Rahui Katene

New Zealand politician


title: "Rahui Katene" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["living-people", "te-pāti-māori-mps", "new-zealand-latter-day-saints", "women-members-of-the-new-zealand-house-of-representatives", "20th-century-new-zealand-lawyers", "new-zealand-mps-for-māori-electorates", "ngāti-koata-people", "ngāti-kuia-people", "ngāti-toa-people", "ngāi-tahu-people", "new-zealand-māori-lawyers", "21st-century-new-zealand-lawyers", "members-of-the-new-zealand-house-of-representatives", "people-from-nelson,-new-zealand", "people-educated-at-waimea-college", "people-educated-at-the-church-college-of-new-zealand", "21st-century-new-zealand-politicians", "21st-century-new-zealand-women-politicians", "new-zealand-māori-women-lawyers", "21st-century-new-zealand-women-lawyers", "1954-births", "20th-century-new-zealand-women-lawyers"] description: "New Zealand politician" topic_path: "law" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rahui_Katene" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::summary New Zealand politician ::

::data[format=table title="Infobox officeholder"]

FieldValue
nameRahui Katene
constituency_MP2Te Tai Tonga
parliament2New Zealand
majority21,049 (45.73%)
predecessor2Mahara Okeroa
successor2Rino Tirikatene
term_start28 November 2008
term_end226 November 2011
birth_date
birth_placeNelson, New Zealand
birth_nameRahui Reid Hippolite
spouseDr Selwyn Katene
partyMāori Party
children5
::

| honorific-prefix = | name = Rahui Katene | honorific-suffix = | image = | imagesize = | order = | term_start = | term_end = | predecessor = | successor = | constituency_MP2 = Te Tai Tonga | parliament2 = New Zealand | majority2 = 1,049 (45.73%) | predecessor2 = Mahara Okeroa | successor2 = Rino Tirikatene | term_start2 = 8 November 2008 | term_end2 = 26 November 2011 | constituency_MP3 = | parliament3 = | majority3 = | predecessor3 = | successor3 = | term_start3 = | term_end3 = | birth_date = | birth_place = Nelson, New Zealand | birth_name = Rahui Reid Hippolite | death_date = | death_place = | spouse = Dr Selwyn Katene | party = Māori Party | relations = | children = 5 | residence = | alma_mater = | occupation = | profession = | signature = | website = | footnotes = Rahui Reid Katene ( Hippolite, born 1954) is a New Zealand politician. She was elected to the 49th New Zealand Parliament at the 2008 general election representing the Māori Party in the seat of Te Tai Tonga, but lost in the 2011 general election to Labour's Rino Tirikatene.

Early life and family

The daughter of activist John Hippolite, Katene is of Ngati Koata, Ngati Kuia, Ngāti Toa and Kāi Tahu descent. She grew up in Nelson and was educated at Waimea College and Church College of New Zealand. A lawyer, she spent six years as managing solicitor at Te Ratonga Ture / Māori Legal Services. Katene is a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

Member of Parliament

|electorate=Te Tai Tonga |party=Māori Party |term=49th|list=7 |start= |end=2011 Prior to the 2008 general election, Katene initially missed out on the Māori Party candidacy for Te Tai Tonga to Monte Ohia. However she became the candidate following Ohia's death.

She defeated incumbent Labour MP Mahara Okeroa with an election night majority of 684.

In 2009 her Te Rā o Matariki Bill/Matariki Day Bill, which would have made Matariki a public holiday, was drawn from the member's ballot. The bill was defeated at its first reading.

In 2010, her member's bill to remove Goods and Services Tax from healthy food was drawn from the member's ballot. The bill gathered support although Labour leader Phil Goff favoured a simpler exemption on just fruit and vegetables. It was defeated at its first reading: National, ACT and United Future voted against the bill while Labour, the Greens, the Māori Party and the Progressive Party supported it.

Since leaving Parliament Katene has remained active in the Māori Party and was briefly in the media spotlight for failing to remove her designation as an MP from social media, a revelation discovered after she appeared in new articles criticising her replacement, Rino Tirikatene who she argued was not listening to the electorate. In early 2013 Katene put her hat in the ring to replace retiring co-leader Tariana Turia who had announced she would step down before the 2014 General election. However, Marama Fox was subsequently chosen as Turia's replacement following the general election.

Katene has also been working for the New Zealand Māori Council as a spokeswomen, supporting its legal challenge to the sale into mixed ownership of Crown-owned assets.

References

References

  1. Neal, Tracy. (26 August 2008). "Maori candidate claims strong support in region". Nelson Mail.
  2. (2 October 2008). "Turia: Wahine Purotu Evening 2008 Maori Women". Scoop Independent News.
  3. The Māori Party. (30 March 2009). "Speech: Katene – Te Hui Amorangi o Te Wai Pounamu". [[Scoop (website).
  4. (2008-07-18). "Rahui Katene to stand for Maori Party in Te Tai Tonga".
  5. [http://2008.electionresults.govt.nz/electorate-69.html Election results 2008] {{webarchive. link. (24 May 2009)
  6. "Te Rā o Matariki Bill/Matariki Day Bill". New Zealand Parliament.
  7. ''New Zealand Parliamentary Debates'' '''656''' 5703.
  8. "Goods and Services Tax (Exemption of Healthy Food) Amendment Bill". New Zealand Parliament.
  9. (18 July 2010). "Interview with Rahui Katene and Phil Goff". [[Q+A]] with [[Paul Holmes (broadcaster).
  10. (9 September 2010). "Bid to remove GST from healthy food fails".
  11. (13 July 2010). "Support for scrapping GST on healthy food". [[One News (New Zealand).
  12. Levy, Danya. (30 May 2012). "Facebook page listed Katene as MP". [[Stuff (website).
  13. (23 January 2013). "Flavell, Katene want Maori Party co-leadership". 3News.
  14. Trevett, Claire. (1 November 2014). "Fox elected as new co-leader". [[New Zealand Herald]].
  15. Bennett, Adam. (1 February 2013). "Crown pressed over redress for Maori". [[New Zealand Herald]].

::callout[type=info title="Wikipedia Source"] This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page. ::

living-peoplete-pāti-māori-mpsnew-zealand-latter-day-saintswomen-members-of-the-new-zealand-house-of-representatives20th-century-new-zealand-lawyersnew-zealand-mps-for-māori-electoratesngāti-koata-peoplengāti-kuia-peoplengāti-toa-peoplengāi-tahu-peoplenew-zealand-māori-lawyers21st-century-new-zealand-lawyersmembers-of-the-new-zealand-house-of-representativespeople-from-nelson,-new-zealandpeople-educated-at-waimea-collegepeople-educated-at-the-church-college-of-new-zealand21st-century-new-zealand-politicians21st-century-new-zealand-women-politiciansnew-zealand-māori-women-lawyers21st-century-new-zealand-women-lawyers1954-births20th-century-new-zealand-women-lawyers