531 PI
Niu FM
PMN News

Takutai Tarsh Kemp.

Photo/Supplied/Te Pāti Māori

Politics

Te Pāti Māori MP Takutai Tarsh Kemp dies

Te Pāti Māori says the MP for Tāmaki Makaurau "devoted every breath to the movement for Māori liberation".

The MP for Tāmaki Makaurau, Takutai Tarsh Kemp, has died at the age of 50.

The Te Pāti Māori MP was at Parliament on Wednesday, before travelling back to Auckland.

She had taken leave from Parliament last year, following a diagnosis of kidney disease.

Kemp recently celebrated her 50th birthday.

She won Tāmaki Makaurau by a slim margin of just four votes over Labour MP Peeni Henare in 2023. A recount later widened the margin.

Previously she was tumuaki of the Manurewa Marae and a director of Hip Hop International.

Takutai Tarsh Kemp, second from right, with Te Pāti Māori members. Photo/Supplied

Te Pāti Māori confirmed Kemp had died in the early hours of Thursday morning.

In a statement, the party said it was "heartbroken", and she "died as she lived: fighting for the cause."

"Takutai Moana devoted every breath to the movement for Māori liberation and worked tirelessly to serve her community of Tāmaki Makaurau."

Takutai Tarsh Kemp, right, with Te Pāti Māori co-leader Debbie Ngarewa-Packer. Photo/Te Pāti Māori

The party said she continued to stand in the House, on marae, in communities while she navigated her health journey, and "she always stood up for our mokopuna."

"As a movement, we are devastated by this news. Takutai was more than a colleague to us, she was our sister, and we loved her dearly."

The party requested privacy and time and space for Kemp's whānau to "gather, mourn, and celebrate their māmā, their daughter, their nan."

"We wish to take this time to honour our tuahine, to honour her parents, her children, her mokopuna and her whānau.

"Further details regarding her tangihanga and opportunities for the public to pay their respects will be shared once confirmed."

The party also shared a mihi. "Mahuta mai rā ko Matariki, ko Pūanga i Te Tahi o te Tau. Maiea Te Waka o Rangi, maiea Taramainuku kia ruiruia ngā mate nui o te wā. Auē te mamae e ngau kino nei i te ngākau e Takutai Moana, kua riro ki te pō uriuri, ki te pō tangotango ki a Mairerangi, ki Te Pūtahi-nui-a-Rehua noho ai. Takoto mai rā i te pūtahitanga o ngā maunga whakahī kia haoa e Te Kupenga nui a Taramainuku hai whetū ririki i te pō."

Prime Minister Christopher Luxon says he's saddened to hear of MP Kemp's passing. Photo/Supplied

MPs will meet on Thursday afternoon to acknowledge Kemp's death and offer tributes. After that, as a mark of respect, Parliament will adjourn for the remainder of the week.

All flags on the Parliamentary Precinct were flying at half-mast and expected to stay that way for several days. Kemp's death will trigger a by-election in Tāmaki Makaurau.

Prime Minister Christopher Luxon said he was saddened to hear of her death.

Luxon said, on behalf of the government, its thoughts are with her whānau, friends, colleagues, and the Tāmaki Makaurau community

"E te māreikura Takutai, haere atu ki Te Rei, ki Te Reinga, ki ō tūpuna ki te pō."

Former prime minister and Labour Party Chris Hipkins posted on social media that it was with "a heavy heart we acknowledge the sudden passing of our colleague and friend".

New Zealand First leader Winston Peters says it "was very sad" to hear of MP Kemp's death. Photo/File

"Our thoughts are with her whanau and our colleagues of Te Pāti Māori at this sad time. Nō reira okioki mai na koe e te tuahine, e te hoa."

New Zealand First leader Winston Peters said it was "very sad news".

"Our thoughts and prayers are with her whanau, family, and friends at this very difficult time," he wrote on X.

Deputy Prime Minister and ACT leader David Seymour said his party's thoughts were with her whanau and Te Pati Māori colleagues.

"With great sadness @actparty MPs acknowledge the passing of our Parliamentary colleague Takutai Tarsh Kemp," he wrote on social media. "She is gone far too soon."

Labour MPs Willie Jackson, Peeni Henare, Carmel Sepuloni and Arena Williams paid tribute to Kemp.

Henare said he had a "really heavy heart and great sadness", while Jackson described it as "shock news" and said Kemp had a "beautiful soul".

"She was a leader in South Auckland," Jackson explained. "She was a leader in her own right before she came into politics… She was getting herself right, she was looking forward to the next election."

Henare said they "knew that her health was struggling, and it just comes as such a shock", his voice cracking as he spoke to reporters gathered at Parliament.

"I had my youth MP here with me over the past couple of days, and yesterday we sat with her for an hour talking about politics and how despite her and I having contested the election, how close we were together and how we worked for the benefit of our community."

Williams said she first met Kemp in 2011, when Kemp was running a dancing group for youth struggling with school, and said South Auckland would be feeling a "heavy loss" with her passing.

Labour MPs (from left) Carmel Sepuloni, Willie Jackson, and Peeni Henare speak at Parliament on the death of Te Pāti Māori MP Takutai Tarsh Kemp. Photo/RNZ/Sam Rillstone

"She was someone who always had an open door for young people."

Sepuloni said there was a "shared grief and sadness" in Parliament, coming not long after the death of South Auckland-based Green MP Efeso Collins.

"It is a loss for us, but it will be even more deeply felt by their whanau and their communities."

Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

This article was first published on RNZ.

Arena Williams (centre) with Carmel Sepuloni, Peenie Henare and Willie Jackson. Photo: Samuel Rillstone / RNZ