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.
|