Governor General Sir Jerry Mateparae has been criticised by a Ngapuhi elder after making a rare foray into politics at Waitangi and urging Ngapuhi to join together to settle.
Sir Jerry was welcomed onto Te Tii Marae at Waitangi this morning in an incident-free powhiri.
Speaking on the marae, Sir Jerry raised the issue of Ngapuhi's settlement, which has been stalled as some hapu challenge the negotiating mandate given to the Tuhoronuku group.
Sir Jerry, who is Ngati Tuwharetoa and Ngati Kahungunu, said that as Governor General he sometimes had conflicts of interest in signing off on Government legislation.
"But my pen didn't hesitate when I signed the settlements for my iwi in Hawkes Bay. My pen will not hesitate when the Government brings to me, as is likely, the Ngapuhi agreement. I just ask that all of you are in there because I've seen the benefits from settlements."
That was a reference to the bitter standoff between the Tuhoronuku and Kotahitanga groups over the mandate. Several hapu, led by Ngati Hine, have objected to the negotiations and the mandate given and are waiting on an urgent inquiry by the Waitangi Tribunal.
Sir Jerry said other settlements showed the progress that could be made. "These are all examples of the hope that we can share."
Ngapuhi elder Kingi Taurua said he was surprised by Sir Jerry's comments.
"I'm very surprised he spoke about it. He shouldn't be talking about that. This is between us and the Government. It's wrong for him to make that statement. The Governor General doesn't have any right to talk about it."
Earlier on the marae, Mr Taurua also raised the Government's response to a Waitangi Tribunal finding that Maori chiefs had not ceded sovereignty when signing the Treaty.
He also objected to Sir Jerry's plans to attend a ceremony at Mangungu Mission in the Hokianga to mark the 175th signing of the Treaty. Mangungu Mission was the site of the largest signing of the Treaty on February 12 1840. Sir Jerry is the first Queen's representative to visit since that signing.
Mr Taurua said Waitangi was where the Treaty was negotiated and first signed and where it should be commemorated.
Sir Jerry responded by saying he would also visit Waitangi first but intended to visit the sites of many signings this year.
Sir Jerry ended his speech with a rather risque joke - saying he recalled Winston Churchill's advice that "a speech should be like a woman's skirt - long enough to cover the subject but short enough to keep interest."
By Claire Trevett of the New Zealand Herald