The Blue Review w/ Liam Hehir

The Blue Review w/ Liam Hehir

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The Blue Review w/ Liam Hehir
The Blue Review w/ Liam Hehir
Unprecedented, yes. Arbitrary, no.

Unprecedented, yes. Arbitrary, no.

The offence was unprecedented, which means the consequences must be too.

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Liam Hehir
May 18, 2025
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The Blue Review w/ Liam Hehir
The Blue Review w/ Liam Hehir
Unprecedented, yes. Arbitrary, no.
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There is much to admire about Te Pāti Māori. Its drive. Its sense of mission. Its insistence on doing things according to the expectations of its voters. There is something commendable in a party that resists uniformity, that values variety, and that seeks to preserve and revive distinctive traditions.

But admiration has limits. Those limits have been well and truly crossed. And people are right to be sick of it.

The Privileges Committee's recommendation to suspend Te Pāti Māori MPs Rawiri Waititi and Debbie Ngarewa-Packer for 21 sitting days, and Hana-Rawhiti Maipi-Clarke for seven, has ignited predictable outrage. Critics decry the punishment as "unprecedented," "disproportionate," and a "chilling precedent." But while the punishment is indeed unprecedented, so too is the conduct that prompted it.

This wasn't a spontaneous breach of decorum. It was a calculated disruption of Parliament's most solemn function—a vote—followed by an outright refusal to acknowledge any wrongdoing. The actions of the Te Pāti Māori MPs didn't just challenge parliamentary rules; they challenged the very authority of Parliament itself.

The Incident Was A Deliberate Disruption

On 14 November 2024, during the vote on the first reading of the Treaty Principles Bill, Hana-Rawhiti Maipi-Clarke initiated a haka. She was joined by co-leaders Rawiri Waititi and Debbie Ngarewa-Packer. Rather than performing from their seats, they crossed the chamber to stand directly in front of ACT Party MPs, performing the haka in a confrontational manner.

When ordered to leave, Ngarewa-Packer compounded the disruption by making a gesture interpreted as a "finger gun," miming a firing motion.

This act, during a live vote, was not just disorderly—it was an affront to the democratic process.

No Contrition, Only Defiance

In matters of parliamentary discipline, contrition often mitigates consequences. Labour MP Peeni Henare, who also participated in the haka, apologised unreservedly. The Committee found his actions disruptive but not contemptuous.

Contrast this with the response from Te Pāti Māori's leadership. Waititi and Ngarewa-Packer refused to apologise or even appear before the Privileges Committee individually.

They dismissed the process as lacking cultural legitimacy and asserted that their actions were compelled by tikanga Māori. They insulted the privileges committee as a kangaroo court, implicitly attacking the ancient prerogative of the House to govern itself.

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