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In a letter addressed to the PM regarding ACT's Treaty Principles Bill, NZ King’s Counsels succeeded in one respect. They showed they don't know constitutional law. When it comes to such matters, the job of the Courts is strictly to interpret constitutions, not re-write them. Yet that is what NZ's KCs have advocated. Although the word "principles" never appeared in the Treaty, nor was defined by Parliament, the Counsels assert the Courts constitute the only authority in NZ with powers to make them up. Even though the Treaty signatories on both sides never referred to such matters, judges over the past years, most of them illiterate in the sense of being unable to speak, read or write Te Reo Māori, so with little sense of the Māori version, have nonetheless been self-declared by their peers as validly inventing & writing a set of Principles. They claim these now form a significant chunk of our Constitution.


Extraordinarily, the Kings Counsels assert that NZ governments, like the one Seymour co-leads, lack authority to "rewrite" any Treaty Principles, since, they argue, that constitutes rewriting the Treaty. But those same Counsels are perfectly content with the Courts having those same powers. They argue our Courts, entirely independently of the Treaty signatories, have already "developed" their own set of Principles, which now "represent settled law". That assertion is far more insulting to Māori than to non-Māori. At least the Treaty was a jointly signed document - but the Principles were written down over a century later by a group of Anglophile NZ judges, with British educated legal minds. Take one of them, Lord Robin Cooke. His eulogy reads, "Lord Cooke was entirely at home at Westminster in the House of Lords, in Cambridge or Oxford, at Inner Temple and in the members' pavilion at Lords .. he was a monarchist, counting it a privilege to be one of Her Majesty's judges".


Are these my views? Not really. I'd argue they were much closer to those of one of ACT Leader David Seymour' most vociferous critics, Treaty scholar, Dame Anne Salmond. She declares, "What do the relationships forged in 1840 mean for contemporary constitutional arrangements in NZ? That’s the puzzle at the heart of Te Tiriti". However, it appears that for New Zealand's Kings Counsels there is no such puzzle. They have already "settled" the matter in law. How ironic for a group of pompous puffed-up lawyers bearing the title "King" to lecture Parliament and the people, telling us how they've got it all sorted; how the courts have already written our Constitution all by their little selves.


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America is super excited about the new Department of Government Efficiency that is being set up, headed by Elon Musk and Vivak Ramaswamy. We all know Musk - his achievement was launching a space program at about 1% the cost of NASA's space program. What had gone wrong at NASA? It had turned into a gigantic bureaucracy. As for Ramaswamy, he worked as an investment partner at a hedge fund before founding Roivant Sciences and Investment firm, Strive Asset Management. His net worth is $960 million. These guys clearly know how to work efficiently and minimize overheads. They know the cost of red-tape.


Meanwhile in NZ, we always thought that ACT was the party to do the same kind of stuff - to cut red-tape and make government work efficiently - to hand power back to the people. So let's take a look at ACT Leader David Seymour's new Ministry of Regulation. Its "senior leadership team" is made up of Wellington insiders - public administrators who've spent their careers regulating. It starts with Gráinne Moss, the new Chief Executive of Regulation. Previously she was System Lead Pay Equity at the Public Service Commission, worked at Ministry for Children, and at the UK's National Health Service, the most regulated outfit on the planet. It gets worse. Her Deputy, Andrew Royle, worked for "the Ministry for the Environment, Crown Law, State Services Commission & Department of Internal Affairs". He's a lawyer. Then there's the new Ministry's Head of Organizational Enablement (what's that?) called Paula Knaap. She's from the Environmental Protection Authority and has "led large regulatory & social policy functions at WorkSafe NZ, Ministry of Education & IRD". Another lawyer. To top off the Senior Leadership Team is Paul Delahunty, from the Social Investment Agency and Tertiary Education Commission, and Department of Conservation.


This group sounds like the first types of folks who Musk and Ramaswamy will be firing. The four members of ACT's Ministry of Regulation have between themselves created more of a mountain of red-tape than 5 million privately employed and small business-owning Kiwis combined. We wont be advising our economics students to go work there.


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