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A draft version of David Seymour鈥檚听Treaty Principles Bill听will be considered by Cabinet this afternoon, the听Herald听understands.听
The Act leader鈥檚 bill, part of the听coalition Government鈥檚 agreement, will go to first reading in November and could be sent to a select committee for further discussion.听
However, Act鈥檚 coalition partners, National and NZ First, have said they will not support the bill past its first reading.听
It comes after 400 church leaders, including all three Anglican archbishops, the Catholic Archbishop and a Catholic cardinal, the Methodist Church president, and the Salvation Army commissioner signed an open letter to MPs calling on them to vote down the bill.听
Act leader David Seymour's Treaty Principles Bill is set to be considered by Cabinet today. Photo / Mark Mitchell
Seymour told the听Herald听the pushback by the churches was undemocratic and not the first time the church had tried to interfere in democracy.听
鈥淭his isn鈥檛 the first time the church has tried to prevent the people from having their say on a policy of mine, the first time being the End of Life Choice Act,鈥 Seymour told the听Herald.听
In a Facebook post this morning, Seymour hit out at the church leaders, saying 鈥渢he core Christian principle of imago dei鈥 automatically meant we all had equal dignity.听
The Treaty Principles Bill reinforced that belief and was 鈥渟omething that Christian leaders should be supporting, if they want to play in politics鈥, he said.听
鈥淚f you wonder why church attendance and reported Christianity is in decline in New Zealand, today鈥檚 display of church leaders abandoning a core, if not the core, Christian belief to play politics might be a clue.鈥听
The open letter, released this morning, states: 鈥淎s Christian leaders from across Aotearoa New Zealand we express our commitment to Te Tiriti o Waitangi. We affirm that Te Tiriti o Waitangi protects the tino rangatiratanga of hap奴 and iwi. That rangatiratanga over land and taonga is to be upheld.听
鈥淲e therefore express our opposition to the proposed Treaty Principles Bill.鈥听
In the letter, the signatories called on 鈥渁ll members of Parliament to do everything in their power鈥 to prevent the bill going to select committee and 鈥渢owards the ongoing restoration of the Tiriti relationship鈥.听
In August,听the Waitangi Tribunal released a scathing report听after considering the bill under urgency. The tribunal said the bill was unfair, discriminatory and needed to be abandoned.听
The 189-page interim report says the Treaty Principles Bill was 鈥渁 solution to a problem that does not exist鈥, saying M膩ori did not want this policy and 鈥渋n fact many have been strongly opposed to it from the beginning鈥.听
鈥淒espite the constitutional significance of defining the Treaty principles in legislation and the importance of this to M膩ori, the Crown agreed to pursue the policy without any engagement or discussion with M膩ori.听
鈥淲e have found that the Treaty Principles Bill policy is unfair, discriminatory, and inconsistent with the principles of partnership and reciprocity, active protection, good government, equity, and redress, and contrary to the article 2 guarantee of rangatiratanga.鈥听
Prime Minister Christopher Luxon and Deputy PM Winston Peters say they will support Act鈥檚 Treaty Principles Bill to the first reading only and not a referendum 鈥 Luxon and Peters are pictured with Kuini Nga wai hono i te po. Photo / RNZ听
Speaking at 18th coronation of听K墨ngi T奴heitia听this year, Prime Minister听Christopher Luxon听and Deputy Prime Minister听Winston Peters听reiterated they would support Act鈥檚 Treaty Principles Bill to the first reading only and not a referendum.听
鈥淚 don鈥檛 know how much clearer I can be,鈥 Luxon said听when quizzed by media听after his speech at T奴rangawaewae Marae.听
鈥淚 have been talking with iwi leaders and have had some incredibly constructive conversations. My legacy for M膩ori will be about improving outcomes for M膩ori.鈥听
鈥楥abinet can stop it today鈥
Labour MP Willie Jackson was also among the mourners at the tangi for K墨ngi T奴heitia. Photo / Mike Scott
鈥淩ight now, National is allowing Act to lead a divisive debate on the Treaty, which is so foundational to our country, and something that means so much to so many 鈥 despite saying they won鈥檛 support it in the long term,鈥 Jackson said.
鈥淐abinet can stop it today. National Party ministers should put their foot down now. If Christopher Luxon won鈥檛, they should collectively tell David Seymour they disagree with his divisive agenda.鈥
Jackson said the bill was based on 鈥渙utdated and incorrect鈥 perspectives on the Treaty.
Julia Gabel is a Wellington-based political reporter. She joined the Herald in 2020 and has most recently focused on data journalism.听
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