Māori Lawmakers Perform Traditional Haka Dance to Protest New Zealand Bill

Mar. 15, 2025

Hana-Rawhiti Maipi-Clarke, right, in 2024.Photo:AP Photo/Charlotte Graham-McLay

Hana-Rawhiti Maipi-Clarke talks to reporters following a protest inside Parliament in Wellington, New Zealand, Thursday, Nov. 14, 2024

AP Photo/Charlotte Graham-McLay

Māori lawmakers performed a traditional haka dance to protest a New Zealand bill.

On Thursday, Nov. 14, Parliament was suspended after opposition lawmakers performed the dance while the bill was read, according to theNew York Times. According to the outlet, the proposed bill could redefine New Zealand’s relationship with Indigenous people and overwrite a treaty established almost 200 years ago.

When speaker Gerry Brownlee asked Māori lawmaker Hana-Rawhiti Maipi-Clarke how her party voted in regards to the Principles of the Treaty of Waitangi Bill, she tore what appeared to be a copy of the bill and began the haka.

According toNBC, a haka is a Maori dance that was “traditionally a challenge to opponents.”

This frame grab taken from a New Zealand Parliament TV feed dated November 14, 2024 and released via AFPTV on November 15 shows Maori lawmakers performing the Haka, a traditional ceremonial dance, disrupting parliament in a protest against a bill that aims to reinterpret a centuries-old document seen as New Zealand’s founding treaty with its Indigenous people.

The interpretation of the treaty still influences lawmakers to this day, perCNN, and 20% of New Zealand’s 5.3 million population is made up of Indigenous people.

The Act, a right-wing political party, claims to want “equal rights” for all, and would negatively impact race relations with the bill, theTimesreported, adding that their proposed bill interprets the 1840 treaty differently and would potentially undermine the rights of the Māori.

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PerABC News, those who oppose the proposed bill claim that it would “eliminate dedicated land, government seats, health care initiatives and cultural preservation efforts granted to the Maori people.”

New Zealand’s National Party has made efforts to avoid the bill. Prime Minister Christopher Luxon, who is a member of the National Party,told reporters, “You do not go and negate, with a single stroke of a pen, 184 years of debate and discussion with a bill that I think is very simplistic.”

CNN reported that the bill passed its first reading but is unlikely to become law.

source: people.com