Manu Alamein Kopu (1943 – 4 December 2011) was a New Zealand politician.
Biography
Early life and career
Kopu was raised in
Ōpōtiki
Ōpōtiki (; from ''Ōpōtiki-Mai-Tawhiti'') is a town in the eastern Bay of Plenty in the North Island of New Zealand. It houses the headquarters of the Ōpōtiki District Council, the mayor of Ōpōtiki and comes under the Bay of Plenty Region ...
, Kopu was the seventh in a family of twenty children. Her family was not wealthy, and Kopu characterised her youth as containing "much hardship". In 1978, her family moved to
Sydney
Sydney is the capital city of the States and territories of Australia, state of New South Wales and the List of cities in Australia by population, most populous city in Australia. Located on Australia's east coast, the metropolis surrounds Syd ...
, Australia.
In Australia, Kopu worked in community programmes aimed at drug addicts and
prostitute
Prostitution is a type of sex work that involves engaging in sexual activity in exchange for payment. The definition of "sexual activity" varies, and is often defined as an activity requiring physical contact (e.g., sexual intercourse, non-pe ...
s at a crisis centre in
Kings Cross, New South Wales
Kings Cross is an Eastern Suburbs (Sydney), inner-eastern locality of Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. It is located approximately 2 kilometres east of the Sydney central business district, in the local government area of the City of Sydney. ...
. She continued this line of work after arriving back in New Zealand in 1986, working with
Betty Wark at the Aroha Society. Kopu also had considerable involvement in
rehabilitation programmes for criminals acting as house parents for long term prison inmates after their release.
Political career
In addition to her rehabilitation work, Kopu was also involved in various
Māori cultural and educational programs. She quickly joined
Mana Motuhake, a political party based around promoting Māori interests and welfare. When Mana Motuhake joined with several other groups to establish the
Alliance
An alliance is a relationship among people, groups, or sovereign state, states that have joined together for mutual benefit or to achieve some common purpose, whether or not an explicit agreement has been worked out among them. Members of an a ...
, Kopu became involved in the new organisation. In the
1993 election, she stood as its candidate in
Eastern Maori, but was unsuccessful. In the
1996 election, the first to be conducted under the new
MMP system, Kopu contested the
Te Tai Rawhiti seat, essentially a reconfigured Eastern Maori. She was also ranked twelfth on the Alliance list. While she did not win Te Tai Rawhiti, the Alliance received enough votes for Kopu to enter parliament as a
list MP. In parliament she was an Alliance spokesperson on Māori affairs, women and youth.
Kopu gradually came under increasing criticism. She had been unemployed for nearly two decades prior to her lucrative election as an MP. She was also seen as having been elected in a 'backdoor' manner; Mana Mohutake leader
Sandra Lee had threatened to resign if the Alliance did not include Kopu in a high place on the party list. This was compounded by her apparent lack of participation – many Alliance colleagues complained that she was rarely seen in Parliament, and believed that she was not doing sufficient work. She claimed her disengagement was a perception that she was being left out of Alliance decision making. Other causes of criticism stemmed from internal tensions between different factions of Mana Motuhake. Kopu resented the criticism, and voiced the possibility of leaving the Alliance. Party leader
Jim Anderton
James Patrick Anderton (born Byrne; 21 January 1938 – 7 January 2018) was a New Zealand politician who led a succession of Left-wing politics, left-wing parties after leaving the New Zealand Labour Party, Labour Party in 1989.
Anderton's pol ...
and party president
Matt McCarten sought a meeting to address Kopu's concerns, wishing her to remain in the party, but just before the scheduled meeting with them Kopu gave an interview on ''Māori News'' stating she was leaving the Alliance to form her own party.
In July 1997, Kopu finally resigned from the Alliance. In a televised statement, she refused to speak English, but only spoke Maori. She blamed racist discrimination for her predicament, going as far as stating that "
apartheid
Apartheid ( , especially South African English: , ; , ) was a system of institutionalised racial segregation that existed in South Africa and South West Africa (now Namibia) from 1948 to the early 1990s. It was characterised by an ...
is alive and well in New Zealand".
When parliamentary services entered her electorate office it was missing furniture earlier allocated to her. The police carried out an investigation and recovered the missing material. No charges were laid against Kopu.
The issue was also of particular relevance since had been elected to parliament by virtue of her position on the Alliance list, not through any votes she had received personally. As such, many believed that Kopu had no right to remain in parliament. Moreover, Kopu (like all other Alliance MPs) had previously signed a pledge affirming that if she ever left the party, she would resign from parliament. Kopu had, in fact, reaffirmed this pledge only a few days before she quit. The leader of the Alliance, Anderton, said that Kopu's actions "breach
devery standard of morality and ethics that are known".
Kopu defended her decision by saying that she was only doing what was best for Māori. Upon leaving the Alliance, she also received strong support from several other Māori MPs, notably
Tau Henare
Raymond Tau Henare (born 29 September 1960) is a former New Zealand Māori people, Māori parliamentarian. In representing three different political parties in parliament—New Zealand First, Mauri Pacific and the New Zealand National Party, Na ...
of the
New Zealand First party. Henare, who had often criticised the Alliance's (and Mana Motuhake's) approach to Māori affairs, said that Kopu was welcome to join New Zealand First, although this was later rejected by other members of the party. Kopu quickly aligned herself with the governing coalition.
A hearing of parliament's privileges committee found that Kopu had not resigned from parliament, and that her pledge to the Alliance did not constitute a constructive resignation. The dispute ultimately led to the introduction of the
Electoral Integrity Act (2001), which – for four years – prevented what became known as
waka jumping.
Mana Wahine
After spending some time as an independent, Kopu decided to establish her own political party,
Mana Wahine Te Ira Tangata. When she launched the party in October 1997, Kopu claimed to have 6,000 members.
[''The Press'', Christchurch 23 October 1997] The party was ostensibly based on promoting the welfare of Māori women. Many of Kopu's critics, however, claimed that the party was established primarily to ensure Kopu received more generous parliamentary funding. As a party leader rather than an independent, Kopu was eligible for an additional $80,000 in funding. Mana Wahine became significant when, in 1999, the governing
National Party was with a precarious majority when its coalition with New Zealand First collapsed. National needed as much support as it could find, and managed to obtain Kopu's backing along with that of several former New Zealand First MPs.
In the
1999 election, Kopu stood as her party's candidate in the
Waiariki electorate. Eleven other Mana Wahine candidates also stood. The party had also intended to submit a party list, but Kopu failed to submit it before the deadline – stating herself that she missed the deadline by mere minutes. This eliminated the possibility of Kopu remaining in parliament as a list MP – she would need to win her electorate race in order to remain in parliament. In the election, however, Kopu won only 1.7% of the vote in Waiariki, placing sixth. Moreover, Mana Wahine candidates only won 1,082 votes nationwide, nowhere near enough for Kopu to be returned as a list MP in any case. Following this loss, she left politics permanently, and the party was dissolved in 2001.
Personal life
Kopu was married with six children and (as of 1996) thirteen grandchildren. Her husband had been long term unemployed since 1990.
Death
Kopu died in
Rotorua
Rotorua () is a city in the Bay of Plenty region of New Zealand's North Island. It is sited on the southern shores of Lake Rotorua, from which it takes its name. It is the seat of the Rotorua Lakes District, a territorial authorities of New Zea ...
on 4 December 2011.
Notes
References
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Kopu, Alamein
1943 births
2011 deaths
New Zealand social workers
Alliance (New Zealand political party) MPs
Leaders of political parties in New Zealand
People from Ōpōtiki
Women members of the New Zealand House of Representatives
Māori MPs
New Zealand list MPs
Mana Motuhake politicians
Māori politicians
Members of the New Zealand House of Representatives
Unsuccessful candidates in the 1993 New Zealand general election