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The table below lists ministers who have held responsibility for Māori issues. Initially, the title used was Minister of Native Affairs, but the title was changed to Minister of Maori Affairs on 17 December 1947 and then to Minister of Māori Affairs with the insertion of the macron in modern orthography under the Māori Language Commission ...
Minister of Aviation (Canada) Minister of Communications (Canada) Minister of Consumer and Corporate Affairs; Minister of Democratic Institutions; Minister of Digital Government; Minister of Forestry (Canada) Minister of Housing, Infrastructure and Communities; Minister of Human Resources and Social Development; Minister of Public Works (Canada)
In response to the Māori loan affair, the Department of Māori Affairs was dissolved in 1989 and replaced by two new agencies: the Ministry of Māori Affairs (Manatū Māori) and the Iwi Transition Agency (Te Tira Ahu Iwi). The Ministry of Māori Affairs was tasked with advising the government on policies of interest to Māori and monitoring ...
He was the Minister of Lands and Minister of Māori Affairs in the Third Labour Government of New Zealand between 1972 and 1975. He was the architect of both the Māori Affairs Amendment Act of 1974, which gave Māori greater control over their land, and the 1975 creation of the Waitangi Tribunal. [3] In 1979 he resigned from the Labour Party. [3]
During his time as Secretary of Māori Affairs, Puketapu chaired the management committee of Te Maori, the international exhibition of Māori objects as art. [4] In the United States, it was exhibited in 1984 in the Metropolitan Museum of Art , the Saint Louis Art Museum and the M.H. de Young Memorial Museum in 1985 and in the Field Museum of ...
The current Māori Trustee is Dr Charlotte Severne, who was appointed in September 2018 by the Minister for Māori Development, Nanaia Mahuta, [7] and reappointed by Willie Jackson in 2021. [8] Previous Māori Trustees include Jamie Tuuta from 2011 to 2018, [9] and John Paki, [10] both of whom were appointed by the Minister of Māori Affairs ...
Minister of Justice, Minister of Veterans Affairs, Minister of National Defence, Minister of Intergovernmental Affairs; only female prime minister of Canada. Defeated and lost her seat in 1993 election. 20: Jean Chrétien (b. 1934) 4 November 1993 12 December 2003 1993 election (35th Parl.)
Outside Canada, one Indigenous Canadian has been elected in Australia: Walt Secord served as a Labor member of the New South Wales Legislative Council from 2011 until his retirement in 2023. Secord is of Mohawk and Ojibwe descent. [1] [2] [3]