“It’s not about Ties, it’s about Cultural Identity, Mate.” By James Reed

Even though I am a critic of multiculturalism, on this one I agree with the pollie who did not wear a tie. Why, if I was in parliament, I would not want to even wear pants, already entering senility, thus beating Donny Dunstan who famously wore pink hot pants to parliament, because he probably thought that he was hot. He was not.

www.reuters.com/article/us-newzealand-politics-necktie/new-zealand-maori-leader-ejected-from-parliament-for-refusing-to-wear-colonial-noose-idUSKBN2A9329  

“A New Zealand Maori leader who was ejected from parliament this week for refusing to wear a necktie in the chamber said forcing him to a Western dress code was a breach of his rights and an attempt to suppress indigenous culture.

Speaker Trevor Mallard twice prevented Rawiri Waititi from asking questions in the debating chamber on Tuesday, insisting that MPs could only ask a question if they were wearing a tie.

Waititi, 40, who became an MP for the first time in the election last October, was wearing a taonga, a Maori greenstone pendant instead.

When Waititi continued with his question after being stopped a second time, Mallard ordered him to leave.

“It’s not about ties, it’s about cultural identity, mate,” Waititi said as he exited the chamber.

Speaker Mallard said that while ties were outdated in his view, an overwhelming majority of members asked that the rule be retained in consultations on the issue in the last few months.

The incident kicked off a debate about colonialism in New Zealand, and sparked outrage from around the world with #no2tie soon trending on Twitter.

Speaking to Reuters on Wednesday, Waititi said he was not surprised by the treatment of the speaker as Maori people had been facing this type of treatment for hundreds of years.

“Maori have not been treated equal in its own country and indigenous people all over the world have been subjected to discrimination due to racist systems that keep our peoples in second place,” he said.

“For us to stand up against subjugation, to stand up against assimilation, to stand up against those who try and make us look, feel, make us think like they want us to think ... this was standing up against that.”

Waititi wore the same attire to parliament on Wednesday and this time he was permitted to speak.

“The noose has been taken off our necks, and we are now able to sing our songs,” Waititi said in the interview.

The New Zealand parliament is the most inclusive ever elected in the country. Nearly half of the 120 seats in parliament are held by women.”

Surely not enough women. And, do they have to wear ties?

 

 

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Thursday, 25 April 2024

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