They had twice, once in August and once in March after the law allowing a binding referendum changed, pushed out making a decision on the matter.
“A hāngī needs to get put down,” Clive Tongaaw’ikau, the chair of Araukuku hapū, said. “I feel like I’ve climbed a mountain, and I’m running down.”
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Tongaaw’ikau spoke at the meeting and led haka and waiata throughout the morning.
“I don’t know how to put it into words,” he said, throwing his arms in the air with a grin.
He said the thought of his district being the odd one out in Taranaki history had saddened him.