Filter by:
Inquiry
Document Numbers
Date Range
to
Applied Filters:
Sort: Wai number (ascending)
A019
Other Document

Brief of Evidence of Faye Deborah Harding, 9 May 24

The Māori Wards and Constituencies Urgent Inquiry

14 May 2024
Size: 557KB
3.3.009
Opening - Party Submission/Memo

I Peters / A Herewini / A Evans (Te Rūnanga o Ngāti Whātua), Opening Submissions, 9 May 24

The Māori Wards and Constituencies Urgent Inquiry

14 May 2024
Size: 485KB
A018(a)
Other Document

Index and appendices to brief of evidence of Matthew Mullany, 9 May 24

The Māori Wards and Constituencies Urgent Inquiry

14 May 2024
Size: 895KB
A017(a)
Other Document

Index and appendices to brief of evidence of Tania Eden, 9 May 24

The Māori Wards and Constituencies Urgent Inquiry

14 May 2024
Size: 5.35MB
Wai 3365
Report

The Māori Wards and Constituencies Urgent Inquiry Report: Pre-publication Version

The Māori Wards and Constituencies Urgent Inquiry

In May 2024, the Waitangi Tribunal granted an application for an urgent inquiry into claims concerning the Crown’s proposed policy changes to the Local Electoral (Māori Wards and Māori Constituencies) Amendment Act 2021. The Tribunal confirmed that the inquiry would focus on whether the actions and policies of Government in altering the 2021 amendment Act were in breach of the Treaty of Waitangi and its principles.

The panel for the urgent inquiry consisted of Judge Sarah Reeves (officer), Basil Morrison CNZM JP, and Kevin Prime, and the inquiry was conducted on the papers with no in-person hearing. The Tribunal’s report was released on 17 May 2024.

The Tribunal found that the Crown breached the principle of partnership (the duty to consult and act reasonably and in good faith and the duty of active protection) by prioritising commitments made in the 2023 coalition agreement in the development of Government policy without discussion or consultation with its Treaty partners. The Crown also failed to adequately inform itself of its Treaty obligations and to conduct adequate Treaty analysis during the policy development process.

In addition, the Tribunal found that the Crown failed to adequately protect Māori rights and interests by prioritising the coalition agreement over the desires and actions of Māori for dedicated local political representation. Combined with breaches of the principles of equity, mutual benefit, and options, the Tribunal found that these Treaty breaches caused significant prejudice to Māori.

The Tribunal recommended that the Crown stop the amendment process to allow proper consultation between the Treaty partners with a view to agreeing how Māori can exercise their tino rangatiratanga to determine dedicated representation at the local level. The Tribunal drew the Government’s attention to the existing provisions in the Local Electoral Act 2001 for representation reviews that would better enable councils to seek public views on all wards and constituencies at the same time, including Māori wards or constituencies.

 

04 Jun 2025
Size: 2.09MB
2.5.008
Pre hearing - Trib Memo/Direction/Decision

Reasons Decision of the Deputy Chairperson Judge Sarah Reeves on the application for Urgency, 13 May 24

The Māori Wards and Constituencies Urgent Inquiry

14 May 2024
Size: 561KB
2.5.003
Pre hearing - Trib Memo/Direction/Decision

Memorandum-directions of the Deputy Chairperson regarding the scope of the urgent inquiry, 6 May 24

The Māori Wards and Constituencies Urgent Inquiry

14 May 2024
Size: 460KB
22 May 2026
Size: 593KB
1.1.001
Statement of claim (SOC)

Statement of claim for Sharryn Te Atawhai Barton, 24 Apr 26 (filed by T Te Whenua)

Kaimahi Māori in the Workplace Claim

22 May 2026
Size: 749KB
2.1.001
New Claim - Trib Memo/Direction/Decision

Memorandum-directions of the Deputy Chairperson registering statement of claim, 21 May 26

Kaimahi Māori in the Workplace Claim

22 May 2026
Size: 425KB
1 ... 7555 7556 7557 ... 7804