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Maori and Mana parties agree election tactics deal

Monday 20th February 2017

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The Maori and Mana parties have sealed a long-expected tactical arrangement to try and ensure that both parties win at least one Maori electorate each in the Sept. 23 general election.

As foreshadowed, the Maori Party will stand aside in the far north Maori electorate of Te Tai Tokerau, where Mana Party leader Hone Harawira was defeated by Labour's Kelvin Davis by 743 votes in the 2014 election - a margin that would have been eradicated if the Maori party hadn't stood and its 2,300 votes had fallen to Harawira.

In return, Mana will not contest any of the remaining six Maori seats - a deal that Harawira had shown some distaste for when asked about it at the annual Ratana commemorations late last month.

Maori party president Tukoroirangi Morgan said the deal was intended to "collectivise our efforts to reclaim all the seats from Labour".

Currently, the only Maori electorate not held by Labour is Waiariki, held by the Maori party co-leader Te Uruora Flavell, who was also able to bring in one other MP, Marama Fox, from the party list after the Maori party won 1.32 percent of the party vote in 2014. Both the Mana and Maori parties will still contest the party vote.

The pact is significant because current opinion polling shows the National Party would need two or more Maori party MPs to win seats in September if it is to avoid having to avoid with the populist New Zealand First party. The first OneNews Colmar Brunton poll this year was published last night, showing National had slipped four percentage points to 46 percent support, Labour was up 3 points to 30 percent, and NZ First would hold the balance of power because National's minor party allies, the United Future, Act, and Maori parties would only win one seat each, leaving the government two seats short of a parliamentary majority.

Late last year, the Maori party was talking up the prospects of snaring several high-profile candidates, with Fox bringing former union leader and talkshow host Willie Jackson to the annual Press Gallery Christmas party. However, Jackson threw in his lot with Labour earlier this month, in exchange for a high list ranking, while the party's attempts to woo Mark Solomon, chair of the Iwi Leaders Group and a former head of the powerful South Island iwi, Ngai Tahu, were unsuccessful. Howie Tamati, a former rugby league star, is the party's biggest catch to date, standing for 

As a list MP, Fox is vulnerable to the Maori party polling below the 1.26 percent party vote threshold that guarantees two seats in Parliament if one is an electorate seat, because she is standing in Ikaroa-Rawhiti, currently represented by one of Labour's stronger-performing Maori MPs, Meka Whaitiri.

For its part, Mana was wiped out in the 2014 election by its marriage of convenience with the Internet Party formed by fugitive internet entrepreneur Kim Dotcom. 

BusinessDesk.co.nz



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