Nats all ‘say’ and no ‘do’ on equal rights
Nats all ‘say’ and no ‘do’ on equal rights
A flyer challenging Prime Minister Bill English’s record on a single standard of citizenship went out to 1.6 million households today.
The flyer that calls on everyone to use their vote in this year’s election “to end National’s race-based policies” was distributed by equal rights group Hobson’s Pledge.
By appeasing continuous tribal demands, National Party leaders are surrendering what’s not theirs to give away, purely to cling onto political power, spokesman Don Brash said.
The National Party constitution commits to equal citizenship. In 2002, Bill English strongly supported a single standard of citizenship, and in 2003, Mr English committed National to scrapping Maori electorates, Dr Brash said.
As the leader of the National Party, I also pledged one law for all in 2004 and 2005, Dr Brash said.
In 2008, former Prime Minister John Key promised to scrap Maori electorates.
But what the National-led Government has done is the complete opposite, Dr Brash said. This government has:
Imposed the unelected Independent
Maori Statutory Board on Auckland.
Funded claims by
tribes for customary marine title over the entire
coast.
Given Maori preferential consultation rights on
local government planning and resource consents.
Allowed
a bicultural straitjacket for schools and
universities.
Not made the slightest move to scrap Maori
electorates
Dr Brash said that Hobson’s Pledge is
calling on Parliament to:
Abolish Auckland city’s
separatist Independent Maori Statutory Board.
Abolish the
Maori electorates, redundant since 1893, when all adults got
the vote.
Close the Waitangi Tribunal.
Remove all
references in law and in government policy to Treaty
“partnership” and “principles”.
Repeal the Mana
Whakahono a Rohe “iwi participation agreements” from the
Resource Legislation Amendment Act.
Ensure the allocation
of water remains in the control of local authorities, not
tribes.
End tax exemptions for multi-million dollar
tribal businesses.
Dr Brash, with Auckland business
manager Casey Costello, represents a national campaign which
says that successive Governments have taken New Zealand
further and further away from the kind of country that most
New Zealanders want – one where everybody is equal before
the
law.