, it’s four times— you’ve
got four times more votes in Epsom than you did in Manurewa
or Mangere.
Yeah, so I’m really pleased
with the diversity work that we’ve acknowledged we need to
do, particularly in Auckland at the moment, and we’ve got
our membership in grass roots reaching out and making those
connections, and we need to be present in communities. So,
yeah, that’s one of my strengths, I think, is being
present in the community.
Is the problem that
if you are struggling to make ends meet now and put food on
the table now, the state of the planet in 50 years’ time
is not your top priority? It’s not a luxury that you can
afford?
And what I’ve always said is that
every decision we make at every level needs to put children
front and centre, not just today’s child but tomorrow’s
child. So, for example, the way that Housing New Zealand has
held back millions of dollars and has neglected to fix up
our state homes has a direct, direct impact on our most
vulnerable, and our children have been dying and, indeed,
sick from that decision.
Well, I’m wondering
if you could ever see yourself as being part of a coalition
with National?
So, what we’ve always done
is worked across parties, and we’ve had good Green policy
gains working with National as well, and insulating our
homes was a direct score for what we want to
uphold.
Yeah, but I’m asking you about a
coalition. Could you see yourself in a
coalition?
So, personally, at the moment
National’s direction is far apart from the Green kaupapa
and our own political aspirations. The membership at the
moment, they decide that, and the membership at the moment
have said it’s highly unlikely.
Okay, well,
let’s take a quick look at some of your personal views so
we can get a sense of where you sit. Um, girls under the
age of 16. Should they need parental consent for an
abortion?
I think that the ultimate decision
has to lie with those young women, and everyone knows that I
was in that position myself. But I do absolutely acknowledge
that whanau... whanau have a right to be involved. I think
the final decision has to rest with the young
woman.
We're gonna talk about taxes soon on
unhealthy foods. It could save lives, but tax on food
obviously hits the poor the hardest. Where do you stand on
that? Tax on unhealthy food?
So our Fair
Share tour around the country. People have been saying we
have healthy food, less expensive than junk food. I don't
know what the exact answers are to make that that happen for
our vulnerable families, but definitely our healthy food
needs to be accessible.
Okay, are you opposed
to all offshore and onshore mining in New
Zealand?
For drilling for oil, even if we
burn the stuff that we know about and that we've got, our
planet and our future and our children are going to suffer.
So we have to be really clear about that, and we have to not
continue opening up new mines. I think that's where we have
to be clear about.
No to new mines but
existing...?
The transition from existing
mines has to be one that doesn't hurt families even
more.
And very briefly, should Maori be able
to access New Zealand Super before the age of
65?
Uh, so the Greens don't have a policy on
that at the moment, and I just—
What's
your—?
Inequalities. The inequalities are
that my own... Both of my own grandparents didn't make it
past 65, and so we need to look at how to make things more
equal for those discriminations.
All right.
Marama Davidson, thanks for joining us this
morning.
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ENDS