Labour leader Phil Goff is accusing the Government of reopening racial wounds.
In a speech about nationhood at a Grey Power-hosted public meeting in Palmerston North today, Mr Goff said the country could celebrate its rich heritage or re-open wounds and divisions.
"We can choose our future based on principle and with the interests of all New Zealanders," he said.
"Or we can have a country where one New Zealander is turned against another, Maori against Pakeha, in a way that Labour strongly rejects."
Mr Goff criticised Prime Minister John Key's handling of Maori MP Hone Harawira's actions when he sent an abusive email referring to white people as "motherf***ers" while defending an unauthorised trip to Paris while on parliamentary business last month.
"The true offence was that by abusing one racial group in New Zealand, he thought he could justify his side-trip off to Paris when his expenses were being paid by the taxpayer to fulfil his duties at the European Parliament," Mr Goff said.
"We cannot reconcile New Zealanders and make progress together in an environment where hatefulness can flourish, wherever it comes from."
He accused Mr Key of cynically holding back on criticising Mr Harawira so he could secure a political deal with the Maori Party over the Emissions Trading Scheme (ETS), passed yesterday.
The Maori Party agreed to back the legislation in return for iwi, who considered the ETS undermined their treaty settlements, getting special rights to plant 35,000 hectares of Crown land and claim carbon credits worth an estimated $25 million to $50 million.
"They re-opened treaty settlements that were made full and final in the nineties," Mr Goff said.
The deal would not benefit all Maori and would burden New Zealanders, he said, and denied Labour's opposition was an example of "playing the race card".
However, he said by allowing some iwi to top up their settlements, as the Maori Party deal permitted, then grievances would not heal.
"If you can never settle treaty grievances, there can never be healing, and you keep alive a grievance from one age into another."
On the foreshore and seabed legislation, Mr Goff said reopening the debate was again cynical and was more about creating a perception of change than doing anything.
"It's hard to see why the country should be put through all the grief just to put a new brand on law that's working... Access to the beaches is a birthright for New Zealanders, Maori and Pakeha alike and must be preserved."
Repealing the legislation would create uncertainty and create "opportunity for disputes to fester unresolved".
He posed the question of what kind of nation New Zealanders wanted.
"A respectful, forward looking country or one stuck in shabby, short-term deals that divide New Zealanders and set one against another."
He said New Zealand was lacking the leadership to bring all people together.
- NZPA
Goff accuses Govt of reopening racial wounds
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