- Nanaia Mahuta
-
The Honourable
Nanaia Mahuta
MPMinister for Local Government In office
2005 – 2008Prime Minister Helen Clark Preceded by Chris Carter Succeeded by Rodney Hide Member of the New Zealand Parliament
for Te Tai HauāuruIn office
1999–2002Preceded by Tukuroirangi Morgan Succeeded by Tariana Turia Majority 6,233[1] Member of the New Zealand Parliament
for TainuiIn office
2002–2008Preceded by New constituency Succeeded by Constituency abolished Majority 3,430[1] Member of the New Zealand Parliament
for Hauraki-WaikatoIncumbent Assumed office
2008Preceded by New constituency Majority 1,046[2] Personal details Political party Labour Nanaia Cybelle Mahuta[3] (21 August 1970 -) BA, MA in social anthropology,[4] is a New Zealand politician and was a cabinet minister in the Fifth Labour Government of New Zealand. She was Minister of Customs, Minister of Local Government, Minister of Youth Development, Associate Minister for the Environment and Associate Minister of Tourism.[5] She has strong links to the Te Kingitanga (Māori King Movement), being the daughter of Sir Robert Mahuta, who was the adopted son of King Korokī and the elder brother of Māori Queen Te Atairangikaahu.
Contents
Member of Parliament
Parliament of New Zealand Years Term Electorate List Party 1996–1999 45th List 8 Labour 1999–2002 46th Te Tai Hauāuru 10 Labour 2002–2005 47th Tainui 19 Labour 2005–2008 48th Tainui none Labour 2008–present 49th Hauraki-Waikato 10 Labour Mahuta was first elected to Parliament in the 1996 elections, when she became a list MP. In the 1999 elections, she won the Te Tai Hauauru electorate, and in the 2002 elections, she won Tainui. Before the 2008 general election the electorate boundaries were changed and it was renamed Hauraki-Waikato. She held the seat with a majority of 888.[2]
Foreshore and seabed controversy
In 2004, she joined Tariana Turia, another Labour MP, in voting against the first reading of her party's legislation on the controversial foreshore and seabed issue. She did not, however, join Turia when she quit Labour to found the Māori Party. In the bill's second reading, she again voted against her party, but in the third reading, she changed her position and supported it, saying that while it had "serious flaws, ... at the end of the day, it was the right thing to do".
Cabinet minister
In the 2005 general election Mahuta held her electorate seat of Tainui. Subsequently, Mahuta as part of the Labour-Progressive coalition government, was Minister of Customs, Youth Development and Associate Environment and Local Government. Mahuta lost her portfolios when Labour were defeated in the 2008 general election.
In opposition
Following the defeat of the Labour government in the 2008 election, Mahuta was appointed spokesperson for Maori Social Development.[6]
In 2009, her Resource Management (Enhancement of Iwi Management Plans) Amendment Bill, which gives more weight to Māori in resource management decisions, was drawn from the member's ballot.[7] The bill was defeated at its first reading in August.[7]
On 15 June 2010, Opposition Leader Phil Goff appointed Mahuta to be Portfolio Spokesperson for Energy and Associate Portfolio Spokesperson for Law and Order. Energy was a portfolio formerly held by Shane Jones. At the same time, in addition to the portfolio appointments, both Mahuta and Charles Chauvel were moved to the parliamentary front bench.
References
- ^ a b "Elections NZ 2005: Official Count Results — Tainui" (PDF). http://www.parliament.nz/NR/rdonlyres/06ABA64D-B539-4429-8EDF-585FA2B00EBC/190/Tainui1.pdf.
- ^ a b Hauraki-Waikato results 2008.
- ^ "New Zealand Hansard - Members Sworn [Volume:651;Page:2"]. Parliament of New Zealand. http://www.parliament.nz/en-NZ/PB/Debates/Debates/5/c/4/49HansD_20081208_00000010-Members-Sworn.htm.
- ^ http://www.parliament.nz/en-NZ/MPP/MPs/MPs/9/6/1/49MP12061-Mahuta-Nanaia.htm
- ^ "Ministerial List for Announcement on 31 October 2007" (DOC) (Press release). New Zealand Government. 31 October 2007. http://www.beehive.govt.nz/Documents/Files/Ministerial%20List.DOC.
- ^ "Goff announces changes to shadow Cabinet and portfolio allocations". New Zealand Labour Party. 2009-05-05. http://labour.org.nz/news/goff-announces-changes-shadow-cabinet-and-portfolio-allocations. Retrieved 2009-12-03.
- ^ a b "Resource Management (Enhancement of Iwi Management Plans) Amendment Bill". New Zealand Parliament. http://www.parliament.nz/en-NZ/PB/Legislation/Bills/c/e/1/00DBHOH_BILL9592_1-Resource-Management-Enhancement-of-Iwi-Management.htm. Retrieved 2009-12-03.
Parliament of New Zealand Preceded by
Tukuroirangi MorganMember of Parliament for Te Tai Hauāuru
1999–2002Succeeded by
Tariana TuriaNew constituency Member of Parliament for Tainui
2002–2008Constituency abolished Member of Parliament for Hauraki-Waikato
2008Incumbent Political offices Preceded by
Chris CarterMinister of Local Government
2005–2008Succeeded by
Rodney HideCategories:- 1970 births
- Living people
- New Zealand Labour Party MPs
- Members of the Cabinet of New Zealand
- New Zealand women in politics
- New Zealand MPs for Māori electorates
- New Zealand list MPs
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