Water Rights: If Maori are able to remain united in their attempts to clarify the nature of any proprietary rights they may still enjoy over New Zealand's water resources, John Key's asset sales programme may yet fall victim to an indigenous strategy of "divide and rule".
DIVIDE ET IMPERA –
“divide and rule” – was the central principle of Roman imperial government.
Identify a conquered people’s long-standing social, economic and political
fissures and drive your wedges home – as many as possible. Not for nothing did the
British aristocracy set their sons to the systematic study of classical texts.
Britain’s imperialists, like Rome’s, were masters at dividing and ruling. The
easy British victories in the New Zealand Land Wars owe a huge debt to “the
loyal Maoris” who were cajoled into taking Queen Victoria’s shilling.
New Zealand’s colonial elites came rather late to the art of
dividing and ruling. Like their counterparts in Canada, the United States and Australia
the assumption of the settler societies nurtured beneath Britannia’s imperial
shield was that their troublesome “natives” would simply succumb to the
Anglo-Saxon invaders’ genetic superiority (or, failing that, their guns and
germs). In all but New Zealand’s case these genocidal expectations were largely
(if not wholly) fulfilled. The “first peoples” of Britain’s non-tropical empire
did indeed dwindle to politically insignificant percentages of the “White
Dominions’” populations.
But not here. Successive settler governments’ efforts to
“smooth the pillow of a dying race” notwithstanding, Maori numbers recovered
and grew. Currently comprising between 10-15 percent of the population, New
Zealand’s indigenous people constitute a significant and un-ignorable minority.
Too few to win back their lost lands, but far too many to be simply shunted out
of sight (and mind?) in the manner of the Canadian, American and Australian
settler regimes. How to govern a settler state in which the indigenous
population steadfastly refuses to fade into history has thus become one of the
New Zealand political class’s most intractable problems.
The looming impasse over the partial sale of the four
state-owned energy companies offers an excellent opportunity to see practically
all of the New Zealand State’s Maori management mechanisms in play and to
assess their effectiveness. Among the many institutions and groups involved are
the NZ Maori Council, The Waitangi Tribunal, The Iwi Leaders Group and the
Maori Party.
Each, in its own way, represents an attempt by Pakeha to
either co-opt and/or pacify Maori resistance, or, by Maori, to exploit and/or
challenge the post-colonial Pakeha Establishment. Ironically, the institution
established to bring traditional Maori leaders into the Settler State’s tent
(the Maori Council) and the quasi-judicial body set up to mollify the angry
Maori masses (the Waitangi Tribunal) have become the primary vectors of
indigenous resistance. By contrast, the Maori Party, launched to overturn the Foreshore
& Seabed Act, which many Maori regarded as another raupatu (confiscation) has taken on the historical role of those
“Loyal Maori” of the Land Wars.
Only the Iwi Leaders Group has yet to show its hand in this
game of post-colonial poker. How it chooses to play its cards may yet determine
whether the National-led Government’s controversial asset-sales programme
proceeds smoothly, or becomes hopelessly, perhaps fatally, mired in legal
challenges.
The Iwi Leaders Group, like the Maori Council before it,
owes this position to the Pakeha Right’s rather belated attempt to copy the
divide and rule tactics of the British imperialists from whom it inherited
its economic dominance.
By enlisting the men and women of aristocratic lineage
and/or great mana, the National Party hoped the Maori Council
would off-set the political advantage its socialist rivals had acquired through
their electoral alliance with the revitalist religious-political movement of
Tahupotiki Wiremu Ratana.
In another historical irony, however, it was the Labour
Party’s privatisation drive of the 1980s which gave rise to the
judicially-inspired notion of a Treaty of Waitangi-mandated, Maori-Pakeha
“partnership”. Seeking to mollify the growing anger of a new generation of
Maori nationalists, Labour had extended the purview of the long-disregarded
Treaty of Waitangi all the way back to the year of its signing in 1840. The
subsequent “Treaty settlements”, negotiated by National Party ministers, saw
hundreds of millions of dollars passing into the hands of tribal
representatives. The elaboration of these significant capital transfers into
powerful tribal corporations gave rise to a new Maori elite which the Right has
attempted to fashion into a protective shield against the urgent
social and economic claims of the growing Maori underclass.
The choice now confronting the Iwi Leaders Group is,
therefore, a profound one. Either, it will facilitate the National Government’s
partial asset sales programme by negotiating some form of tribally-based
compensation, or, it will throw its weight behind the Waitangi Tribunal and the
Maori Council. The latter course would align them in a politically significant
way with the needs and aspirations of non-elite Maori: the beleaguered whanau and hapu who constitute the primary victims of National’s neoliberal
policies.
Looking at the large number of Pakeha opposed to asset
sales, Maori might then decide to practice a little “divide and rule” of their
own.
This essay was
originally published in The Press of
Tuesday, 7 August 2012.
Excellent commentary Chris, this style of writing is a welcome relief from your Labour Party 'road testing', please keep it up.
ReplyDeleteOur heritage is predominantly Celtic and Pacific Island blood mix, and we Celts know in our heart of hearts that Maori are a cornerstone of our make up, and who we are, as a nation.
Excellent piece, Chris
ReplyDeleteThe Maori who supported the government in the 19th century often didn't need much 'cajoling'-they were only too happy to settles old scores and tribal differences with the assistance of the government of the day. On the East Coast Roparta was an enthusiatic supporter and tracked Te Kooti with a will. In fact the European soldiers preferred his command to that of the English twit who was nominally in charge. The problem with today's history writing is that is overlaid both with a PC concept and with the need to satisify the $ demands that iwi place on it. Ropata was said by the Waitangi Tribunal to be someone who didn't adhere to the Treaty! How stupid is that as a criticism?
ReplyDeleteNo Jigsaw, the trouble with history today is that it is often written by amateurs with an axe to grind rather than proper historians who know something about the Maori mindset. This whole PC idea is too often thrown around by the ignorant. If PC means doing proper research and not treating Maori as Brown Pakeha then I'm all for it.
ReplyDeleteJames Cowan spoke Maori and spoke to the people who were there at the time. Modern historians dismiss his work as too 'Victorian'-the whole concept of 'proper historians' ie university historians just shows how brainwashed you have become.
ReplyDeleteHow can Maori tribalists be socialists, except within their own tribe? By that measure the Koch Brothers are socialists.
ReplyDelete