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Home / Northland Age

Te Pāti Māori turns down Te Tai Tokerau hui offer

RNZ
20 Nov, 2025 10:52 PM4 mins to read

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Te Tai Tokerau MP Mariameno Kapa-Kingi has been expelled from Te Pāti Māori. Photo / Mark Mitchell

Te Tai Tokerau MP Mariameno Kapa-Kingi has been expelled from Te Pāti Māori. Photo / Mark Mitchell

By Tuwhenuaroa Natanahira of RNZ

The chairman of Te Rūnanga Ā Iwi o Ngāpuhi says he is “extremely disheartened” by Te Pāti Māori declining an invitation to meet with Te Tai Tokerau voters.

Mane Tahere had invited the national executive of Te Pāti Māori (TPM) to attend a face-to-face hui at Kohewhata Marae in Kaikohe on Sunday to discuss the expulsion of Te Tai Tokerau MP Mariameno Kapa-Kingi and what the strategy for the electorate would be heading into next year’s general election.

TPM declined Tahere’s invitation, saying in a letter that it had been advised by “multiple rangatira of Te Tai Tokerau” not to attend “at this time”.

The letter said the party was dealing with some legal proceedings and had been advised that attending might be seen as “interfering with that process”.

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“We acknowledge and appreciate the intention behind your invitation and remain committed to the wellbeing of our people and to appropriate kōrero at the right time and in the right way.”

In a response sent out yesterday, Tahere said the national executive’s absence would send a loud message about how the party valued its northern voter base.

“At present, it appears that value is very little.

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“I cannot accept the reasons given for your non-attendance. My invitation made it absolutely clear that this hui would be held under tikanga on the marae, a setting that Te Pāti Māori, of all political movements, should instinctively understand, respect, and be guided by.”

Tahere said TPM’s claim that multiple Te Tai Tokerau rangatira advised against attending the hui did not stack up with personal conversations he had had.

“I have spoken with many rangatira across Te Tai Tokerau who recognise the importance of this hui for our whānau and who believe firmly that Te Pāti Māori must be present, because showing up is who we are as iwi Māori.”

Speaking to RNZ, Tahere said more than 10,000 people voted for Kapa-Kingi to be their MP, another 7000 gave their party vote to TPM and a few hundred were registered to attend the weekend’s hui.

“We are not hillbillies sitting up here with pitchforks. We’re a mature lot; many of our Ngāpuhi people are quite on to it.

“The whole point of the programme was for whānau and even Whāea Mariameno to have their kōrero and to ‘hohou te rongo’ because we were cut out of much of the decision-making about our own candidate. We still have that mamae [pain] as voters in that it’s just off-kilter.”

He said the way Kapa-Kingi was expelled from the party was “un-Māori” and it was “glaringly obvious” that the national executive was following “Pākehā ture [law]”.

Mane Tahere, chairman of Te Rūnanga Ā Iwi o Ngāpuhi, issued the hui invitation to Te Pāti Māori's national executive. Photo / RNZ, Peter de Graaf
Mane Tahere, chairman of Te Rūnanga Ā Iwi o Ngāpuhi, issued the hui invitation to Te Pāti Māori's national executive. Photo / RNZ, Peter de Graaf

“A hui at the marae can break through all of that.”

Despite the no-show, Tahere said the hui would go ahead and the door would remain open for Te Pāti Māori to attend.

“I was also encouraged by the positivity coming out from many of the attendees and whānau I’ve spoken to about being strategic, having some outcome that is focused on us as a people and being collective and united.

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“You go through some riri [anger], but you also come out with ‘ko puawai tēnei, he mea rawa mō te iwi’ ... the pressure should be put on them so that they reconsider and turn up.”

Tahere said Te Tai Tokerau represented a key electorate for TPM and its failure to turn up on Sunday could spell disaster for the party at next year’s election.

“Everybody will be assessing the political structuring of ‘where to next’, whether it’s Labour or New Zealand First ... the Te Pāti Māori voters, I would say, from what I’ve been hearing, are very much hōhā [annoyed].

“This could be the make-or-break and, perhaps by not turning up, political suicide for Te Pāti Māori.”

- RNZ

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