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Aroha's avatar

There is always a measure of disgruntlement when an election is won by default, as I believe happened in the 2023 election here. Many may not agree with me, but I think the coalition was voted in because their voters were sick to the back teeth of the path the Labour government was taking which included giving increased powers to the judiciary, albeit indirectly. I was one of these voters and after a lifetime of voting Labour I didn't and probably never will again (I'm 77). Why? Because when a party is so set on allowing Critical Theory tenets to trump common sense I see no hope for us ordinary buggers to grasp what is being done in our name. Judges are appointed, not elected, and given the takeover of our university law schools by the likes of Khylee Quince, a strong proponent of social justice and Dean of Law at AUT, I fear for the quality of future appointments. In May this year Ms Quince objected to the comments of a KC complaining to the Government Regulations Review Committee regarding mandatory tikanga Māori studies for law students and her response was to make a social media post calling him "an old racist dinosaur" and advising him to "go and die quietly in the corner".

I think an indisputable positive effect of Seymour's bill is that people who have never previously thought about the content of the Treaty are now aware of it and talking and arguing about it. Or at least they are in our central Waikato town.

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Hilary Calvert's avatar

You said it so much better than I did last Thursday in the ODT last Thursday. Try he law schools teach that parliament makes the law. I wonder if they still teach that courts interpret it rather than extend the application of it?

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