
A kōrero with Ikaroa-Rāwhiti candidates Cushla Tangaere-Manuel & Meka Whaitiri
09/05/23 • 28 min
Ikaroa-Rāwhiti is shaping up to be one of the tightest races this election. We speak to its two leading candidates Cushla Tangaere-Manuel (Labour) and Meka Whaitiri (Te Pāti Māori).
Ikaroa-Rāwhiti is shaping up to be one of the tightest races this election. We speak to its two leading candidates Cushla Tangaere-Manuel (Labour) and Meka Whaitiri (Te Pāti Māori).
Previous Episode

Shane Jones on the Treaty, Toilets, and Teeth
Shane Jones outlines NZ First's campaign to re enter parliament - their policies and priorities, including their controversial transgender toilet policy. Then we hear from commentators Tau Henare and Bernie O'Donnell
Watch the video version of the episode here.
Shane Jones outlines NZ First's campaign to re enter parliament - their policies and priorities, including their controversial transgender toilet policy. Then we hear from commentators Tau Henare and Bernie O'Donnell.
New Zealand First's campaign slogan 'Take back our country' is focused on five key issues: Taking a stand against racist separatism; fighting Australian owned banks and a supermarket duopoly; investing in health, social services and crime prevention; tax reform; and taking on the gangs.
NZ First is also promising to ban trans women from women's toilets and to make English an official language of Aotearoa New Zealand.
Jones was part of a group which petitioned the government to "give effect to the aspirations" of the Treaty of Waitangi in 1978.
Jones said a lot of what they set out to achieve in terms of the Treaty had been delivered upon.
"Where I've ended up parting company is the way in which the Treaty has been, I feel unhinged from its moorings... and now it's used as a justification for every inequity that befalls us as a people."
It was impossible to deal with issues such as higher Māori mortality rates, truancy and prison rates simply by invoking the Treaty, he said.
"I genuinely feel that with the ideological fervour driving for co-governance, it has the capacity to weaken our status as a nation."
New Zealand had some big internal challenges and there was the potential for Sino-American conflict in the Pacific, he said.
"I'm very worried about internal bickering undermining our capacity and our robustness as a nation."
The best way to deal with inequities for Māori was by providing diverse delivery of services on the front line, he said.
"If you judge the quality of the service based on the outcome that's positive, but if you pretend by invoking the name of the Treaty and dredging up yet more tribunal reports, you're going to improve the quality of front-line service - I thoroughly disagree with that."
On the banning of trans women from women's toilets, Jones said there had been "no shortage of people" that had told the party it was an issue that needed to be addressed.
Jones said he believed attaching Māori names to organisations was tokenism in that doing so did not provide any corresponding improvement in services for Māori...
Next Episode

An Interview with Labour Leader Chris Hipkins
In an in-depth interview, Labour leader Chris Hipkins discusses Labour's tax policy, Māori housing inequity, the cost of living, and the climate crisis.
Watch the video version of the episode here.
Labour leader Chris Hipkins believes there are better ways to bring down the cost of housing, electricity and groceries than new taxes.
But in at least three of those areas - electricity, banking and groceries - a third-term Labour-led government would not rule out taxes on excessive profits, should other measures fail to rein them in.
"Tax is not the only way you can tackle inequality," Hipkins - whose grasp on the prime ministership is looking shakier with every poll - told Mata this week.
"The policies that we are introducing and implementing as a government are actually I think making a meaningful difference on inequality."
An IRD document released in April, the High-Wealth Individuals Research Project Report, found the wealthiest New Zealanders pay an effective tax rate about half that the rest of us do, largely through untaxed capital gains.
Despite this, support for the idea from his former revenue minister and it being a key plank of likely coalition partner the Greens' platform, Hipkins has ruled out implementing any kind of wealth tax, should Labour lead the next government.
He has also ruled out a comprehensive capital gains tax, despite the recommendation from the Tax Working Group to target capital gains to ease the burden placed on wage and salary earners.
Housing
Currently, the bright-line test means residential property - aside from the family home in most instances, and a few other situations - attracts a capital gains tax if it is sold sooner than 10 years after purchase. National wants to lower this to two years.
Hipkins said other suggestions - such as a land tax, as proposed by The Opportunities Party - were not on the table.
"It's not something we're looking at at the moment," Hipkins told Mata host Mihingarangi Forbes.
"The main form of land tax we have at the moment is local government rates, which are levied on a combination of land and asset value - whatever sits on top of that land - so we already have that at the moment. We're not proposing to expand that further. ...
If you like this episode you’ll love
Episode Comments
Featured in these lists
Generate a badge
Get a badge for your website that links back to this episode
<a href="https://goodpods.com/podcasts/mata-with-mihingarangi-forbes-276809/a-k%c5%8drero-with-ikaroa-r%c4%81whiti-candidates-cushla-tangaere-manuel-and-mek-33940925"> <img src="https://storage.googleapis.com/goodpods-images-bucket/badges/generic-badge-1.svg" alt="listen to a kōrero with ikaroa-rāwhiti candidates cushla tangaere-manuel & meka whaitiri on goodpods" style="width: 225px" /> </a>
Copy