The Nation: Maori Electorate Seats
On The Nation: Lisa Owen interviews Maiki Sherman,
Ella Henry, and Chris Wikaira
Youtube
clips from the show are available here.
Lisa
Owen: The Maori seats could be crucial in next year’s
election. If the Maori Party comes out on top, John Key
could find it easier to form a government with them, but
without Winston Peters. But if Labour retain their
advantage, it could help them into power. So it’s
prediction time. I’m joined now by AUT senior lecturer
Ella Henry, PR consultant Chris Wikaira and NewsHub
political reporter Maiki Sherman. Good morning to you all.
Maiki, can I come to you first? Are these seats, or could
these seats decide the election? If so,
how?
Maiki Sherman: Absolutely. I think that
the Maori seats will be crucial when it comes to next
year’s election. I mean, John Key will be doing everything
that he can not to have to rely on Winston Peters if it
comes down to it to form the next government, and he’s had
a good working relationship with the Maori Party. So if, for
example, the Maori Party could claw back one or two extra
seats on top of Waiariki held by Te Ururoa Flavell, then
that could give John Key some options, and when we heard the
Maori King back the Maori Party, it was sort of coined then
that perhaps the Maori King could save John Key from
Winston, the kingmaker.
Chris, do you agree?
Because these are going to be hotly contested, and Labour
wants to hang on to them. How many do you think they can
realistically walk away with?
Chris Wikaira:
I think the first thing we need to look at is what’s going
to happen in terms of the Maori vote overall. Are we going
to see a protest vote because Maori voters are not happy
with Maori Party being with National? We saw that in 1999.
Remember New Zealand First. There’s the Winston factor
again. Clean-swept those seats in ’96, but the party vote
went overwhelmingly to Labour, and Maori voters expected
that to be a New-Zealand-First-Labour coalition when it
wasn’t. Those Maori MPs, the former Tight Five guys,
effectively admitted afterwards, ‘Well, you know, we
signed our death warrants right then.’ What is the mood of
our Maori voters going to be? Are they going to protest-vote
Maori Party into oblivion, or with what Tuku Morgan and what
the Maori Party are doing now, bringing some big names in,
some personalities, is that going to be what changes the
game?
Let’s bring Ella in on the
conversation. You’re talking there about the mood of Maori
voters - What do you think it is, Ella? Can you tell that
yet?
Ella Henry: I think what’s
interesting about this whole situation is that we’re a
year out and some very big names are being touted, some very
well-known people, who at the end of the day have got a
brand reputation, whether they choose to go with Labour or
Maori Party, and truth be told, some of those people could
go in either direction. So we’re not talking about a huge
political variation. It’s which party are you going to
affiliate with. What I think is probably one of the scariest
things about this is that the next election may well be won
in the Maori seats because of the calibre of your
social-media status. You know, the person with the biggest
number of Twitter followers and Facebook followers might
become the criteria for selection as opposed to, you know,
going to every meeting party and kissing every baby to get
selected. So it’s going to be much more a
social-media-driven campaign, which of course, doesn’t
require as much money, which is great for the smaller
parties, the less-moneyed ones, but it’s going to mean a
lot more scrutiny from a wider audience, because we are all
social-media attuned, so any slip-ups between now and next
year could be catastrophic for any of these potential
candidates.
I want to look at specific seats
now. Let’s look at Hauraki-Waikato. If I can come to you,
Maiki. Longer-serving incumbent Maori MP Nanaia Mahuta in
that seat. There’s been endless speculation about whether
she’ll even stand this time round. Why wouldn’t
she?
Sherman: Well, actually, I think now
that— You know, following the Maori King’s speech and
his backing of the Maori Party and then the strong move by
Tuku Morgan to bring in some high-profile candidates, Nanaia
Mahuta was essentially backed into a corner and is now
coming out fighting and will definitely, I’d say, contest
the next election. She was considering standing down
previous to that, which she always does when it comes around
at the elections, but I think now she’s really got her
back up against the wall, and she’s coming out fighting.
The question is whether it’s too late. She has been in
there for 20 years. People do sort of question what she has
produced over those 20 years as a member of parliament for
Hauraki-Waikato, so it will be very interesting to see. I
mean, we’ve got Rahui Papa who’s been touted as a
potential candidate for the Maori Party. He’s also a key
figure in the tribal politics of that area, and so it would
be very interesting to see if these two go head-to-head
which way the voters will, you know,
support.
Chris, Maiki raises there Nanaia’s
track record in the electorate. It raises the question, the
bigger question – what’s Labour done for Maori
lately?
Wikaira: Oh, that’s a question
that is on a lot of people’s lips, I think. Lately, they
haven’t been able to do a lot, because they’ve not been
in government, and the Maori Party is there. The thing that
still looms large in people’s memories is, even though
it’s a while ago now, the foreshore and seabed. The Maori
voters are very volatile, and we’ve seen that since MMP
first came in. You know, Maori were the first to really
split their vote, with that New-Zealand-First-Labour split
that I mentioned before. Then when the Maori Party came in,
overwhelmingly, the party vote was still for Labour, and
that was keeping one foot in the conservative past and what
was known and what was considered to be a bit safe. It’s
up for grabs. It’s really up for grabs. National has been
making some inroads into the party vote since MMP started,
where it used to get absolutely no support whatsoever, so it
is dynamic, and it is changing.
Well, let’s
look at Te Tai Tokerau. Hone Harawira lost the seat, Ella,
in 2014 because he made the wrong alliance, basically. Will
he sign up with a partnership this time round, or will he go
it alone? Because there’s talk that he and the Maori Party
will cut some kind of arrangement.
Henry:
One thing I do know about Hone is that he understands
realpolitik, and the last election, I think, was a sobering
experience for all of those associated with the Mana Party,
so they’ve had to take stock. I think he’s been very
circumspect in the last year. He hasn’t been as loud and
brash as he has been in the past. So that suggests to me
that he is taking a more statesman-like approach, and
obviously, strategic alliances are going to be a lot better
for a tiny party like that than trying to go it alone or,
you know, ill-advised relationships with odd political
partners.
Maiki, if you look at the numbers,
the raw numbers in a number of these electorates, if the
Maori Party and Mana had come to some kind of arrangement,
they would’ve won those seats. Do you see something like
that happening next time round, next
election?
Sherman: I think if you look at
adding up those two numbers, that’d be too simplistic. I
don’t think it would work like that, even if they did sort
of strike up a deal. I don’t think, actually— There was
obviously discussion around potential deals to be had
between Mana and Maori, but actually, now that we’re
getting a— you know, along the alliance here, I don’t
think that’s going to happen. I think maybe the closest
they’ll get to a deal is that they don’t publicly attack
each other in those electorates, but in terms of any sort
of, you know, deals like, ‘You stand here; we won’t
stand there,’ I don’t actually know any longer that that
could be the case.
What about not standing a
candidate? Would it go that far, do you think, Maiki? Just
saying, ‘Okay, Te Tai Tokerau — we just won’t stand a
candidate there so that Hone can get
in’?
Sherman: Yeah, no, that’s what I
mean. I don’t think, actually, they’re going to go down
that path. I actually don’t think that’ll come off in
the end. I mean, there obviously was a discussion, but I
don’t think so, and I think that Hone Harawira, in terms
of Te Tai Tokerau, is going to have a tough job of getting
that seat back off Kelvin, because Kelvin’s done a stellar
job in the electorate. He has been solid; he has raised
national issues. The only thing he’ll need to do now in
the year leading up to the election is to buckle down on
local messages, because we’ve heard him talk about police
and talk about, you know, sexual abuse and those sorts of
things. Now he needs to sort of get messages like that out
to the media and to the public but about his own electorate,
and I think that’ll seal the deal for
him.
The thing is, Ella, — do the Maori
Party need Mana? Because, obviously, Te Ururoa Flavell won
Waiariki, but it was their only seat last time round. They
were hangin’ fingers on the edge of the
cliff.
Henry: They’re going to need,
certainly, I think, some high-profile names on the ballot
ticket next time. So I do think that that’s going to be a
critical pathway forward for them. The reality is Hone has a
huge following in the north, but as Maiki said, you know,
Kelvin’s been stellar. I was in Kaitaia just last week,
and he was everywhere. So that’s going to be very hotly
contested, but I think at this stage looks like it’s going
to stay with Labour, but I think the Maori Party’s just
got to raise its profile; it’s got to keep promoting what
it believes it’s doing, and, you know, you see Ururoa
everywhere, but at the end of the day, he doesn’t
necessarily always attract the kind of media attention which
shows people that he’s— you know, what they’re
doing.
Well, Chris, Ella’s raising the point
about high-profile candidates there, which bring us to
Labour’s Tamati Coffey, who is going to run in Waiariki
this time round. Does he really have a chance there in what
is, I’m told, a pretty traditional conservative Maori
seat?
Wikaira: Oh, Te Arawa, the area of Te
Arawa — very conservative. Te Ururoa had a fight to, you
know, be accepted as a politician. For a start, he’s a
long-standing member; he’s Ngati Rangiwewehi. Okay,
Tamati’s from there as well, but he’s seen as the young
fella well and truly, and Te Ururoa’s worked very very
hard in the electorate. He has his detractors, as do all the
Maori candidates in all seats. You know, it can be a bit
‘love and hate’. It’s going to be a very very tall
order for Tamati to beat Te Ururoa.
Sherman: I don’t
think that Tamati Coffey has what it takes to beat Te Ururoa
Flavell. That seat is tied up for the Maori Party. The thing
with Waiariki is that that seat is won and lost on the
marae, and so when Tamati Coffey doesn’t have te reo
Maori, he can’t stand on the marae, and many people in the
back rooms and in the kitchen will be wondering if they’ve
seen him out the back doing the dishes or peeling the spuds
lately, and so I think Te Ururoa will be fine in that
seat.
Maiki, you mentioned earlier the
Kingitanga. What kind of role do you think that’s going to
play in the election this time round? And also, Tuku
Morgan.
Sherman: Yeah, Tuku Morgan —
obviously, I’ve said it before — is a game changer, and
I think we’ve seen that leading into this election. Prior
to his appointment as the president, it was looking quite
grim for the Maori Party, but he’s managed to spark a fire
now in the belly of the Maori Party. They’re excited. You
know, I talked to members within their party, and they’re
excited, and they’re actually getting, you know, national
attention in terms of the types of potential candidates that
they’re being able to pull, so that’s very interesting.
It’s also interesting, as well, that they managed to
secure the support of the Maori King. Obviously, that
remains to be seen whether or not that will have a direct
impact in Hauraki-Waikato with Nanaia Mahuta, but it is
still interesting to note that, you know, someone of that
calibre, of that standing has actually come out and said
politically, ‘This is who we should be backing, and this
is why,’ you know. We didn’t really see that in the past
so vocally and so upfront from the Kingitanga, although
people say that they have always been a political movement.
So it’s going to be very interesting. Te Tai Tonga and Te
Tai Hauauru are the electorates to watch, in my opinion,
because from Labour’s point of view, the candidates there
have been the most lacking in terms of their performance
over the last term. They just haven’t been as visible as
other candidates in the other electorates. So it will be
interesting to see whether the Maori Party can stump up
strong candidates to take a real challenge to them
there.
Ella, I’m
wondering—
Wikaira: And they’ve got a
really interesting selection process even into Te Hauauru
with high-profile people. You know, Howie Tamati is in
there, and he’s got a high profile — more with the
Pakeha community than the Maori community, some people might
argue, to the south end of the—
And that’s
a point of contention, isn’t it?
Wikaira:
Oh, yes, it is. If you look at— You’ve got Debbie
Ngarewa-Packer, who’s the CEO of Ngati Ruanui iwi — got
a very high profile in her patch at the moment fighting
again trans-Tasman resources and ironsands mining. Adrian
Rurawhe for Labour has had a very very low profile, but we
know he’s out on the ground; he’s got a very strong
following within the Ratana church and also in Whanganui,
and remember, that seat is not just won and lost in
Taranaki; it goes Whanganui, comes all the way down to
Porirua.
Mm. We’re almost out of time, but I
just want to give the last word to Ella. Strategically, is
it a bad thing if Labour were to lose these seats and the
Maori Party were to get them? Because wouldn’t it give
them another option for a coalition
partner?
Henry: And I think too the Labour
Party understands that. It is still rebuilding its
relationship; as Chris mentioned, the Foreshore and Seabed
Bill. It’s still rebuilding a relationship with its Maori
constituency, who— what we’ve got to remember too is
Maori are a youthful population, and we don’t know how our
young voters are going to respond. They traditionally
haven’t voted, but if they do come out, they’re going to
be looking for people who have a high profile in the youth
community.
Right.
Henry: And
that’s going to, I think, be a confounding variable that
none of us can judge.
All right, great to talk
to you all this morning.
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