It is not a partisan argument. It is a constitutional warning.
New Zealand is experiencing constitutional drift driven by: undefined Treaty terms, judicial reinterpretation, bureaucratic expansion, non‑statutory governance structures, opaque Crown–iwi negotiations, public funding of private entities without accountability.
These developments are occurring without public mandate, without statutory authority, and without democratic legitimacy.
Failure to address these issues will result in the continued erosion of parliamentary sovereignty and the entrenchment of unelected authority structures.
I. THE TREATY TEXT: THE ONLY CONSTITUTIONAL ANCHOR
The Māori‑language Treaty — the only version actually agreed to — contains:
kāwanatanga ceded to the Crown,
tino rangatiratanga guaranteed to individuals and hapū over their property,
nga tikanga katoa rite tahi — equal rights under the law.
It contains no partnership, no co‑governance, no shared sovereignty, no “principles,” and no requirement to “give effect to” anything.
The English text was not agreed to.
The “principles” doctrine was invented more than a century later.
The partnership doctrine has no basis in the text.
The Māori text is the constitutional foundation.
II. JUDICIAL REINTERPRETATION AND CONSTITUTIONAL RISK
The courts have expanded Treaty obligations far beyond the text, creating:
Partnership, active protection, shared authority, co‑governance, obligations to “give effect to”, obligations to protect “taonga” in an expanded sense. These expansions were not authorized by Parliament. They were not authorized by the Treaty.
They were created through judicial interpretation, often relying on the English text or later political developments.
This has created a parallel constitutional framework that Parliament never enacted.
III. THE LEGAL EXPANSION OF “TAONGA”
A. The 1840 Meaning
In the Māori text, taonga meant:
Property, goods, possessions, tangible items.
It did not include: political authority, natural resources, data, language, environmental governance, cultural veto rights.
The modern expansion is a post‑1980s invention.
B. Case Law Driving Expansion
NZMC v AG (1987)
Expanded “taonga” to intangible cultural values.
Broadcasting Assets (1994)
Declared Māori language a “taonga” requiring Crown protection.
Ngāi Tahu v DG of Conservation (1995)
Extended “taonga” into commercial regulation.
Ngāti Apa (2003)
Extended “taonga” into territorial authority.
None of these expansions are grounded in the Māori text.
C. Tribunal Jurisprudence
The Waitangi Tribunal has extended “taonga” into: flora and fauna (Wai 262)
intellectual property, genetic material, scientific knowledge, data sovereignty (Wai 2522)
political authority (Wai 1040)
These findings are advisory, yet government agencies treat them as binding.
D. Constitutional Consequences
Judicial policymaking replaces parliamentary lawmaking. Undefined Treaty terms override statutory clarity, Sector‑wide co‑governance claims proliferate, Equal citizenship is eroded. Parliamentary sovereignty is weakened.
IV. NON‑STATUTORY GOVERNANCE STRUCTURES
A. National Iwi Chairs Forum (NICF)
Not created by statute.
Not elected. Not accountable. Not subject to OIA.
Yet Ministers attend its meetings and treat it as a parallel policy body.
B. Iwi Leaders Groups (ILGs)
Operate in: Freshwater, climate, resource management, health, data.
They draft policy frameworks and negotiate directly with government agencies.
C. Data Iwi Leaders Group (DILG)
Claims Māori data is a “taonga” requiring Māori governance.
Influences: Cloud First, AI governance, national data policy. This is policy capture by a private entity.
D. Funding and Accountability
These bodies receive taxpayer‑funded support through: departmental budgets, consultancy contracts, engagement payments, co‑governance participation funding, local government contributions.
Yet they remain: unaudited, unregulated, unaccountable, opaque. This is incompatible with democratic governance.
V. CONSTITUTIONAL RISKS TO NEW ZEALAND
Parallel authority structures. Loss of democratic accountability, Opaque decision‑making, Erosion of equal citizenship. Undermining of parliamentary sovereignty, Judicial expansion without democratic mandate. Policy capture by unelected entities, These risks are not hypothetical.
They are already occurring.
VI. REQUIRED ACTION BY PARLIAMENT
To restore constitutional clarity and democratic accountability, Parliament must:
1. Define “taonga” explicitly and narrowly
— as property and possessions in the 1840 sense.
2. Anchor Treaty interpretation in the Māori text
— not in judicially‑invented “principles.”
3. Affirm that NICF, ILGs, and DILG have no constitutional or statutory authority
— and cannot bind the Crown.
4. Require transparency in all Crown–iwi negotiations
— including OIA coverage.
5. Reassert parliamentary sovereignty
— only Parliament can make law.
6. Ensure equal citizenship under Article 3
— no parallel governance structures.
VII. RED LINE DECLARATION
No constitutional authority may be transferred, shared, or implied through: undefined Treaty terms, judicial invention, bureaucratic policy, non‑statutory negotiation, co‑governance arrangements ,partnership doctrines.
Tribunal findings. Only Parliament may legislate. Only the Māori text of Te Tiriti is binding.
Equal citizenship is non‑negotiable.
VIII. CLOSING CONSTITUTIONAL STATEMENT
This document is submitted to ACT, NZ First, and National with the expectation that it will be treated with the seriousness required of elected representatives. This is not a political dispute.
It is a constitutional inflection point. If Parliament fails to act: constitutional drift will continue, democratic accountability will erode, parallel authority structures will deepen, public trust will collapse.
The responsibility now rests with Parliament.
The public expects clarity, courage, and constitutional integrity.
This document has been compiled from a wide range of files, reports, and reference materials. It is provided to Members of Parliament for serious consideration. The content requires further research, careful evaluation, and informed discussion to ensure that the constitutional issues identified are properly understood and addressed