We are a party of action and so while that promise may have been little more than a slogan for other parties, for us it’s a line in the sand.
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Friend,

When New Zealand First returned to Government, we made a promise to stand for equal citizenship and one law for all. We are a party of action and so while that promise may have been little more than a slogan for other parties, for us it’s a line in the sand.

If you believe that promise matters, chip in today to keep us fighting for it.

Donate now

It is New Zealand First who fought hard to ensure our coalition agreement with National included 'amending section 58 of the Marine and Coastal Area Act'.

Today in Parliament, we passed the Marine and Coastal Area (Takutai Moana) (Customary Marine Title) Amendment Bill. Watch my full speech here.

You’ve probably seen a headline here or there about it; perhaps referred to as MACA. But often the important details, the context, gets missed in the news reports in favour of dramatic (but ridiculous) headlines. So bear with us while we lay down some facts to explain why it was so important for New Zealand First to ensure this Bill was included in our coalition agreement and passed into law.

The fight over who controls New Zealand’s coastline has been waging for decades and New Zealand First has resolutely stood on the principle that all New Zealanders should have access to New Zealand’s shores and seas, and that no one race should “own” it.

That’s the principle we’re defending and we need your help to keep doing it. Will you chip in and help us stand for equal citizenship?

New Zealand First supported the original Foreshore and Seabed Act 2004 which extinguished all customary title and vested ownership of the coast in the Crown. We backed the bill on the grounds that it secured the coast for the public and prevented race-based property rights. Winston Peters said the law was necessary to prevent the fragmentation of national sovereignty and ensure “one law for all citizens.”

Wasn’t he spot on? They say hindsight is 20/20, but Winston had the measure of the situation even while living it.

In 2011, that settled legislation was replaced with the Marine and Coastal Area (Takutai Moana) Act, declaring that no one owns the coast but creating a new legal path for iwi and hapū to seek Customary Marine Title (CMT) if they could prove “exclusive use and occupation since 1840”. A bit strange seeing as there is little to distinguish CMT from ownership.

Over time, court interpretations widened the remit of the bill and lowered the threshold for claiming rights. Now almost every metre of New Zealand’s coastline has been claimed or is under active claim.

We said this would happen and we were right. Now we’re fixing it.

>>Donate to show your support<<

In 2011 New Zealand First opposed the original MACA bill. Our leader called the new law “a constitutional outrage” that “betrayed the public promise that no one would own the coast.”

He warned that it would lead to endless court battles; ambiguous customary titles being granted over vast areas; a gradual transfer of control from public to private (tribal) interests; and new racial divisions “as dangerous as those created by the original debate.”

Painfully accurate in his predictions, Winston has had to watch while they all came true. But he promised that when New Zealand First re-entered government, we would review and amend the Act to restore the intent of equal citizenship which is precisely what this Amendment Bill now does.

The bill reduces the ambiguity of the CMT test, re-affirms that a customary marine title cannot be sold and public access is maintained, and puts the burden of proof back where it belongs, on applicants to show continuous, exclusive use since 1840.

This fulfils an important New Zealand First coalition policy commitment, upholds the sovereignty of Parliament, and balances the public interest in the common marine and coastal area. Clarity, fairness, and transparency replacing legal ambiguity.

This is what delivering on a promise looks like.

Chip in to support New Zealand First in 2026.

Winston Peters’ comments on the bill have been tested and found to be true. If only the opposition and the media listened to him more often! They jump up and down when he says things like “Māori don’t own the sea… nobody owns the sea.” But he is right and what’s more, he is amplifying how ordinary New Zealanders feel. He is giving a voice to those who are too often ignored.

The passing of this bill should feel like a true victory to you if you believe in:

  • Equal citizenship: no special rights above your fellow Kiwi because of ancestry.
  • Public access: your right to the beach is not for sale or dependent on if you have a Māori ancestor.
  • The importance of Parliamentary sovereignty: the courts are there to interpret the law, not create it.

If you agree, back us to keep fighting for these principles.

Donate today

Inevitably, the usual suspects are not happy.

Activists will do what activists do. Commentators will try to paint common sense as controversy. That’s fine. We’ll front up with the facts and we’ll continue representing the will of New Zealanders like you.

Will you stand with us and chip in to help take this message to every corner of the country?

Donate to keep us fighting

New Zealanders, like you, who despair at the turn our country took some time ago toward some race-based laws, are crucial to how we can turn things around. Will you chip in to advance the fight?

More and more we are hearing that New Zealanders recognise that for the change we desperately need to happen New Zealand First simply must have more seats in Parliament and around the Cabinet table. We are ready to take it up a notch, are you ready to stand by our side?

Either we are one nation under one law or we are something else. And that something else is a scary thought indeed. We know where we stand.

If you share that conviction, please stand with us now and show your support for New Zealand First.

Casey Costello

Stand with us – Donate now
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