National leader Christopher Luxon this week said again that the proposed Māori Health Authority had to go - despite a raft of expert opinion arguing for the opposite.
Tag: News. Showing results 1 - 10 of 1604 in News
Primary tabs
Search results
-
Hilda Halkyard-Harawira, a woman unafraid to fight for what she believes in
Hilda Halkyard-Harawira has been involved in mobilising people power movements for many years, unafraid to call out racism and Treaty breaches whenever and wherever she sees them.
-
Helen Clark on Putin: 'He’s capable of pushing the button'
“He said anyone who wanted to interfere with Russia’s special operation in Ukraine would face consequences they could hardly imagine or foresee. That means only one thing.”
-
Tame Iti told he's a kūpapa, sellout for ducking Wellington protests
Activist Tame Iti has been accused of being a kūpapa because he chose to not get involved in the Wellington protests.
-
'Dawn raids were racist'- Sir Kim Workman quit senior police role to protest
Sir Kim Workman became a police officer in 1958 after developing a passion for social justice. But after years in his career he decided to quit after witnessing racism in the police force.
-
Dame Naida Glavish: The country made 'Kia ora' acceptable
The simple act of saying "Kia ora" on the phone nearly lost Dame Naida Glavish her job as a tolls operator in 1984.
-
'Kōhanga kids are changing Māoridom'- Dame Iritana Tāwhiwhirangi
Dame Iritana Tāwhiwhirangi has helped thousands of tamariki grow up surrounded by their mother tongue of te reo Māori through Te Kōhanga Reo movement since 1982.
-
Māori health has to focus on whānau: Sir Mason Durie
Sir Mason Durie says to address health concerns for Māori, efforts must focus more on whānau than the need for more doctors and nurses.
-
'It was a real treasure trove'- Sir Eddie Durie reveals his favourite Treaty inquiry
Sir Edward Taihakurei Durie has revealed the historical Treaty inquiry that gave him the “greatest satisfaction” during his time heading the Waitangi Tribunal.
-
Sir Toby Curtis: ‘Pākeha schools are hopeless and cannot educate our kids’
Sir Toby Curtis’ devotion to education has taken him from being a primary school teacher to a principal to a vice-chancellor and now a knight.