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Māori protestABC News
•80% Informative
Government ramps up initiatives to remove recognition of Indigenous people and language from public policy and law.
Prime Minister Christopher Luxon of the center-right National party ordered public agencies to stop affirmative action policies for Mori people.
His remarks reflect exploding popularity of Mori culture and language which has reversed course from brink of extinction decades ago to become part of everyday life in New Zealand .
Analysts say the move imperil New Zealand's standing on Indigenous matters.
Mori lawmakers hold 33 of Parliament ’s 123 seats, six of them representing a Mori political party.
Seymour has secured a pledge that parliament will consider his proposed law redefining the Treaty of Waitangi's principles.
Luxon has promised the bill will not succeed, but it will be open for public submissions.
Detractors warn this threatens months of racially charged debate about matter that many New Zealanders consider long settled.
VR Score
85
Informative language
85
Neutral language
52
Article tone
formal
Language
English
Language complexity
66
Offensive language
not offensive
Hate speech
not hateful
Attention-grabbing headline
not detected
Known propaganda techniques
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Time-value
short-lived
External references
5
Source diversity
1
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