• Metiria Turei

  • Sep 26 2019
  • Durée: 43 min
  • Podcast

  • Résumé

  • Did Metiria Turei mean to turn the 2017 election on its head? Earlier that year, the former Green Party co-leader made an admission that would upend their entire campaign.

    "Did Metiria Turei mean to turn the 2017 election on its head?" - Morgan Godfery, host of Matangireia

    Watch the video version of the episode here.

    At her party's annual conference earlier that year, the former Green co-leader made an admission that would upend the entire election campaign: as a young mother, she was accepting rent money from flatmates, without disclosing it to Work and Income.

    At that time, Turei was a struggling parent putting herself through law school. Years later, the admission was meant as instructive: benefit levels are too low, and that forces young mothers and beneficiaries to make impossible decisions.

    But her political opponents and many in the media saw an uncomplicated case of "benefit fraud," Journalists dug into her past, searching for records in places like the National Library, and tracking down old friends and family.

    In the end, that scrutiny of her family became intolerable, and six weeks before the election, Turei stood down as Green co-leader.

    It was the end of a 15-year career in Parliament that saw the former activist and lawyer champion issues like child poverty and the management of tūpāpaku (human remains), securing landmark select committee inquiries into both.

    "Skilled up, we can take on power and authority," Turei told Morgan Godfery - host of Matangireia.

    The then-Green MP saw a dramatic demonstration of that just two years into her parliamentary career, when the foreshore and seabed hīkoi made its way through Parliament's front gates.

    "This is fierce as," she thought.

    "Rod Donald had a big, green banner that said 'Honour the Treaty.' I was so stoked he'd done that."

    "We were on side in that debate."

    Turei and her Green Party colleagues cast their vote against the then-Labour-led government's Foreshore and Seabed Act 2004 when it came up for its third and final reading.

    Does it bother Turei that she never had the opportunity to be a part of the government?

    "I do my fair share of yelling at the telly like everybody else does when I think things aren't going fast enough. But that's the whole point is that you make your contribution and move on. The best signifier that your contribution mattered is that the issues you were working on continue to progress."…

    Go to this episode on rnz.co.nz for more details

    Voir plus Voir moins

Ce que les auditeurs disent de Metiria Turei

Moyenne des évaluations de clients

Évaluations – Cliquez sur les onglets pour changer la source des évaluations.