| Tau Henare |
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| māori politicians | |
| henare, tau | |
| mauri pacific | |
| new zealand first mps | |
| members of the cabinet of new zealand | |
| new zealand national party mps | |
| 1960 births | |
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Henare was born and educated in Auckland . Before entering politics, he held a number of governmental and consultancy positions, including advisory roles at the Department Of Internal Affairs and with the Waitakere City Council. His family has a certain amount of political activity in its history, with Henare's great-grandfather, Taurekareka (Tau) Henare , having served in Parliament from 1914 to 1948 alongside famous Maori politicians such as Apirana Ngata , James Carroll , and Maui Pomare . Henare's own involvement with Maori politics first came with Mana Motuhake , a purely Maori party, but when Winston Peters (himself half Maori) established the New Zealand First party, Henare changed the focus of his activities. Henare first won election to Parliament in the 1993 Elections as the New Zealand First candidate for the Northern Maori electorate. He defeated Bruce Gregory , the incumbent Labour Party member, a surprising result given Labour's traditional dominance in the Maori Seats . He became New Zealand First's second MP, joining Peters in the House. As such, Henare became New Zealand First's deputy leader. In the 1996 Elections , conducted under the new MMP electoral system, New Zealand First gained fifteen further MPs, and also made a clean sweep of the five Maori seats. As deputy leader, Henare was second on New Zealand First's party list. He easily won reelection in his electorate, which had been renamed Te Tai Tokerau. When New Zealand First went into coalition with National, Henare joined the Cabinet , with his most prominent ministry that of Maori Affairs . He and the four other New Zealand First Maori MPs-- Tuku Morgan , Rana Waitai , Tu Wyllie and Tuariki Delamere --became known as the Tight Five . In August 1998 , however, the coalition between National and New Zealand First started to become unstable, and internal tensions arose within New Zealand First itself. When Prime Minister Jenny Shipley sacked Peters from Cabinet on 14 August 1998 , Peters pulled New Zealand First out of the coalition. However, Henare and several other New Zealand First MPs Left The Party and offered their support to National, allowing the government to maintain a slim majority. It later emerged that before departing, Henare had mounted an unsuccessful challenge to Peters. After a brief time as an independent, he banded together with four other MPs who had departed New Zealand First (including two other members of the Tight Five, Morgan and Waitai), and established the Mauri Pacific party with himself as the new party's leader. Late in the term, he caught considerable heat for refusing to give Trevor Mallard a chance to speak on the use of the Maori Language in Parliament because Mallard wasn't Maori. In the 1999 Elections , Henare finished a distant third in his electorate and Mauri Pacific only gained 0.08% of the vote, forcing it out of Parliament. In the 2002 Elections , after Mauri Pacific's dissolution, he stood as a candidate for the National Party. He contested the Te Atatu electorate, and was ranked thirty-fifth on National's list. On election day, he finished second in Te Atatu and National did not win enough seats for him to return to Parliament. In the 2005 Elections , he stood again as a National candidate, again contesting Te Atatu and holding the 29th slot on the party list. He has expressed agreement with the controversial Orewa Speech on race relations made by National Party leader Don Brash . Henare finished a distant second in Te Atatu, but National's gains in the election were enough to return him to Parliament as a list MP. Henare currently also works as a talkback host at the NewsTalkZB Radio station. |
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