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Home / Northland Age

A bit of a do at Jonesy's

Northland Age
9 Feb, 2015 08:10 PM2 mins to read

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WHAT'S THE GOSS? Labour Party leader Andrew Little, former Far North Mayor Wayne Brown, Labour MP David Parker and NZ First leader Winston Peters.

WHAT'S THE GOSS? Labour Party leader Andrew Little, former Far North Mayor Wayne Brown, Labour MP David Parker and NZ First leader Winston Peters.

There was only one place to be in the Far North on the night before Waitangi festivities began, and that was the home of former Labour MP Shane Jones.

No fewer than five past and present Labour leaders turned up for the annual pre-Waitangi party hosted by Mr Jones, now Ambassador for Pacific Economic Development, and his partner Dorothy Pumipi near Kerikeri.

The party's newest leader, Andrew Little, was there, as was the man he ousted, David Cunliffe, along with Phil Goff, David Shearer, and last year's interim leader David Parker. All seemed to rub along happily despite the ructions of recent years. Only Helen Clark was missing; she was busy in New York, apparently.

Never one to miss a party, and probably the last to go home, was NZ First leader Winston Peters, former Maori Affairs Minister (now Northland Regional councillor) Dover Samuels grabbed the mic and showed he could have pursued an alternative career as a cabaret singer, and surprise talent Mr Shearer belted out half a dozen rock 'n roll numbers with the Billy TK Junior band.

Also spotted in the crush under the shelter of the balcony or circling the buffet table were sevens star and former All Black Eric Rush, iwi leaders Sonny Tau (Ngapuhi) and Naida Glavish (Ngati Whatua), master waka builder Hekenukumai Busby, broadcasters Willie Jackson and John (JT) Tamihere, former Far North Mayor Wayne Brown and Pacific trade bigwigs. A bishop, no less, blessed the food.

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Almost the entire Labour caucus showed up. Party veteran and deputy leader Annette King got a special mention from Mr Jones, who described her as his political mentor. The heavily outnumbered Whangarei MP Shane Reti bravely flew the flag for National.

Perhaps the most eagerly anticipated guest, however, arrived in slices on the buffet table - the 305.9kg marlin Mr Jones hooked off Cape Brett last month. Before the party he joked he'd had to ask his son Tohe to rebuild the deck just to take the weight of the monster fish.

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