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Description:A political blog by Bryce Edwards, dealing with politics and society in New Zealand and...

Keywords:NZ Politics, New Zealand, NZ, New Zealand Politics, Labour Party, National Party, Green Party,...

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by Bryce Edwards Home Archives Profile Subscribe Cartoons about the politics of law and order in NZ Murdoch - Stuff 27 November 2019 Tremain - ODT 28 November Hubbard - 28 November 2019 Emmerson - NZ Herald 27 November 2019 Slane - Listener 23 August 2019 Bell - Stuff 19 August 2019 Murdoch - Stuff 21 August 2019 Slane - Listener 3 May 2019 Murdoch - Dominion Post 13 June 2018 Posted at 12:55 PM | Permalink | Comments (0) | Reblog (0) 25 November 2019 Cartoons about the NZ First donations scandal Hubbard - 25 November 2019 Tremain - ODT 25 November 2019 Craig - 23 November 2018 Murdoch - Stuff 22 November 2019 Emmerson - NZ Herald 22 November 2019 Hubbard - 20 November 2019 Emmerson - NZ Herald 21 November 2019 Emmerson - NZ Herald 20 November 2019 Tremain - ODT 14 November 2019 Posted at 10:33 AM | Permalink | Comments (0) | Reblog (0) 12 September 2019 Cartoons about #MeTooLabour Slane - Listener 13 September 2019 Emmerson - NZ Herald 13 September 2019 Emmerson - NZ Herald 13 September 2019 Murdoch - Stuff 11 September 2019 Hubbard - Stuff 12 September 2019 Emmerson - NZ Herald 12 September 2019 Hubbard - 12 September 2019 Emmerson - NZ Herald 11 September 2019 Previous Labour Party Summer Camp cartoons Scott - Dominion Post 20 March 2018 Emmerson - NZ Herald 17 March 2018 Moreu - Timaru Herald 16 March 2018 Hubbard - 14 March 2018 Posted at 03:06 PM | Permalink | Comments (0) | Reblog (0) 08 August 2019 Cartoons about abortion law reform in New Zealand Murdoch - Stuff 9 August 2019 Hubbard - Stuff 8 August 2019 Murdoch - Stuff 22 May 2019 Hubbard - 25 May 2019 Tremain - ODT 29 May 2018 Hubbard - 31 May 2018 Emmerson - NZ Herald 29 May 2018 Moreu - Timaru Herald 20 March 2017 Posted at 11:38 AM | Permalink | Comments (0) | Reblog (0) 30 July 2019 John Moore: Ihumātao – a rallying cry for disaffected Māori The occupation of disputed Māori land at the site Ihumātao in Auckland is heating up. Last week police made several arrests and used pepper spray at the occupation. Several hundred protesters are currently active at the Ihumātao site. John Moore looks into the issues in this guest blog post. The nature of the current dispute has now taken on the dimensions of not just a dispute between protesting Māori versus Fletcher Building (the legal owners of the disputed land) but also a dispute between the local Māori Establishment versus disaffected Māori. The very question of how Māori should orientate towards the colonial state and tauiwi corporations is at play here. A brief summary of the background to this dispute Ihumātao, is a peninsula on the shore of Auckland’s Manukau Harbour. It is a historical Māori settlement, and is the city’s oldest settlement. In 1863, the land was confiscated from Māori by the state. The states occupation of the land was followed by sites sacred to local Māori being quarried, and burial sites being destroyed Ihumātao has ended up in the hands of one of New Zealand’s largest corporations, Fletcher Building. The land has been declared a Special Housing Area, and Fletchers is building 500 houses on Ihumātao. The corporation has negotiated with local Māori leaders representative of officially recognized iwi organisations. And these Māori iwi leaders have given the go ahead for Fletcher Building to develop the area. A brief political analysis of this dispute This is a developing political conflict that has many dimensions. As so it is not surprising that the mainstream media has been finding it particularly difficult to navigate around the various contrasting narratives that are coming from the protesters themselves, and contrasting narratives from their opponents. On one level, this is primarily a protest by local Māori against Fletcher Building, who are intent on building hundreds of houses on the contested land. Another dimension, is that this is a conflict within the mana whenua of the area. The officially recognised Māori leadership of the area are in fact backing Fletcher Building. And at one stage local Māori leaders went onto the occupation with the police to demand that the protectors leave. Some would argue that the inter- Māori nature of the conflict comes down to either an intergenerational dispute, a dispute of contrasting world views, and even a dispute of disaffected Māori versus the local Māori elite. With the occupation of Ihumātao heating up, the conflict has now taken on the dimension of a clash between the protectors and their supporters versus the state. Hundreds of police and now present at the site. And arrests have been made, and physical force has been used. The state, to all intents and purpose, is recognising Fletchers as the legal owners of the land. And the police have used violence to thwart the efforts of the protesters, and to enforce Fletcher Building’s property rights over the disputed land. This occupation of Ihumātao can be analysed through an "indigeneity and post-colonial" lens. Such a framework would position this dispute as a blowback by an indigenous people against an oppressive colonial state and a colonial corporation. However, some key activists involved in the occupation at Ihumātao have argued that a form of class war is present with this dispute. Emilie Rākete, the Māori caucus coordinator for the group Organise Aotearoa, has stressed the class dimensions of the protest. She has argued that the planned development of Ihumātao by Fletcher Building, and the use of the police against the protesters, is an example of ongoing colonisation by the state and capital of Aotearoa. Pasifika intellectual Alex Birchall has echoed this viewpoint. He has argued that the land development at Ihumātao is supported by a self-interested iwi elite, including some kaumātua of the legally recognised mana whenua”. He sees this elite as complicit in the abuse of power now being undertaken by the police. The Government versus the protectors The Jacinda Ardern-led Government has ostensibly taken a neutral stance on the dispute. Māori Development Minister Nanaia Mahuta has said that "the heavy hand of Government should not override the real opportunity the hapū have to resolve this issue within their whānau." Initially, the prime minister said that the Ihumātao dispute was a concern not of the government but of local mana whenua. And she stressed that the government did not what to act to override the decisions made by local Ihumātao leaders. Of course, by local Māori leaders Ardern was referring to those Māori elite who are backing Fletcher Building, and the actions of the police to disperse the occupation. As the situation has heated up, the Government has taken a slightly new tack by presenting itself as a neutral arbitrator that will bring all the different players to the negotiating table. However, protesters have indicated they see the government’s move as disingenuous, and that they feel they will be deliberately left out of future negotiations. What Ihumātao points to, in a deeper political sense, is the deep levels dissatisfaction within Te Ao Māori with how the whole treaty settlement process has played out. With billions of dollars of land, resources and money transferred to certain Māori iwi, we have seen the enrichment and empowerment of a layer of Māori leaders, alongside the ever-present reality of general poverty within Te Ao Māori. Most Māori don’t seem to of benefited particularly from the Treaty settlement process. So, in a very real sense, this occupation is a rallying cry and rallying point for those Māori who feel they haven’t gained from Treaty settlements that have enriched and empowered certain official iwi leaders. One thing that points to this deep-seated sense of unease within the Māori world is the growing levels of inequality within Te Ao Maori. That is, we have a new materially well-off Māori professional layer and an actual Māori capitalist class, while the majority of tangata whenua have, in many cases, become poorer. Disaffected Māori are clearly dissatisfied with their...

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