Personalities always loom large over Maori politics, but the latest internal struggles played out at Ratana over the past few days reflect more than just personal political ambitions. The tensions reflect, according to Morgan Godfery, 'deep dysfunction within the parliamentary and party wings' compounded by an 'anaemic caucus and a debilitated membership' - see his blogpost Trouble in the Maori Party: Act I. Pita Sharples' isolation from Tariana Turia and Te Ururoa Flavell is a growing problem says Godfery, not helped by Flavell's drive - assisted by President Pem Bird - to become leader. He warns 'Te Ururoa's reckless ambition already led to the creation of the Mana Party, he must be careful not to let it lead to a death warrant for the Maori Party' - see: Quick comments on a Mana Maori Party. Ex-Te Tai Tonga MP Rahui Katene has joined in with a bid for both co-leader and Turia's Te Tai Hauauru electorate - see TV3's Flavell, Katene want Maori Party co-leadership.
While Maori politics is often played out more publicly than the pakeha version, the Maori Party's political management has for a long time been little short of disastrous, particularly since Pem Bird took over the president's role. To have a leadership challenge spill out at the annual Ratana gathering, surrounded by the assembled press gallery and political foes, is simply incompetent.
Mana leader Hone Harawira may have actually forced it all out in the open by claiming that Maori Party members in Te Tai Tokerau want him to lead a unified movement. That could be dismissed easily (and quickly was by Turia and Flavell) but Sharples' response that the two parties should be talking about a merger and that 'it's a bit silly to have two Maori-kind of parties' - see Newswire's Harawira 'dictatorship' unwelcome - Turia would have raised the paranoia levels up several notches.
Claire Trevett writes that such a merger is very unlikely given the antipathy, and that Harawira would just add to their problems rather than solving them - see: Harawira's offer doesn't deserve a look in. She says that what the Maori Party needs most is stability, which is undoubtedly true right now, but ignores the basic political pressures causing the ructions. It is always much easier for parties to appear unified and focused when the polls are good and careers aren't in immediate jeopardy. Even if the Maori Party can sort out an orderly leadership transition - and there is little evidence of that to date - the reality is they face a huge struggle to hold on to their three current seats in 2014, irrespective of who is wearing what badges.
It is all a far cry from 2004 when, as Chris Trotter writes, the dream was that the Maori Party would harness the growing voting power of Maori and leverage it against National and Labour - see: Maori Party's founding tenets starting to unravel. Ignoring the material interests of the majority of working class Maori has been fatal to that dream, especially as 'it was the Maori Party's misfortune to enter into a confidence-and-supply agreement with the National Party just as a global financial crisis was hurling tens of thousands of young Maori into joblessness and underemployment'.