Friday, April 21, 2017


WHY MY COLOUR WILL ALWAYS BE LABOUR

My daughter once told a Labour Selection Panel, “Like mum and dad, I’m as Labour as a meat raffle at the Otara Flea Market on a Sat’day morning.” 

People ask me, “Why are you so dedicated to Labour when it’s betrayed Maori loyalty?”  So many reasons. 

Labour was first elected in 1935 which immediately set out social policies which led the world and put people into work building roads, bridges and homes for families therefore push-starting the nation out of a slowing economy.  

My gran spoke no English but knew three words important for her, ‘Michael Joseph Savage.’ For Rimaha and Wairemana, there was no blot on Labour with its famous cry “... make work schemes”, whereby the unemployed were put into work after a crippling Depression.  By the 1930’s Labour had evolved into a party of social liberalism, with a policy platform that called for the state to provide such things as free education, a salaried medical service, a free public hospital system, adequate standards of housing, the family benefit, a basic minimum wage and full employment.  My grans received The Old Age Pension  (years after Pakeha). And Labour set up the first social security systems in the world. 

Labour expanded such initiatives as free milk in schools, so proud when I was called out as “The milk monitor.”  I loved the red apples too.    

In 1935, and in 1939 Education Minister Peter Fraser explained the rationale behind planned reforms with education its cornerstone.  “Every person, whatever their level of academic ability, whether he be rich or poor, whether he lives in town or country, has a right, as a citizen to a free education of the kind for which he is best fitted, and to the fullest extent of his powers.’ Fraser acknowledged that country kids were disadvantaged.

 I am a product of Labour's policy to put school buses into remote New Zealand that took me, and my Maori cohorts into High Schools and Colleges.  Kirk later said, “Social Security does not imprison people.  It sets them free.  It does not sap self reliance.  It strengthens it by removing fear and insecurity.”  Kirk took us further into a unique place in global politics as a small nation prepared to take on a nuclear free stance in the face of a super power.  Lange and Rata took the balance of the treaty to another level by introducing the Treaty of Waitangi Act 1975 and Wetere in 1985 back-dated treaty claims to 1840.   In addition, Labour had the guts to halt a Springboks tour of New Zealand.

Education has failed Maori kids.  It failed Pakeha kids too.   In 1990, under Geoffrey Palmer, we witnessed change when The NZ 1990 Commission unloaded treaty education packs into primary and secondary schools which ushered in a revolution – a revolution in education, reconciliation and in nationhood.

Taken further, we can make the strongest impact if we can demonstrate an end to injustice, discrimination and disharmony in our own country. Taking a positive view, the diversity of peoples on our planet is one of the greatest synergies for humanity and we can do that and become the most livable small democracy in the world.    

In peace, New Zealand can lead to a radical contribution to world missions.  Redemption is a huge challenge that faces peoples globally.  One of the most important things that take place in the hearts of the offended is the release from unresolved grief.

Of course Education has failed us all.

But education is the only antidote I know to deal with fear, helplessness and failure.  Look to rangatahi (Maori and Pakeha fluent in our  two founding cultures) to craft a vision drawn from the furrows tilled by Savage, Nash, Semple, Fraser, Kirk, Rata, Rowling, Lange, Wetere and Clark and do more than just acknowledge Maori loyalty by building a bicultural conversation around the treaty, Kaitiakitanga, a generosity of spirit and trust.  Don’t ever lose empathy.  Mike Moore said it for me “I am very proud of what Labour has done.”

We can do it again.  I trust a new Labour government in 2017 will suture the wounds and scorns and again bring us together as one nation unified as in Hobson’s prophecy.

 “He iwi kotahi tatau.”