COMMENT:
Tomorrow the blue blazers of the Ratana brass band will be dusted off, the euphoniums and trombones will glitter in the sun, the drums will be ratta-tatt-tatting and the drum major will be swinging the mace, leading a never-ending stream of reverential politicians onto the marae near Whanganui.
They're reverential because, while it may be all about celebrating the birth of the prophet Wiremu Ratana, it's actually about politics and never more so this than this year.
The Māori Party, wiped out at the last election, is poised to make a comeback and while that's a frightening prospect for Labour, it's music to National's ears.
Laying the groundwork for a Māori resurgence is the firebrand Tariana Turia who showed mettle in 2004, standing up to the formidable Helen Clark over the foreshore and seabed legislation. That gave birth to the Māori Party and the time is ripe for resurgence and Turia knows it, and so does the hopeful Simon Bridges who sees it as the coalition lifeline he'll need.