Minister for Māori Development explained

Post:Minister for Maori Development
Flag:Flag of New Zealand.svg
Flagcaption:Flag of New Zealand
Insigniacaption:Coat of arms of New Zealand
Incumbent:Tama Potaka
Incumbentsince:27 November 2023
Department:Ministry of Maori Development
Style:The Honourable
Member Of:Executive Council
Reports To:Prime Minister of New Zealand
Appointer:Governor-General of New Zealand
Termlength:At His Majesty's pleasure
Formation:27 August 1858
First:William Richmond
Salary:$243,841[1]
Website:Ministry of Māori Development

The Minister for Māori Development is the minister in the New Zealand Government with broad responsibility for government policy towards Māori, the first inhabitants of New Zealand. The Minister heads the Te Puni Kōkiri (TPK, or the Ministry of Māori Development). Between 1947 and 2014 the position was called Minister of Māori Affairs; before that it was known as Minister of Native Affairs. The current Minister for Māori Development is Tama Potaka.[2]

Role

The role of the Minister for Māori Development differs from those of other ministers. While the Minister for Māori Development does have a government department to supervise (Te Puni Kōkiri, TPK for short, or the Ministry of Māori Development), he or she also has input into other portfolios to the extent that they affect Māori. For example, the Minister for Māori Development would expect to be involved in the development of Māori language policy in the education portfolio, even though education is normally the sole responsibility of the Minister of Education.[3] [4]

History

The office was originally called Minister of Native Affairs, or simply Native Minister. Most early Ministers of Native Affairs were not Māori, although a convention existed that there should be Māori in Cabinet (albeit without portfolio). Prior to the implementation of responsible government, Māori affairs (specifically the purchase of land from Māori by the Crown) had been handled by the Governor.[5]

Attitudes of early Ministers were varied. The first Minister, William Richmond, considered Māori to be savages, and believed that his task was to "reform" Māori by making them more like Europeans. He was particularly hostile to Māori tradition of shared land ownership, considering it "beastly communism".[6] Other Ministers were more friendly to Māori interests - James FitzGerald, the sixth Minister, believed that peaceful co-existence with Māori was vital, and considered the confiscation of Māori land to be an "enormous crime".[7] Other Ministers have varied between these positions.[8]

The first Minister of Native Affairs to be ethnically Māori was James Carroll, appointed by the Liberal Party in the late 19th century.[9] Another prominent Minister of Native Affairs was Āpirana Ngata, also of the Liberals. For the most part, however, early Ministers were Pākehā, although were frequently advised by Māori colleagues.[10] Maui Pomare[11] of the Reform Party and Eruera Tirikatene of the Labour Party were examples of politicians who played a major role in the portfolio without actually holding office.[12] After Carroll and Ngata, it was not until Matiu Rata (1972–1975) that there was another ethnically Māori Minister of Māori Affairs.[13]

Under the Maori Purposes Act 1947, the Ministerial title and all other government usage was changed from 'Native' to 'Maori'.[14]

1972 to present

Matiu Rata, appointed as the Minister of Māori Affairs in 1972, the first Maori since Ngata was Minister of Native Affairs in 1928.[15]

After the 2014 general election cabinet reshuffle, the title was changed from Minister of Māori Affairs to Minister for Māori Development. While Prime Minister John Key said that there was not really any difference in what the portfolio would involve, "it gives you a sense of where the minister [Flavell] will want to shape the portfolio".[16] During the 2014-2017 term of the Fifth National Government, Te Ururoa Flavell served as the Minister for Māori Development.[17]

Following the formation of the Sixth Labour Government, Nanaia Mahuta was appointed as Minister for Māori Development.[18]

List of ministers

The table below lists ministers who have held responsibility for Māori issues. Initially, the title used was Minister of Native Affairs, but the title was changed to Minister of Maori Affairs on 17 December 1947 and then to Minister of Māori Affairs with the insertion of the macron in modern orthography under the Māori Language Commission. In 2014, the title was changed for a fourth time to Minister for Māori Development.

Key
No.NamePortraitWas Māori?Term of officePrime Minister
As Minister of Native Affairs
1William RichmondNo27 August 185810 November 1860width=1 rowspan=2 style="color:inherit;background:"Stafford
2Frederick WeldNo10 November 186012 July 1861
3Walter MantellNo12 July 186118 December 1861Fox
4Dillon BellNo6 August 186230 October 1863Domett
5William FoxNo18 December 186130 October 1863Whitaker
(3)Walter MantellNo30 October 186327 July 1865Weld
6James FitzGeraldNo27 July 186516 October 1865
7Andrew RussellNo16 October 186524 August 1866Stafford
8James Crowe RichmondNo24 August 186628 June 1869
9Donald McLeanNo28 June 18697 December 1876Fox
Waterhouse
Fox
Vogel
Pollen
Vogel
Atkinson
10Daniel PollenNo18 December 187613 October 1877
11John SheehanNo15 October 18778 October 1879Grey
12John BryceNo8 October 187921 January 1881Hall
13William RollestonNo4 February 188119 October 1881
(12)John BryceNo19 October 188116 August 1884
Whitaker
Atkinson
14John BallanceNo16 August 1884
3 September 1884
28 August 1884
8 October 1887
Stout
15Edwin MitchelsonNo8 October 188724 January 1891Atkinson
height=50 style="color:inherit;background:"(14)John BallanceNo24 January 18914 February 1891Ballance
height=50 style="border-bottom:solid 0 grey; background:"16Alfred CadmanNo4 February 189129 June 1893
height=50 style="border-top:solid 0 grey; background:"Seddon
17Richard SeddonNo29 June 189321 December 1899
height=50 style="border-bottom:solid 0 grey; background:"18James CarrollYes21 December 189928 March 1912
Hall-Jones
height=50 style="color:inherit;background:"Ward
19William MacDonaldNo28 March 191210 July 1912Mackenzie
20William HerriesNo10 July 19127 February 1921Massey
21Gordon CoatesNo7 February 192110 December 1928height=36 style="border-top:solid 0 grey; background:"
Bell
Coates
height=50 style="border-bottom:solid 0 grey; background:"22Āpirana NgataYes10 December 19281 November 1934Ward
height=15 style="border-top:solid 0 grey; background:"Forbes
23George ForbesNo1 November 19346 December 1935
24Michael Joseph SavageNo6 December 193527 March 1940Savage
25Frank LangstoneNo1 April 194021 December 1942Fraser
26Rex MasonNo7 July 194319 December 1946
27Peter FraserNo19 December 194617 December 1947
As Minister of Maori Affairs
(27)Peter FraserNo17 December 194713 December 1949Fraser
height=50 style="border-bottom:solid 0 grey; background:"28Ernest CorbettNo13 December 194926 September 1957Holland
height=15 style="border-top:solid 0 grey; background:"Holyoake
29Keith HolyoakeNo26 September 195712 December 1957
30Walter NashNo12 December 195712 December 1960Nash
31Ralph HananNo12 December 196024 July 1969Holyoake
height=15 style="border-bottom:solid 0 grey; background:"32Duncan MacIntyreNo22 December 19698 December 1972
height=15 style="border-top:solid 0 grey; background:"Marshall
33Matiu RataYes8 December 197212 December 1975Kirk
Rowling
(32)Duncan MacIntyreNo12 December 197513 December 1978Muldoon
34Ben CouchYes13 December 197826 July 1984
35Koro WētereYes26 July 19842 November 1990Lange
Palmer
Moore
36Winston PetersYes2 November 19902 October 1991Bolger
37Doug KiddNo2 October 19916 November 1993
38John LuxtonNo6 November 199312 October 1996
height=30 style="color:inherit;background:"39Tau HenareYes12 October 199610 December 1999
height=15 style="border-top:solid 0 grey; background:"height=36 style="color:inherit;background:"Shipley
40Dover SamuelsYes10 December 199928 June 2000Clark
41Parekura HoromiaYes26 July 200019 November 2008
As Minister for Māori Affairs
42Pita SharplesYes19 November 20088 October 2014Key
As Minister for Māori Development
43Te Ururoa FlavellYes8 October 201421 October 2017
Key
 
English
44Nanaia MahutaYes26 October 20176 November 2020Ardern
height=40 style="border-bottom:solid 0 grey; background:"45Willie JacksonYes6 November 202027 November 2023
height=15 style="border-top:solid 0 grey; background:"Hipkins
46Tama PotakaYes27 November 2023presentLuxon

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Parliamentary Salaries and Allowances Determination 2016. New Zealand Parliament. 11 October 2017.
  2. Web site: Ministry of Māori Development. New Zealand Government. 11 October 2017.
  3. Web site: Roles and functions. Te Puni Kōkiri. 11 October 2017.
  4. Book: Luxton. John. The Ministry of Māori Development – Te Puni Kōkiri. 2008. New Zealand Business Roundtable. Wellington. 9781877394270. 2008. 11 October 2017.
  5. Butterworth and Young, "Appendix 1: Political Heads of the Departments of Maori Affairs," Maori Affairs, pp. 123-124.
  6. Web site: Sinclair. Keith. Richmond, Christopher William. Te Ara - the Encyclopedia of New Zealand. 11 October 2017.
  7. Web site: Macintyre. W. David. Fitzgerald, James Edward. Te Ara - the Encyclopedia of New Zealand. 11 October 2017.
  8. Butterworth and Young, Maori Affairs, pp. 5-7.
  9. Butterworth and Young, Maori Affairs, p. 58.
  10. Butterworth and Young, Maori Affairs, pp. 74-78.
  11. Web site: Butterworth. Graham. Pomare, Maui Wiremu Piti Naera. Te Ara - the Encyclopedia of New Zealand. 11 October 2017.
  12. Web site: Ballara. Angela. Tirikatene, Eruera Tihema Te Aika. Te Ara - the Encyclopedia of New Zealand. 11 October 2017.
  13. Butterworth and Young, Maori Affairs, pp. 107-110.
  14. Butterworth and Young, Maori Affairs, pp. 123-124.
  15. Web site: Māori Ministers. New Zealand History. Ministry for Culture and Heritage. 11 October 2017.
  16. News: Flavell given portfolio renamed to reflect 'new focus' on Maori future . The New Zealand Herald . 6 October 2014 . 7 October 2014 . Bennett, Adam.
  17. Web site: Hon Te Ururoa Flavell. New Zealand Parliament. 26 October 2017.
  18. Web site: Ministerial List. Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet. 26 October 2017.