Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern will be formally welcomed to Waitangi today but there is some discontent about the decision to remove the powhiri from Te Tii Marae.

Ardern's powhiri will be held at what is known as the 'upper marae' on the Treaty grounds rather than at Te Tii Marae.

While there are still powhiri at Te Tii Marae, it will not play host to the politicians for the first time in recent history.

The decision to move it to the upper grounds was made after protests and other incidents at Te Tii Marae which resulted in a succession of former Prime Ministers - Helen Clark, Sir John Key and Bill English - deciding to avoid it.

Advertisement

Te Tii elder Kingi Taurua said he would be at the powhiri for Ardern but was unhappy about the decision to move it, saying it would deprive Ngapuhi of the chance to raise issues of concern with the Government of the day.

"In Waitangi [at Te Tii] they challenge the government about their policies. Here [at the upper marae], they don't. They massage the Government's back and so it's quite different."

One example was the Trans-Pacific Partnership which Taurua has previously spoken against and the Labour Government is about to sign.

Taurua said he had been asked to speak in the powhiri for Ardern but Pita Paraone, the former chairman of the Waitangi National Trust, said no invitation to speak had been issued.

Kelvin Davis accepts the wero after Labour Party members were welcomed on to Karetu Marae on Saturday.

"That's news to me. If he's going to use it as a platform - the same he has used in previous years to incite those of our younger people to protest in the way they have done in recent years then I'm not sure that's a good thing."

He said there was nothing wrong with raising specific political issues but the powhiri was not the place to do it.

This part of the whole weekend it about welcoming people to Waitangi. It's not about presenting our visitors with what are really political issues."

He acknowledged the people of Te Tii were unhappy with the decision. "But I don't think they should be surprised given the reaction from the people of the North over recent years. It was timely the decision was made."

Governor General Patsy Reddy was welcomed to the upper marae yesterday without incident and said it was a "new dawn."

However, she was diplomatic about Te Tii saying the powhiri for her there the year before had also been 'wonderful.'

Ardern and partner Clarke Gayford attended NZ First MP Shane Jones' Waitangi party last night.

Ardern was called to speak, and said he hadn't come to speak: "I just came for the kai."

She thanked Jones for his hospitality and congratulated him on his wedding and then ended: "As Aupito William Sio always says, when you smell the pork, keep it short."

In his welcome to her, Jones said there was a big eye tuna "and I can assure you Prime Minister it doesn't come from the Kermadecs."

After today's powhiri Ardern will visit a local school for a picnic before attending the Navy's Bear the Retreat.

Tomorrow she will attend the dawn ceremony before hosting a barbecue for the public - her version of Key's more formal Waitangi breakfast for iwi leaders and local dignitaries.