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Politics | Māori wards

Māori leader calls for Kaipara mayor’s resignation over Māori ward move

Dame Naida Glavish at the 2022 Dargaville protest against KDC canning karakia from the start of council meetings. Photo: NZME

Prominent Māori leader Dame Naida Glavish is calling for Kaipara Mayor Craig Jepson to resign in the face of his push to scrap his council’s Māori ward.

Glavish, Te Rūnanga o Ngāti Whatua co-chair, said the māyor’s push to get rid of Kaipara District Council (KDC)’s Te Moananui o Kaipara Māori ward this week was not acceptable.

The council will potentially be the first council in the country to get rid of Māori wards under legislation passed last week.

“He needs to look in the mirror and remind himself which country he’s in,” Glavish said.

In response, Jepson said he would not resign over his Māori ward push.

Kaipara mayor (Craig Jepson centre, grey shirt ) and council greet karakia protestors in Dargaville in late 2022 (Photo NZME)

“I don’t think people should be divided by race,” Jepson said.

He had been elected by a large majority on a plank that included better democracy for his people, he said.

“I have a mandate from my community,” Jepson said.

“I wish that New Zealanders would work together, and we didn’t have these growing divisions,” Jepson said.

Jepson said everybody, including Dame Naida, was entitled to their opinion.

He said Glavish continued to label him as racist, but he was not.

Dame Naida Glavish (with loud hailer) speaks out against KDC removing karakia from the start of its council meetings in a 2022 protest march in Dargaville (Photo NZME)

Glavish said the ward’s likely removal was part of Kaipara District Council’s (KDC) push to wind back Māori participation that began soon after Jepson’s election in October 2022.

The council made headlines in 2022 after karakia was removed from the start of council meetings.

Glavish was among opponents who spoke out against the move as part of a protest of more than 500 people in Dargaville in 2022.

KDC is expected to can its Te Moananui o Kaipara Māori ward at an extraordinary meeting in Mangawhai on Wednesday.

Protest action is being planned against the move.

Former Kaipara mayoral candidate Paturiri Toatu (Ngāti Whātua o Kaipara) is calling on iwi and tauiwi from around Northland to join a peaceful protest outside the extraordinary council meeting in Mangawhai on Wednesday morning.

KDC Mangawhai Māori ward meeting protest organiser Paturiri Toata at the 2022 Dargaville protest against KDC's removal of karakia from the start of council meetings (Photo NZME )

Toatu said he was organising the peaceful protest to express how tangata whenua and tauiwi were feeling.

He said Māori anger was growing over widespread coalition government changes, which included enabling the removal of Māori wards before next year’s local elections.

Toatu, who will speak at Wednesday’s meeting, stood for the Kaipara mayoralty in 2019 and for Kaipara District Council (KDC)’s first-time Te Moananui o Kaipara Māori ward in 2022.

At edition time, more than 6000 people had seen Toatu’s TikTok peaceful protest call.

KDC’s likely Māori ward move has also angered Kaipara iwi Te Roroa – one of several iwi to walk out on Prime Minister Chirstopher Luxon at the national iwi chairs forum in Auckland last week.

Te Roroa general manager Snow Tane said KDC’s likely Māori ward removal was a manifestation of the coalition government’s legislation changes affecting Māori, including with the Marine and Coastal area (Takutai Moana) Act, removal of Oranga Tamariki Act’s section 7AA and the Treaty Principles Bill.

Te Roroa chair Thomas Hohaia will be among a number of public forum speakers at the KDC meeting on Wednesday.

Tane said High Court action was among the options being considered by iwi in the wake of a KDC Māori ward removal decision.

He said the likely removal of KDC’s Māori ward was part of a procession of moves by the council to roll back tangata whenua involvement in its workings.

Meanwhile, a two-day-old Change.org petition advocating for the KDC Māori ward’s retention at edition time had 500 signatures.

Hikurangi father Ben Pearce said he was Pākehā but organised the protest because he wanted his children to have an upbringing that reflected New Zealand.

Māori wards were essential basics of local government’s necessary consideration of the principles of the Treaty of Waitangi, Pearce said.

Democracy Northland spokesperson John Bain said he supported KDC’s potential Māori ward removal.

Bain would not be drawn on KDC doing this without a poll.

He has previously said polling was an essential part of the community being able to have its say on Māori wards.

Bain, who will speak at Wednesday’s meeting, said that if the Māori ward were removed, the Kaipara community would be able to have its say on any Māori candidate who chose to stand at the next election.

This would be on an even playing field because there would be no Māori ward.

Bain said the October 2025 local elections would effectively allow the Kaipara community to have the equivalent of a poll by having its say through whether or not it voted in Māori councillors, who would be standing in general wards, along with other candidates.

LDR is local body journalism co-funded by RNZ and NZ On Air.

Local Democracy Reporting is Public Interest Journalism funded through NZ On Air

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