ACT: The Right Partner for the John Key Government
AN ADDRESS BY DON BRASH, LEADER
ACT 2011 CAMPAIGN LAUNCH
13 NOVEMBER 2011
Ladies and gentlemen,
New Zealand needs ACT!
New Zealand’s a wonderful country.
We live in a country which is bigger than Britain, with more natural resources per person than almost any other country on Earth.
A country which has more fresh water per person than almost any other country on the planet.
A country which gave women the vote before any other country, and has one of the oldest democracies in the world.
A country where we can say with certainty that, no matter how vigorously we disagree with each other about politics, nobody will get shot, or beaten to death, in political turmoil.
A country which has produced Ed Hillary, and Kiri Te Kanawa, and Kate Sheppard, and Katherine Mansfield, and Jean Batten, and Apirana Ngata, and Bill Buckley, and Angus Tait, and Bill Gallagher, and Ernest Rutherford – a man ranked by some as close to Newton and Einstein in terms of his contribution to our understanding of physics.
It is a wonderful country.
But ladies and gentlemen, this country is at risk. Far too many people are finding it hard to make ends meet. Far too many young people can’t get a job. Far too many people fill our jails. Far too many children are poorly fed and poorly housed. Far too many families break down in acrimony and violence. Far too many young people come out of school unable to read and write. Far too many working age adults languish on a hand-out. Far too many towns and cities spew untreated waste into our once-clean streams and rivers.
And to a large extent these are the social costs of the under-performance of our economy. Once, we were one of the richest countries in the world. Our productivity was up with the best.
But then we were hit by the loss of our best export market, and by the disastrous policy response to that. By 1984, New Zealand was on the verge of bankruptcy. We were rescued by Sir Roger Douglas, the Minister of Finance who went on to found the ACT Party, and for more than 10 years productivity started growing strongly again.
But when Winston Peters became the Treasurer in 1996, and even worse when Helen Clark became Prime Minister in 1999, the momentum ended.
She introduced the envy tax for those on higher incomes; she reversed many of the labour market reforms; she introduced legislation giving local authorities the power to do whatever they wished; and she massively increased government spending towards the end of her reign – an increase which set up the years of deficit since 2009.
Today, the Government is borrowing hand over fist; $20 billion in the last year, hundreds of millions of dollars every week, the equivalent of hundreds of dollars a week for every household.
Productivity growth has fallen away – to an estimated 1% annually according to the Reserve Bank.
Despite the best export prices in a generation and weak import demand, the balance of payments is still in deficit – with that deficit projected to increase over the next few years. And as a result our debt to the rest of the world gets bigger, year by year – not yet at Greek or Spanish levels, but damned uncomfortable just the same.
Two credit rating agencies have downgraded us, and as a former Governor of the Reserve Bank I know that that’s an ominous sign.
The IMF projects growth in per capita income over the decade to 2016 to be half the growth they project for Australia over the same period. In fact, 148 countries are expected to grow faster than we will over that period. We would have been in a state of national mourning if even one other country had beaten us at rugby – we seem relaxed at being 149th in the economic growth stakes!
The gap between incomes here and incomes across the Tasman continues to grow. When National came to power, the gap was 35%; now it’s closer to 40%. As a result, New Zealanders leave in ever-increasing numbers; nearly 300,000 over the last decade.
Just last week, the Herald on Sunday wrote of the Kiwi families living in Australia but longing to come home. Couples like Adrian and Jules Paalvast, with three New Zealand-born sons – longing to return to New Zealand, but feeling unable to do so because Adrian makes three times the salary in Australia that he could make in New Zealand, thus enabling Jules to stay home with her four children.
A survey of 4,000 13-year-olds recently found that an astonishing 27% of them wanted to leave New Zealand permanently when they were old enough to do so.
Dealing with this challenge should be the dominant theme in the election campaign – but it’s not. The serious danger is that we could reach a tipping point, the point at which so many New Zealanders have left that it becomes a cumulative process, with each new departure easier to justify than the last one. Some suggest we may already have reached that point.
At this critical time in our country’s life, voters face a stark choice: do they want a centre-left government headed by Phil Goff or do they want a centre-right government headed by John Key? There are no other options available.
We in the ACT Party are in no doubt at all about which of these two men offers the better prospect for our great country, and we have already declared publicly that we will give Confidence and Supply to a John Key-led Government.
The Labour Party is advocating policies which nobody who cares for our long-term future could support – massively more borrowing than even National proposes; employment legislation which would see a return to the industrial mayhem which prevailed before 1991; a $15 minimum wage which would lead quite directly to more unemployment; an end to the 90-day trial period in employment contracts; a capital gains tax; a big increase in the compliance costs imposed on small businesses because of the exemption of fruit and vegetables from GST; a huge increase in the costs of the farming sector as a result of bringing biological emissions into the ETS in 2013; and an instruction to the Reserve Bank to stop worrying about inflation and start focusing on the exchange rate. This is crazy stuff.
As an aside, I understand as well as anybody the problem which big swings in the exchange rate cause for exporters. I spent almost 14 years of my life trying to reduce those big swings. Alas, there are no easy ways to eliminate them, not at least if keeping inflation under control is also an objective. The Labour Party pretended they knew what to do about this issue in 1999, when they were campaigning to win the election in that year, and promised to have the whole Reserve Bank framework put under a microscope. When they won the election, they duly appointed a monetary policy expert from Sweden to do exactly that, and after months of study, the expert declared the New Zealand monetary policy framework world’s best practice.
It may sound good to exporters for Labour to say that they will smooth out those exchange rate fluctuations and keep inflation under control: believe me, no central bank has yet discovered how to do that.
So there’s not the slightest chance that ACT could support Labour after the election.
But like many others, we want a John Key-led Government to deal more decisively with the challenges which our country faces than has been the case over the last three years.
The Government has introduced National Standards in the school system, and some of our schools are world class. But far too many young people are coming out of 10 or 12 years of school barely literate. Parents who scrimp and save to send their children to independent schools are forced to pay twice for the privilege, once through taxation and a second time through school fees. The school system remains highly centralised – with a centralised curriculum, and a centralised and bureaucratic remuneration system.
There has been a pleasing reduction in violent crime in the last three years, and the ACT Party can take some of the credit for that – we supported National in increasing police numbers, especially in South Auckland, and we were responsible for getting the Three Strikes legislation passed, so that repeat violent and sexual offenders spend longer in jail.
But there is still far too much senseless violence, and too often the police prosecute the victim of that crime, as when Virender Singh was prosecuted a year or so ago when he tried to defend himself with a hockey stick while being attacked by five drunken youths.
Right now, the world economy is looking more ominous than at any time in my life-time. I spent a few days visiting London and Washington late last month to get a first-hand picture of just how bad things might get. I came home deeply worried – the Eurozone is in serious trouble because of irresponsible government spending in the countries of southern Europe; the United Kingdom and the United States are struggling under massive government deficits; and Japan seems unable to get to grips with its own massive government debt. The scope for the world economy to endure a prolonged and deep recession is all too evident.
In this threatening global environment, we believe the Government needs to urgently focus its spending on those who most need it, to flatten and reduce taxes in order to encourage investment, and to radically reduce the bureaucracy which makes life so miserable for homeowners, farmers, and manufacturers – indeed, for anybody wanting to do something!
Realistically, ACT is the only party which can help National do what John Key and the rest of the Cabinet know needs to be done. And Friday’s “cup of tea” shows clearly that John Key knows that.
Over the last three years, ACT has ensured stable centre-right government – indeed, we enabled John Key to announce that he was in a position to form a government on the night of the last election, because we had pledged support to National in advance, as we have done again.
Again and again, we supported National Party-initiated legislation when without our support legislation would have failed.
We gave voice to widespread public concern about the Anti-Smacking law, the Marine and Coastal Area Act, and the Emissions Trading Scheme, though ultimately in vain.
We can claim much of the credit for the retention of the right to silence in criminal cases.
And as I’ve mentioned, as a result of our initiative, the Three Strikes legislation was passed. As a result of our initiative, students are no longer obliged to join a union. As a result of our initiative, the Productivity Commission was set up. As a result of our initiative, the 2025 Taskforce was set up, and the National Party committed to promoting policies which would close the income gap with Australia by 2025. (National doesn’t talk about closing that gap much anymore, because they know they don’t have a plan to close it. ACT does!)
So we’ve shown we can work with National, and can deliver positive benefits for New Zealand.
But much remains to be done.
In the last few weeks, National has gone some way towards policies which we strongly support by proposing quite far-reaching welfare reform, some useful changes in employment law, and some steps in the right direction in enabling employers to take on teenagers at less than the adult minimum wage. They’ve even made some tentative suggestions for reforming the Resource Management Act. We support all these moves – as far as they go.
But let me set out what we would like to achieve in the next Parliament.
There are nine policy areas we’ll be looking to work with National on to improve the lives of all New Zealanders, and perhaps especially those New Zealanders whom the major parties seem to have forgotten – those who struggle to keep small and entrepreneurial businesses alive, the farmers and those who provide services in rural communities, the self-employed taxi drivers and dairy owners (for whom earning even $13 an hour for the hours worked seems a distant dream), those struggling to cope with the burden of bureaucratic officials and senseless red-tape.
Pass Spending Cap (People’s Veto) Bill and Regulatory Standards Bill
1) First, we want to ensure that the two Bills introduced by Rodney Hide in the last Parliament are passed into law – namely the Spending Cap (People’s Veto) Bill and the Regulatory Standards Bill.
The Spending Cap Bill would not require any reduction in government spending – indeed, it would explicitly allow government spending to increase as our population grows and as prices rise, and it would allow for a complete exemption from the cap to deal with a national emergency, such as the Christchurch earthquakes – but it would prevent future governments engaging in the kind of grossly irresponsible electoral bribes which the Clark Government undertook in the last three years of that Government’s life. For this reason, we believe its passage is well overdue.
Similarly, the Regulatory Standards Bill – opposed by most government departments and supported by most people in the private sector – would raise the bar on new legislation and regulation to the considerable benefit of everybody.
Only a party vote for ACT will get these two fundamentally important pieces of legislation passed into law!
Reduce government spending relative to the size of the economy to enable radical tax reduction, and a lower exchange rate
2) Second, we will be pushing for a faster reduction in government spending – relative to the size of the economy – than that currently envisaged. At the moment, government spending is a larger share of the total economy than in any year of the last Labour Government. And yet there are a number of spending programmes which National criticised strongly when in Opposition but which remain untouched – programmes which have little or no merit in terms of any concept of social justice.
Getting spending under control more quickly would have three important benefits.
It would hasten the day when we’re no longer borrowing from our children to make life more enjoyable for ourselves.
It would enable tax rates to be reduced and flattened. We’re especially keen to get the company tax rate reduced – that’s vitally important if we’re to see a strong increase in investment in New Zealand. Yes, our company tax rate was reduced last year, but taken together with the change in depreciation allowances the overall effect was to increase the effective corporate tax rate. In any event, our company tax rate remains at 28%. That in fast-growing Singapore and Hong Kong is only 17%.
By how much could tax rates be reduced? The 2025 Taskforce showed that, if government spending could be reduced to the same share of GDP that it was in 2005, at the end of Labour’s second three-year term in office, then the top personal tax rate and the company tax rate could both be reduced to 20%. I’m not confident that that’s still possible, but a radical reduction of both rates could certainly be achieved.
Because of the crucial need to raise wages and salaries by increasing investment, we favour accepting that there will need to be an ongoing gap between the company rate and the top personal rate (as there is currently) by introducing a radically lower company tax rate at 12.5%, with the top personal rate as low as revenue will allow, perhaps 25%. We don’t doubt that that would have a very dramatic effect on investment, and therefore on wages, salaries and jobs.
Another substantial benefit of getting government spending reduced more quickly is that it would help reduce the exchange rate – vitally important if farmers and other exporters are to generate the strong growth in exports that our high level of overseas debt demands.
This is partly because much of the borrowing being undertaken by the government is being done by selling bonds to foreigners – and of course those foreigners have to buy New Zealand dollars to buy the government bonds.
It’s also partly because tighter restraint on government spending would almost inevitably prompt the Reserve Bank to further reduce the Official Cash Rate, and that too would reduce the upward pressure on the exchange rate. Yes, the OCR is lower now than at any time in our history, but it’s also higher than in any other developed country except Australia. There can’t be much doubt that if the OCR were, say, 1% rather than 2.5%, the exchange rate would be lower and export growth would be stronger.
Only a party vote for ACT will get government spending back under control quickly, and take the pressure off exporters!
Radically reduce bureaucracy
3) Third, we will be pushing for a strong attack on bureaucracy. And by that we don’t simply mean a reduction in the number of bureaucrats, though that would no doubt be part of it. We mean taking an axe to some of the more ridiculous rules and regulations which those bureaucrats enforce:
· The rule which enables Auckland Council planners to tell a home-owner to paint her white house black or brown because it’s near the Kaipara;
· The rule which requires a retailer of farming equipment in Masterton to get approval before erecting a sign on his own property;
· The rule which requires a farmer to get approval before building a hay-barn on his own property;
· The rule which enables local authority planners to designate a farm as having outstanding landscape value, without any suggestion of compensation for the loss of value which that designation involves;
· The rule which requires a farmer to get a building consent to replace his home after it’s burnt down;
· The law which enables local authorities to tightly constrain the supply of land, with disastrous consequences for housing affordability for most young New Zealanders.
Fixing these frustrating and expensive rules would almost certainly require a fundamental reform of both the RMA and the Local Government Act, and quite possibly an amendment to the Bill of Rights Act to ensure that the right to peaceful enjoyment of one’s own property is enshrined in law.
Only a party vote for ACT will make a serious dent in the inane bureaucratic rules which cost us a fortune and ruin our lives!
Take an axe to the Emissions Trading Scheme
4) Fourth, we also want to take an axe to the Emissions Trading Scheme. Whatever you believe about the causes of climate change, it makes no sense at all for New Zealand, producing just 0.2% of global greenhouse gas emissions, to have the only all sectors, all gasses, ETS in the world.
No other country penalises farming for its production of greenhouse gases, and yet that is a major part of the ETS in New Zealand.
Yes, National proposes to defer the inclusion of agriculture into our ETS until 2015; Labour proposes to include it from 2013.
But even now agriculture is hurt by the effect of the ETS on the price of electricity, petrol, diesel, and coal. If biological emissions were to be included in the ETS on the basis proposed by the Labour Party, it would have an absolutely devastating effect on the viability of a great many farms. Even the deferment proposed by the National Party would at best leave farmers paying thousands of dollars for their use of on- and off-farm energy. New Zealand’s farming sector – the most efficient producer of food in the world – doesn’t deserve that kind of punishment.
Indeed, there’s a strong argument that biological emissions don’t add to greenhouse gases at all: every unit of carbon emitted by pastures, crops and animals was first absorbed from the atmosphere.
Only a party vote for ACT can protect farmers – and the rest of us – from the ETS!
Give parents effective control over their children’s education
5) Fifth, we want taxpayer funding to “follow the child”, to give parents an opportunity to send their children to any school willing to take them, as already happens with Early Childhood Education. This would enable parents to send their child to an independent school if that was their preference, or to an “integrated school”.
And to enable parents to make an informed choice about which school is best suited to their child, we would open up SchoolSMART, a website run by the Ministry of Education which holds information about schools, about pupils’ performance, about teacher performance and about other indicators. National once campaigned to make this information available to parents. In Government, they haven’t done it.
We would recognise long-established and well run state schools, such as Auckland Grammar, Epsom Girls, McLean’s College, Rangitoto College, Wellington College and Christchurch Boys High School, as “trust schools”, and allow them to operate substantially free from bureaucratic control – including giving them the ability to establish other campuses, perhaps by acquiring schools which might be losing pupils.
Only a party vote for ACT will give parents a chance to choose the school which best suits their child, and boards of trustees and principals a chance to run their schools free from the stifling hand of Wellington bureaucrats!
Promote a multi-party consensus on changes to New Zealand Superannuation
6) Sixth, we will push for a multi-party consensus on changes to New Zealand Superannuation to ensure its long-term viability as our population gradually ages.
The Labour Party has recently announced their support for a gradual increase in the age of eligibility, as we proposed months ago. They’ve adopted the proposal of the Retirement Commissioner, which would see the age of eligibility reach 67 by 2033.
We think that that’s too slow, not affecting in any material way the baby boomer generation.
The Australian Labor Government has announced that the age at which Australians will become eligible for their taxpayer-funded pension scheme will reach 67 by 2023, 10 years earlier than the Labour Party has proposed here.
But whether by 2023 or 2033, this issue needs to be put on the agenda. Most other developed countries are gradually increasing the age at which their citizens become eligible for taxpayer-funded retirement income, and for the same reason. We’re all living longer. It’s totally irresponsible to pretend that no increase will be needed.
Only a party vote for ACT will ensure that this issue is addressed in a timely way!
Promote a safer, more secure, society
7) Seventh, we will push to make New Zealand a safer and fairer place by ensuring that the victims of crime are not subject to unfair scrutiny by the police when they try to defend themselves, and ensuring that young offenders are appropriately dealt with before their criminal activities escalate.
The statute books already entitle people to use reasonable force to defend themselves and their property. But in practice it’s all too common for the police to charge people who defend themselves – in other words, for the police to treat victims as criminals.
I mentioned the case of Virender Singh a moment ago. I could have mentioned the case of Greg Carvell, charged with shooting and wounding an intruder who was threatening him and two of his staff with a machete. Or the case of Paul McIntyre, charged with shooting and wounding one of three men who were trying to steal his property in a remote location in the dead of night. There have been far too many similar cases.
While clearly the use of force in defence of person and property must be reasonable – it would clearly be absurd to use lethal force against a teenager retrieving a ball from your front lawn – the present policy needs to change. We believe there’d be merit in enshrining the right to self-defence in the Bill of Rights Act.
In respect of youth offending, there’s a lot of evidence that to the extent young people get away with minor offending, there’s an increased chance of their engaging in further and more serious offending. We will ensure that all young people know that breaking the law has consequences, in order to ensure our young people stay on the straight and narrow. Ensuring that young people receive a decent education, and can find a job when they need one, will also help keep young people out of trouble.
Only a party vote for ACT will protect your right to self defence, and make it clear to our young people that every crime has a consequence!
Push for equal legal status for all New Zealanders, irrespective of race
8) Our eighth agenda item is to give effective force to Article III of the Treaty of Waitangi – the clause which asserts that all New Zealanders have equal status at law. We reject the notion that the Treaty established a “partnership” between “the Crown” (on behalf of all New Zealanders) and a subset of New Zealanders defined by their ancestry. If Article III is taken seriously, it leaves no room for separate Maori electorates in Parliament, no room for Maori wards in local government, and no room for requiring consultation with Maori over and above the obligation to consult with any other New Zealander.
We believe that, except where already in private ownership, the foreshore and seabed should belong to the Crown, on behalf of all New Zealanders. Because we are a party which believes in the rule of law, and in particular the right of all New Zealanders to have access to the courts, we also believe that those who think they have a customary right to certain parts of the foreshore should be allowed to have their claims tested in court. And we mean tested in court: we don’t regard negotiating such claims with a minister, within an intensely political environment where Parliamentary votes are at stake, as at all a substitute.
We favour the enactment of a simple piece of legislation providing that nothing in any statute or regulation, whether passed by Parliament or by any other regulation-making body, should confer any benefit, preferment or special status on anybody by reason of the ethnicity of that person.
Only a party vote for ACT will move New Zealand forward to a state where all New Zealanders – those of Maori ancestry, those of European ancestry, those of Asian ancestry, those of Pacific Island ancestry – all of us have equal rights under the law!
Re-establish a constructive relationship with Fiji
9) Finally, we will push to rebuild our relationship with Fiji.
The ACT Party has long been in broad agreement with the thrust of New Zealand’s foreign policy: in particular, we favour the drive for building new relationships with China, India and other emerging countries in Asia, and for working hard to bring the Trans Pacific Partnership to a successful conclusion. We have supported the Government in its determination to fulfill New Zealand’s commitments in Afghanistan until next April. We continue to regard a close relationship with Australia, the United Kingdom, the United States and Canada as fundamental to our security.
But we’ve come to the conclusion after extensive talks with Fijians now living in New Zealand, and New Zealanders with long experience in the Pacific, that our present policy of holding the Bainimarama regime at arm’s length is not working for New Zealand or for Fiji.
Fiji has long been family: many New Zealanders holiday there and a significant number have business interests there. Many New Zealanders were born there.
We need to rebuild a positive relationship with that country – encouraging the regime towards its professed aim of building a vibrant colour-blind democracy, based on one vote one person.
Only a party vote for ACT will lead to a re-examination of our relationship with Fiji!
So there you have a summary statement – the ACT Plan for the next Parliamentary term if you like – setting out what we will be aiming to achieve in the next Parliament.
All of our policies are motivated by a concern for those New Zealanders who, like Adrian and Jules Paalvast, want to return to their homeland, but feel that they can’t do so in fairness to their children. And for those who still live in New Zealand but feel deeply torn between what this country has to offer and the much higher living standard which, for the foreseeable future, they could enjoy abroad.
And when we look at the policy positions being adopted by other potential partners of the National Party, we’re convinced that ACT is the most logical partner for National.
The parties of the left – Labour, Mana, Maori and Green parties – are in a competition over who can come up with the most economically irrational policies. They are in a race to increase the minimum wage – in the process, destroying jobs and consigning those they claim to represent to the unemployment benefit. So much for compassion!
Their other policies would be just as destructive. The Maori Party wants to exempt the first $25,000 of income from tax; to make teaching te reo compulsory in secondary schools; to scrap the 90 day probationary period; to write Treaty of Waitangi principles (whatever they are!) into employment law; and to give iwi a veto over foreign investment.
The Green Party wants to protect the environment, as of course we in ACT do also, but has a totally unworldly view of how economies work and has no understanding what a devastating impact on our living standards the implementation of their core policy platform would have. For a party that talks up their opposition to big business, they seem intent on delivering massive subsidies to big businesses that promise to create so-called “green jobs” – despite policies of that kind leading to massive job losses in countries such as Spain which have gone down that path.
By contrast, ACT shares much the same basic philosophy as the National Party – a belief in freedom, in individual responsibility, in limited government, in equal citizenship, a belief that New Zealanders’ lives would be better by having less government – less government taxation, less government spending, less government borrowing, less government bureaucracy. And we actually mean it!
Of course, we have differences of opinion with National too. We want to see much more vigorous action to deal with our problems than National has felt able to deliver over the last three years.
But we haven’t the slightest doubt that we could again work constructively with National, to the benefit of all New Zealanders – high income and low income; young and old; urban and rural; Maori, Asian, Pacifika and European.
And that’s my message to all New Zealanders. ACT is the only party with the experience and the commitment which can help a John Key-led Government deal with the challenges which our country faces.
And those challenges are huge.
In a world getting tired of countries which can’t live within their means, we’re still borrowing like there is no tomorrow.
In a world where our people are getting steadily greyer, we’re not confronting the challenges posed by the increasing cost of New Zealand Super, of care for the aged, and of healthcare.
In a world where people find it easier and easier to move countries, we’re drifting off the pace, and seeing too many of our young people deciding to make a better life for themselves somewhere else.
A party vote for ACT at this election is your best way to ensure that we meet those challenges, for the benefit of all New Zealanders.
One Law For All?
Mr Chairman, ladies and gentlemen,
Almost exactly two months ago, I gave a speech here under the same title: One Law for All?
It didn’t get a lot of attention, and perhaps because of that people in many parts of the country ask me whether ACT remains committed to equality before the law for all New Zealanders.
In one provincial city, after I had given a speech about the serious economic challenges facing our country, almost every question I was asked was about Treaty settlements, about the foreshore and seabed issue, about a perception that Maori have been given a special status in Resource Management issues.
So today, I want to speak once again about this issue. And about whether we as New Zealanders really do want a country where everybody is equal under the law.
A few months back, I was asked on a television programme whether I thought that Maori were ‘special’. I said ‘no’. I could have said that ‘all New Zealanders are special’, but if the question was designed to find out whether I thought Maori should have a special legal or constitutional status in New Zealand, then I stand by my answer.
Indeed, more than that, I believe we have no future as a country if we continue building a society where people of one ethnicity have a favoured legal status as compared with other New Zealanders.
And lest there be any misunderstanding – unintentional or deliberate – I am not suggesting that this special legal status has made the average Maori citizen better off economically than other New Zealanders.
Nobody thinks that Maori New Zealanders are, on average, better off than other New Zealanders. Yes, there are some very prosperous Maori New Zealanders.
But far too many Maori earn well below the average wage.
Maori make up only 15 per cent of our population, but 35 per cent of those on the unemployment benefit, 42 per cent of those on the DPB, and 51 per cent of those in prison.
33 per cent of Maori between the ages of 15 and 19 are not in work, education or training, and in some parts of the country that figure is even worse.
Coroner Wallace Bain recently noted that the overwhelming majority of children who die of abuse are Maori.
These are appalling statistics, and strongly suggest that present policies have failed Maori New Zealanders.
We in the ACT Party believe that taxpayers should pay compensation whenever it can be established beyond reasonable doubt that the government acted improperly by confiscating or undermining property rights.
But Treaty settlements will never solve these appalling Maori social statistics.
Fundamentally, dealing with Maori over-representation in all the worst social statistics is not about the size of Treaty settlements, and certainly not about creating a special legal preference for Maori, but about dealing with the underlying causes of the problem:
• The failure of our education system to ensure that Maori teenagers leave school with sufficient literacy and numeracy skills to participate in a modern economy – in a 1995 survey, 66 per cent of Maori adults lacked the literacy skills to participate in the modern economy, and I strongly suspect the situation is no better now;
• The laws which prevent employers taking on relatively unskilled people at a wage which makes sense for employers – no employer is going to take on somebody who can’t read and can’t do basic arithmetic at today’s adult minimum wage; and any increase in the adult minimum wage, which Labour and the Maori and Mana Parties propose, would simply make that problem worse;
• The communal ownership of much of the land owned by Maori. Maori own a great deal of land in New Zealand, and where that land is owned and controlled by Maori incorporations it is often used very productively, and for that we should rejoice. But too much Maori land lies almost entirely unused because, with scores and sometimes thousands of owners, it’s simply impossible for anybody to put the land to productive use;
• And especially the enormous damage done by the welfare system.
These are the fundamental causes of the over-representation of Maori in all the worst social statistics, and until those fundamental causes are dealt with, Maori will continue to be amongst the poorest, the most socially deprived, and the most imprisoned members of our society.
Apirana Ngata warned of the damage which welfare would do to Maori at the very beginning of the welfare state, in the late 1930s and early 1940s. He was right.
Almost 20 years ago, a prominent South Auckland Maori leader told me that, in her considered opinion, the only way to deal with Maori unemployment was to abolish the unemployment benefit completely.
‘Too many of my people have relatively few skills’, she said.
‘They can’t live well on the dole, but with three or four sharing a house, and doing a few cash jobs under the table, they can live adequately on the dole.’
And she saw that as a disaster.
And before anybody leaps to conclusions, no, I’m not saying ACT wants to abolish the unemployment benefit completely. I’m simply quoting a far-sighted Maori leader who recognised the extraordinary damage the welfare system is doing to Maori society.
So the first of the two points I want to make today is that Maori New Zealanders are not being well served by present policies.
What’s needed is reform of the education system, the reintroduction of a lower youth minimum wage to give young people their first step into a career, a resolution of the problem of communal ownership of Maori land, reform of the welfare system, and perhaps the acceptance by Maori leadership that Maori attitudes themselves need to change.
Of the four policy changes needed, three have been longstanding ACT Party policies.
The second point I want to make is that present policies of giving a special legal status to Maori are storing up huge problems down the track and generating deep resentment among many non-Maori. They are impeding progress for Maori and non-Maori alike. And if anything, the trend’s getting worse.
Separate Maori electorates date back to 1867, at a time when the only people who had a vote in New Zealand were men who owned property. Since most Maori property was communally owned, virtually no Maori men got a vote. So the Maori electorates were created, initially for just five years.
But of course, now every adult, regardless of whether they own property or not, and regardless of gender, can vote.
The Royal Commission on the Electoral System recommended as long ago as the 80s that the Maori electorates should be scrapped if New Zealand adopted the MMP electoral system. Well, we’ve had MMP for 15 years, but we still have the Maori electorates.
Actually, separate Maori electorates have long since ceased to serve any useful purpose – the number of Maori in Parliament substantially exceeds the number of Maori electorates, proving that separate Maori electorates are simply not needed to ensure that Maori are elected to Parliament. Indeed, in this electorate of Tauranga, not only is the sitting Member Maori, so are most of the other candidates!
But not only have there been no moves to scrap the Maori electorates, we’ve seen a gradual extension of racially-based representation into local government.
The Labour Government started that trend, by giving local governments the option to create special Maori wards. Environment Bay of Plenty was the first to do so.
Then came the Waikato Regional Council, which decided just weeks ago to reserve two places for iwi.
And only days ago, Nelson councilors agreed to set up a Maori-only ward for that city.
The Auckland Council narrowly escaped having special wards for Maori (thanks to the strong opposition of Rodney Hide as Minister of Local Government) but has nevertheless been saddled with a Maori Statutory Board - a board which gives unelected Maori the right to vote on most of the Auckland Council committees.
Ironically, when the first 20 councilors were elected to the new Auckland Council, three of them were Maori, which by chance coincided fairly accurately with the number of Maori in the Auckland population.
In the course of an interview on a Maori radio station a few days ago, I was asked how the Maori voice would be heard if Maori electorates and Maori wards were to be abolished. My answer, of course, is that the Maori voice would be heard in exactly the same way as the European voice, or the Asian voice, or the Pacific voice – through the ordinary voting process, where every person, regardless of race, gets an equal say.
The Resource Management Act has long given Maori a special status in resource consents and local government planning.
In drawing up their plans, local governments are required by that Act to consult with their communities – nobody could object to that – and also with iwi.
When I went to school, requiring local government to consult with their communities and with iwi can only mean that iwi are somehow not part of the community. And I would have thought that any self-respecting Maori would find that highly offensive.
Offensive or not, the wording clearly means that Maori have ‘two votes’ when local governments are drawing up their plans – one vote as a member of the community and another, potentially more powerful, vote as a Maori.
You’ve seen how this works here in Tauranga of course, where local iwi have caused major delays to plans by the Port of Tauranga to deepen the port.
It seems that this power of veto may be extended. The National Policy Statement on Indigenous Biodiversity, issued for consultation earlier this year but not yet formally adopted, would require anybody wanting to cut down native plants – such as manuka scrub – to seek permission from both their local council and tangata whenua.
If the Government were to accept any of the recommendations of the Waitangi Tribunal on the so-called Wai262 claim, Maori authority over New Zealand’s fauna and flora – and indeed, over many other aspects of New Zealand life – would be massively extended.
Among other things, the Tribunal has recommended:
• a new Maori Advisory Commission to control patents and plant variety rights, with the power of veto over applications;
• a new Maori Conservation Authority for dealing with all conservation matters; all decisions made by Maori under the Maori consultation processes of the RMA to be compulsory;
• all public sector agencies being required to prepare Maori language plans; and an expansion of the role of Maori in the negotiation of international treaties.
There has long been preferential access for Maori to some university courses, and affirmative action in the form of ensuring one or more Maori on the boards of most SOEs and other government agencies is now routine.
Not content with that, establishing special Maori advisory boards appears to be increasingly common. When the Government established the Environmental Protection Authority, it also established a Maori advisory committee for that Authority, to ensure that the Maori world view was adequately taken into account.
And too often that Maori world view is not based on science but on the animist views of early Maori, not shared by the great majority of Maori in New Zealand today and not shared by any of the rest of us.
Those views are being increasingly listened to, at potentially serious risk to life and limb. Some years ago, the Labour Government refused to take action to clear a channel so that the crater lake on Mount Ruapehu could drain safely, despite failure to do so risking the kind of disaster which destroyed scores of lives at Tangiwai. Why? Because some Maori felt that to do so would offend the spirit of the mountain.
At about the same time, GNS Science, one of the Crown research institutes, went to considerable expense to bring a mini-submarine all the way from Germany to the shores of Lake Taupo to explore the floor of the lake for geothermal, and potentially volcanic, activity.
At the last minute, the local iwi forbade GNS to explore the floor of the lake – this despite the fact that knowing more about volcanic activity under Lake Taupo is of fundamental importance not just to those who live on the shores of that lake but also to all those who live in New Zealand.
In 1999, ERMA put out a publication identifying issues of relevance to Maori for the benefit of those applying to use new chemicals or introduce new plant material to New Zealand. It noted the importance of applicants advising ERMA about the implications of the new product or plant for:
• the sanctity of Maori cultural health and well-being
• the recognition of Maori cultural, spiritual, ethical, or socio-economic values
• the protection of the mauri (spiritual integrity or life-force) of people
• the protection of the mauri of Maori culture, language and knowledge
• the maintenance, expression and control by Maori of their traditional practices eg kaitiakitanga, tapu, rahui
• the protection of the mauri of valued flora and fauna
• the protection of the mauri of the land
• the protection of the mauri of waterways (inland and offshore)
• the protection of the mauri of air and other taonga
This is surely a daunting list of matters to be considered by any applicant for the use of some new chemical.
Similar restrictions apply to the Ethics Committees established to assess whether clinical trials can be conducted in New Zealand. Dr Shaun Holt has written about the utterly absurd problems he encountered when he wanted to test the efficacy of honey as a treatment for a particular skin infection. He was required to consult a Maori health provider to ‘make sure there were no cultural issues if any Maori children took part’.
And of course, Aucklanders are familiar with the notion that a taniwha under Auckland would need to be appeased before any underground railway was built under that city.
I mentioned a moment ago that the ACT Party supports taxpayers – and that’s what we finally mean when we speak of the Crown – paying compensation whenever it can be established that some legitimate property right has been confiscated.
But there is a seriously worrying suggestion that, in at least a number of cases, compensation has already been paid for those 19th century wrongs, in some cases more than once.
There is also evidence that the decision-making process has become seriously corrupted, with witnesses put under pressure to provide only the information which justifies additional compensation being paid.
If compensation for historical wrongs is to retain broad community support, it’s absolutely imperative that the decision-making process is completely robust, and free from any suggestion of bias or corruption. Unfortunately, that’s not the case at present.
In recent years, a great deal of attention has focused on the foreshore and seabed, or the marine and coastal area as it’s now called. This attention was driven, of course, by a legal case which concluded that a Maori tribe might have some right to claim a customary title to a part of the coastline in the Marlborough Sounds, and that the tribe concerned should have the ability to test that claim in the courts.
After much controversy, the National-led Government, with the support of the Maori Party but not of the ACT Party, passed the Marine and Coastal Area Act. Alas, that appears to have satisfied nobody.
Many Maori are angry because they seem to think that they should have ownership rights to most of the foreshore, and the seabed extending well out from the shore, and potentially the resources which lie below. The leadership of the Maori Party defend their support for the legislation by saying that they got as much as they could from this Government, while implying that they’ll be seeking more when the opportunity presents itself.
Most other New Zealanders deeply resent any suggestion that the foreshore is not the common property of all of us, to use and enjoy as we choose, and ridicule the idea that Maori could ever, with a straight face, claim to have been in exclusive use of the seabed miles from the shore.
The ACT Party believes that, except where small slices of the foreshore are already in private ownership – often as a result of coastal erosion – the foreshore and seabed should be in Crown ownership – in other words, held on behalf of all New Zealanders, irrespective of ethnicity. But we also accept that, if equal rights under the law are to be respected, people should have the right to go to court – not to a ministerial office – to test their claim to have a customary right to some parts of the foreshore.
Unfortunately, there is an increasing trend to regard the Treaty of Waitangi as having established some kind of formal partnership between Maori on the one hand and the rest of us on the other, as Lord Cooke seemed to conclude back in 1989. Indeed, not only a formal partnership but one where Maori and other New Zealanders share in decision-making on a more or less equal basis.
What did the Treaty of Waitangi really say about this issue? In fact, the Treaty is absolutely unambiguous. It says quite explicitly that all New Zealanders are to have the ‘rights and privileges of British subjects’. That was an extraordinarily enlightened statement for 1840. But extraordinary or not, that’s what it says, and in my view that’s a great basis for a modern democratic New Zealand.
Apart from anything else, it avoids the whole debate about who is and who is not entitled to be called ‘Maori’, and to enjoy the legal privileges currently associated with being Maori.
It doesn’t matter whether Maori really are entitled to be called ‘indigenous’, whether they arrived in New Zealand first, or indeed when they arrived in New Zealand.
It doesn’t matter whether all of a person’s ancestors were Maori, or whether only one of 64 ancestors was Maori.
It doesn’t matter which version of the Treaty document is the ‘real Treaty of Waitangi’.
In one sense, even if the Treaty of Waitangi did not say that all of us have equal rights, having equal legal rights is really the only way forward for a modern society. There can be no peace where people of different races have different legal rights, and we’re extraordinarily fortunate that our founding document already provides for such equal rights.
Back in 2004, when I was Leader of the National Party, I met with a particularly wise Maori – actually, I tried unsuccessfully to persuade him to be a candidate in the 2005 election. I asked him about his vision for New Zealand’s future. He told me that his vision was that, in 50 years’ time, an educated New Zealander would be fully familiar with the Bible, with the writings of the Greek philosophers, with the works of Shakespeare, and with the writings of both Apirana Ngata and Confucius. That’s a vision I share.
New Zealand culture has never been simply English culture. At one time, it might’ve been described as a blend of two cultures, European and Maori. Today it’s a tapestry of many cultures – European, Maori, Polynesian and Asian – all of them contributing to the richness of New Zealand life.
Last month, the All Blacks made us all proud as New Zealanders by winning the Rugby World Cup. The All Blacks are made up of players of European, Maori and Pacific Island descent. They all had a single goal, to win for New Zealand. And they did. On the field, they were equals. That’s the goal we must aspire to – one nation of many peoples, all equal before the law.
The only way in which we can all proceed into a peaceful and prosperous future is on the basis of equality under the law.
The ACT Party is absolutely committed to that equality, and at the moment ACT is the only party committed to that equality.
One Law For All?
Click here for a pdf of this speech.
Don Brash, Leader ACT New Zealand
Redwood Room, Bureta Park Motor Inn
8 September 2011
Mr Chairman, ladies and gentlemen,
Tonight, I want to speak once again about the place of Maori in our nation. And about whether we as New Zealanders really do want a country where everybody is equal under the law.
And I’m doing this against plenty of advice, from the media and indeed from within my own family. It’s sometimes difficult to discuss sensitive and difficult issues of this kind, but ACT has never been a party to shy away from difficult issues.
But is it really wise to talk about this issue again? Aren’t you being opportunistic, desperately seeking votes? Isn’t this just tired right-wing rhetoric? Aren’t you just proving, once again, that you’re a racist?
Well, hardly opportunistic. I have held the same view on this issue for many years, and expressed it not just at Orewa in January 2004 but in my very first speech in Parliament after becoming Leader of the National Party in October 2003. The ACT Party has held a commitment to one law for all since its inception. And one law for all was a key theme of the National Party’s in the 2002 election, while the National Party’s website still shows as one of the party’s fundamental values a commitment to “equal citizenship”.
And hardly “right-wing” either. People from across the political spectrum worry about what appears to be the agenda of successive governments to create a legally preferred position for those with a Maori ancestor. Chris Trotter, hardly somebody from the extreme right of New Zealand politics, has often written about the importance of affirming that all New Zealanders have equal legal status.
And to argue that somebody who wants people to have equal rights under the law, irrespective of their ethnicity, is racist is surely the epitome of Orwellian double-speak!
A few weeks ago, I was asked on a television programme whether I thought that Maori were “special”. I said “no”. I could have said that “all New Zealanders are special”, but if the question was designed to find out whether I thought Maori should have a special legal or constitutional status in New Zealand, then I stand by my answer.
I’m giving this speech tonight because I believe that the future of our country is intimately bound up with how together we deal with the place of Maori in our society. Are we on the right track already, with the ongoing creation of a legally distinct position for Maori in New Zealand, or do we urgently need to change direction?
I first want to argue that present policies aren’t working for those they are supposedly designed to help – Maori New Zealanders.
I’ve been accused of claiming that Maori New Zealanders are “privileged”. But my critics have completely misunderstood what I said, in some cases deliberately I suspect. What I mean is that Maori New Zealanders now have a legal status which is different to, and superior to, those of other New Zealanders. I stand by that.
But of course nobody thinks that Maori New Zealanders are, on average, better off than other New Zealanders. Yes, there are some very prosperous Maori New Zealanders. Until a few weeks ago, the highest paid person in Australasia was a Maori New Zealander.
But far too many Maori earn well below the average wage.
Maori make up only 15% of our population, but 35% of those on the unemployment benefit, 42% of those on the DPB, and 51% of those in prison.
33% of Maori between the ages of 15 and 19 are not in work, education or training, and in some parts of the country that figure is even worse.
Tragically, Coroner Wallace Bain recently noted that the overwhelming majority of children who die of abuse are Maori.
These are appalling statistics, and strongly suggest that present policies, many of them introduced 40 years ago, have failed Maori New Zealanders.
Taxpayers should pay compensation whenever it can be established beyond reasonable doubt that the government acted improperly by confiscating or undermining property rights – whether that means compensating iwi for wrongs done in the 19th century or compensating farmers for retrospectively imposing conditions on the use of their land in the 21st century.
But Treaty settlements will never solve these appalling Maori social statistics. It was Rob McLeod, himself of Ngati Porou descent, who first made this point strongly. Updating his figures, let’s assume for the moment that total compensation paid amounts to $3 billion, not the original $1 billion “fiscal envelope”. And let’s assume that that $3 billion can be invested to yield an after-tax return of 5%. That would generate a net $150 million every year. Split evenly across, say, 600,000 Maori, that means an extra $250 annually for all Maori – nice to have of course, but not remotely enough to materially narrow the gap between average Maori incomes and average non-Maori incomes.
So Treaty settlements won’t fix the fundamental problem.
Fundamentally, dealing with Maori over-representation in all the worst social statistics is not about creating a special legal preference for Maori but about dealing with the underlying causes of the problem:
· The failure of our education system to ensure that Maori teenagers leave school with sufficient literacy and numeracy skills to participate in a modern economy – in a 1995 survey, 66% of Maori adults lacked the literacy skills to participate in the modern economy, and I strongly suspect the situation is no better now;
· The laws which prevent employers taking on relatively unskilled people at a wage which makes sense for employers – no employer is going to take on somebody who can’t read and can’t do basic arithmetic at today’s adult minimum wage; and any increase in the adult minimum wage, which some of the dopier parties in Parliament propose, would simply make that problem worse;
· The communal ownership of much of the land owned by Maori. Maori own a great deal of land in New Zealand, and where that land is owned and controlled by Maori incorporations it is often used very productively, and for that we should rejoice. But too much Maori land lies almost entirely unused because, with scores and sometimes thousands of owners, it’s simply impossible for anybody to put the land to productive use;
· And especially the enormous damage done by the welfare system.
These are the fundamental causes of the over-representation of Maori in all the worst social statistics, and until those fundamental causes are dealt with, Maori will continue to be amongst the poorest, the most socially deprived, and the most imprisoned members of our society.
I’ll be giving a major speech on ACT’s view of the current welfare system shortly, but I have to say in this context that something that really bothers me is the way some Maori leaders keep putting all the blame on the government for the sorry state of Maori society. In one sense, they’re right: it’s the government which prevents employers hiring teenagers at less than the minimum wage. It’s the government which runs an education system which produces so many illiterate Maori. It’s the government which has failed to facilitate a change to the communal ownership of land. And it’s the government which operates the welfare system which traps so many Maori in hopelessness.
But surely some of the responsibility lies with Maori leaders themselves.
Let me give you an example of how the government has worked hard for Maori but achieved little. In the late 1970s, there was deep concern about poor Maori heath statistics. That marvelous institution, the Plunket Society, decided that it wasn’t reaching enough Maori and Pacific Island children. With the support of the National Government, they closed the Mt Albert Karitane hospital for women and babies and put the money into extra Plunket nurses and cars so that Plunket could visit all mothers in their own homes. An advertising campaign was undertaken to alert Maori and Pacific Island mothers about the availability of the service. When nurses still weren’t reaching enough mothers, they took to driving around towns and suburbs where there was a high concentration of Maori and Pacific Islanders looking for signs of baby clothes on the line, and cross checking them with the Plunket register. A few more women were reached as a result, but there were still significant numbers who made no effort to respond to Plunket’s efforts.
In the 1980s, the Fourth Labour Government started a number of special Maori health units. One opened in Rotorua with Maori staff dedicated to reaching Maori children. In the 1990s, the National Government started a whole lot more of them. Maori were trained to staff them and they tried to reach out into their surrounding communities. The Fifth Labour Government pushed on with Maori health clinics. And yet Maori still have the worst infant mortality statistics, the worst immunization statistics, the worst rates of influenza, rubella and meningitis, and as a race they die younger than others.
Despite huge government resources being fed for decades into anti-smoking campaigns, the 2006 census showed that 42% of Maori aged 15 and over smoked, while only 18% of non-Maori did so – this despite much of the anti-smoking assistance being provided free to those willing to try them.
In other words, despite decades of often racially-directed health policies, Maori health statistics remain conspicuously worse than everyone else’s. Surely we have to take a new tack if we want to assist Maori. One thing should now be absolutely clear: just spending more and more money on failed “cures” won’t get us there.
Why?
In my view, it’s because progress towards better outcomes for Maori was halted in the early 1970s by the introduction of welfare policies that have played a bigger part in ripping up the fabric of Maori society than any colonialist policies of the past, or any lack of willingness by governments to assist.
Prior to the 1970s, Maori health statistics were gradually improving. Maori were increasingly reducing the size of their families, thus freeing parents to spend more time with their children. There was a chance that educational achievements would rise as two parents assisted fewer children with their homework, and played their part at pre-schools.
But right from the start of the DPB in 1974 Maori women became disproportionately represented in the solo mum category that qualified for the benefit. I’ve seen estimates that half of all Maori births today are to women who are dependent on a benefit. Many are in no stable relationship with a man. Like you, I’ve read of women with children by as many as five men, none of whom takes the slightest interest in the upbringing of their children. Much of the government money intended for the upbringing of the children is spent in the pub. Or on drugs. Mum’s de factos beat up the kids. Like everyone else, you’ve read the stories of Coral Burrows, of Kris and Cru Kahui. And of dozens of others. In many of those cases, booze, incest, violence, drugs and parental neglect seem to go hand in hand. This is an issue for both Maori and non-Maori women, but tragically far too many of them are Maori.
What are we going to do about this? Why does it carry on, year in, year out, with neither National nor Labour facing up to the obvious problems that flow from welfare dependency?
Many Maori leaders do recognise the problem.
I’ve no doubt that Tariana Turia and Pita Sharples recognise the damage which current welfare policies do to Maori, and they speak about this issue more than any other Maori Members of Parliament.
Apirana Ngata warned of the damage which welfare would do to Maori at the very beginning of the welfare state, in the late 1930s and early 1940s.
Almost 20 years ago, a prominent South Auckland Maori leader told me that, in her considered opinion, the only way to deal with Maori unemployment was to abolish the unemployment benefit completely – “Too many of my people”, she said, “have relatively few skills. They can’t live well on the dole, but with three or four sharing a house, and doing a few cash jobs under the table, they can live adequately on the dole.” And she saw that as a disaster. (And before anybody leaps to conclusions, no, I’m not saying ACT wants to abolish the unemployment benefit completely: I’m simply quoting a far-sighted Maori leader who recognised the extraordinary damage the welfare system is doing to Maori society.)
Merepeka Ruakawa-Tait, the former head of the Women’s Refuge, has also pointed out that too many Maori women “allow free-loaders in the guise of men unable or unwilling to work to live with them. The home becomes a danger zone and these men have no biological ties with the children and they can be cruel and abusive.” She claimed that, in spite of the rhetoric about loving their children, Maori undervalue children.
So that’s the first of the two points I want to make this evening. Maori New Zealanders are not being well served by present policies. What’s needed is reform of the education system, the reintroduction of a lower youth minimum wage (or perhaps even the abolition of any minimum wage for those under 20), a resolution of the problem of communal ownership of Maori land, reform of the welfare system, and the acceptance by Maori leadership that Maori attitudes themselves need to change. Of the four policy changes needed, three have been longstanding ACT Party policies.
The second point I want to make is that present policies of giving a special legal status to Maori are storing up huge problems down the track and generating huge resentment among many non-Maori. They are impeding progress for Maori and non-Maori alike. And if anything, the trend’s getting worse.
Separate Maori electorates date back to 1867, at a time when the only people who had a vote in New Zealand were men who owned property. Since most Maori property was communally owned, virtually no Maori men got a vote. So the Maori electorates were created, initially for just five years, so that all Maori men got a vote – indeed, Maori men were the first New Zealanders to enjoy a universal suffrage.
But of course, now every adult, regardless of whether they own property or not, and regardless of gender, enjoys the vote. The Royal Commission on the Electoral System recommended as long ago as the ‘eighties that the Maori electorates should be scrapped if New Zealand adopted the MMP electoral system.
The National Party established a party committee to review some aspects of the New Zealand constitution in the late ‘nineties. That committee recommended that the Maori electorates should be scrapped. The National Party announced its intention to scrap these electorates in the middle of 2003, well before I became the Leader of the Party.
The separate Maori electorates have long since ceased to serve any useful purpose – the number of Maori in Parliament substantially exceeds the number of Maori electorates, proving that separate Maori electorates are simply not needed to ensure that Maori are elected to Parliament.
But what do we have? The National Party has gone silent on their plan to scrap the Maori electorates. And instead we have the gradual extension of racially-based representation into local government.
The Labour Government started that trend, by giving local governments the option to create special Maori wards. So far, only Environment Bay of Plenty has done so.
The Auckland Council narrowly escaped having special wards for Maori (thanks to the strong opposition of Rodney Hide as Minister of Local Government) but has nevertheless been saddled with a Maori Statutory Board – a board which gives unelected Maori the right to vote on most of the Auckland Council committees.
The Resource Management Act has long given Maori a special status in resource consents and local government planning. In drawing up their plans, local governments are required by the Act to consult with their communities – nobody could object to that – and also with iwi. When I went to school, requiring local government to consult with their communities and with iwi can only mean that iwi are somehow not part of the community. And I would have thought that any self-respecting Maori would find that highly offensive.
Offensive or not, the wording clearly means that Maori have “two votes” when local governments are drawing up their plans – one vote as a member of the community and another, potentially more powerful, vote as a Maori.
And again, it seems that this power of veto is being extended. The National Policy Statement on Indigenous Biodiversity, issued for consultation earlier this year but not yet formally adopted, would require anybody wanting to cut down native plants – such as manuka scrub – to seek permission from both their local council and tangata whenua.
If the Government were to accept any of the recommendations of the Waitangi Tribunal on the so-called Wai262 claim, Maori authority over New Zealand’s fauna and flora – and indeed, over many other aspects of New Zealand life – would be massively extended.
Among other things, the Tribunal has recommended a new Maori Advisory Commission to control patents and plant variety rights, with the power of veto over applications; a new Maori Conservation Authority for dealing with all conservation matters; all decisions made by Maori under the Maori consultation processes of the RMA to be compulsory; all public sector agencies being required to prepare Maori language plans; and an expansion of the role of Maori in the negotiation of international treaties.
Establishing special Maori advisory boards appears to be increasingly common. When the Government established the Environmental Protection Authority, it also established a Maori advisory committee for that Authority, to ensure that the Maori world view was adequately taken into account.
And too often that Maori world view is not based on science but on the animist views of early Maori, not shared by the great majority of Maori in New Zealand today and not shared by any of the rest of us.
Those views are being increasingly listened to, at potentially serious risk to life and limb. Some years ago, the Labour Government refused to take action to clear a channel so that the crater lake on Mount Ruapehu could drain safely, despite failure to do so risking the kind of disaster which destroyed scores of lives at Tangiwai. Why? Because some Maori felt that to do so would offend the spirit of the mountain.
At about the same time, GNS Science, one of the Crown research institutes, went to considerable expense to bring a mini-submarine all the way from Germany to the shores of Lake Taupo to explore the floor of the lake for geothermal, and potentially volcanic, activity. At the last minute, the local iwi forbade GNS to explore the floor of the lake – this despite the fact that knowing more about volcanic activity under Lake Taupo is of fundamental importance not just to those who live on the shores of that lake but also to all those who live in New Zealand.
In 1999, ERMA put out a publication identifying issues of relevance to Maori for the benefit of those applying to use new chemicals or introduce new plant material to New Zealand. It noted the importance of applicants advising ERMA about the implications of the new product or plant for:
· the sanctity of Maori cultural health and well-being
· the recognition of Maori cultural, spiritual, ethical, or socio-economic values
· the protection of the mauri (spiritual integrity or life-force) of people
· the protection of the mauri of Maori culture, language and knowledge
· the maintenance, expression and control by Maori of their traditional practices eg kaitiakitanga, tapu, rahui
· the protection of the mauri of valued flora and fauna
· the protection of the mauri of the land
· the protection of the mauri of waterways (inland and offshore)
· the protection of the mauri of air and other taonga
As Owen McShane has observed, “imagine you are a scientist wanting to run clinical trials for a new pharmaceutical or vaccine developed in your headquarters in Switzerland. You have heard from your colleagues that New Zealand is an excellent location for such trials. So you open up this (ERMA) report and read that list. It is a daunting list for a scientist to cope with… How can you possibly report on the impact of your new pharmaceutical on ‘the spiritual integrity or life force of people’ without sacrificing your own scientific integrity?”[1]
Similar restrictions apply to the Ethics Committees established to assess whether clinical trials can be conducted in New Zealand. Dr Shaun Holt has written about the utterly absurd problems he encountered when he wanted to test the efficacy of honey as a treatment for a particular skin infection. He was required to consult a Maori health provider to “make sure there were no cultural issues if any Maori children took part”.
And of course, Aucklanders are familiar with the notion that a taniwha under Auckland would need to be appeased before any underground railway was built under that city.
I mentioned a moment ago that the ACT Party supports taxpayers – and that’s what we finally mean when we speak of the Crown – paying compensation whenever it can be established that some legitimate property right has been confiscated. But there is a seriously worrying suggestion that, in at least a number of cases, compensation has already been paid for those 19th century wrongs, in some cases more than once.
There is also evidence that the decision-making process has become seriously corrupted, with witnesses put under pressure to provide only the information which justifies additional compensation being paid.[2]
If compensation for historical wrongs is to retain broad community support, it’s absolutely imperative that the decision-making process is completely robust, and free from any suggestion of bias or corruption. Unfortunately, that’s not the case at present.
And what about the fact that many Maori commercial activities are fully tax-free as charities, or that those which are not sometimes operate as “Maori Authorities”, enjoying a preferentially lower tax rate?
Why Maori commercial activities should be entitled to operate as charities is totally beyond me, though of course the same question arises about the commercial activities undertaken by some religious organisations.
There is some logic in taxing Maori Authorities at a lower rate than ordinary companies, as was explained to the Finance and Expenditure Select Committee when I was on it in 2003. The logic is that, because company tax is effectively a withholding tax, paid by companies on behalf of shareholders, the company tax should be no higher than the marginal tax rate paid by shareholders. And it’s assumed that the vast majority of the “shareholders” of Maori Authorities are relatively poor, and therefore on a very low marginal tax rate. Having a low rate of tax on Maori Authorities therefore avoids many thousands of the “shareholders” of those Authorities filing a claim for a very small tax credit.
But of course that also means that Maori Authorities have the considerable benefit of accumulating reserves from after-tax income at a much faster rate than is possible for other companies. The ACT Party argues that the benefits that come from low taxation should be extended to all companies.
In recent years, a great deal of attention has focused on the foreshore and seabed, or the marine and coastal area as it’s now called. This attention was driven, of course, by a legal case which concluded that a Maori tribe might have some right to claim a customary title to a part of the coastline in the Marlborough Sounds, and that the tribe concerned should have the ability to test that claim in the courts.
This is not the place to trace the tortuous history of this issue, but suffice it to say that where we’ve now got to seems to satisfy nobody. Many Maori are angry because they seem to think that they should have ownership rights to most of the foreshore, and the seabed extending well out from the shore, and potentially the resources which lie below. Most other New Zealanders deeply resent any suggestion that the foreshore is not the common property of all of us, to use and enjoy as we choose, and ridicule the idea that Maori could ever, with a straight face, claim to have been in exclusive use of the seabed miles from the shore.
Most New Zealanders also resent the suggestion that Maori should have an equal say in the management of our major rivers and other natural resources, in an increasing trend to co-governance.
More generally, there is an increasing trend to regard the Treaty of Waitangi as having established some kind of formal partnership between Maori on the one hand and the rest of us on the other, as Lord Cooke seemed to conclude back in 1989. Indeed, not only a formal partnership but one where Maori and other New Zealanders share in decision-making on a more or less 50/50 basis.
This appears to be the implicit assumption behind the Government’s decision to appoint a panel to review our constitutional arrangements, with five of the 12 members of the panel being Maori. Since when can such a panel be regarded as representing the people of New Zealand?
What did the Treaty of Waitangi really say about this issue? To me, the Treaty is absolutely unambiguous. It says quite explicitly that all New Zealanders are to have the “rights and privileges of British subjects”. That was an extraordinarily enlightened statement for 1840, when the Englishmen who were sent to establish the Queen’s authority over New Zealand must have regarded Maori as primitive.
But extraordinary or not, that’s what it says, and in my view that’s a great basis for a modern democratic New Zealand.
Apart from anything else, it avoids the whole debate about who is and who is not entitled to be called “Maori”, and to enjoy the legal privileges currently associated with being Maori.
It doesn’t matter whether Maori really are entitled to be called “indigenous”, whether they arrived in New Zealand first, or indeed when they arrived in New Zealand.
It doesn’t matter whether all of a person’s ancestors were Maori, or whether only one of 64 ancestors was Maori.
It doesn’t matter which version of the Treaty document is the “real Treaty of Waitangi”.
In one sense, even if the Treaty of Waitangi did not say that all of us have equal rights, having equal legal rights is really the only way forward for a modern society. There can be no peace where people of different races have different legal rights, and we’re extraordinarily fortunate that our founding document already provides for such equal rights.
Back in 2004, when I was Leader of the National Party, I met with a particularly wise Maori – actually, I tried unsuccessfully to persuade him to be a candidate in the 2005 election. I asked him about his vision for New Zealand’s future. He told me that his vision was that, in 50 years’ time, an educated New Zealander would be fully familiar with the Bible, with the writings of the Greek philosophers, with the works of Shakespeare, and with the writings of both Apirana Ngata and Confucius. That’s a vision I share.
New Zealandculture has never been simply English culture. At one time, it might’ve been described as a blend of two cultures, European and Maori. Today it’s a tapestry of many cultures – European, Maori, Polynesian and Asian – all of them contributing to the richness of New Zealand life.
Tomorrow, the All Blacks launch their bid to win the Rugby World Cup. The All Blacks are made up of players of European, Maori and Pacific Island descent. They all share a common goal, to win for New Zealand. On the field, they are equals. That’s the goal we must aspire to – one nation of many peoples, all equal before the law.
The only way in which we can all proceed into a peaceful and prosperous future is on the basis of equality under the law.
The ACT Party is absolutely committed to that equality.
Let Mutu Speak! - Brash
Maori Studies professor Margaret Mutu should be allowed to express her opinions even if those opinions are highly objectionable, says ACT New Zealand leader Dr Don Brash.
Professor Mutu is in hot water for saying white immigration should be restricted on account of the 'supremacist attitudes' of some whites.
Ngapuhi leader David Rankin has called for her sacking and laid a formal complaint with the Race Relations Commissioner.
"Nobody could disagree with Margaret Mutu's views more strongly than I do, as will be very clear in a speech I'm giving tomorrow," says Dr Brash.
"But it's the Bill of Rights by which we should be guided in matters like this.
"It says, 'Everyone has the right to freedom of expression, including the freedom to seek, receive, and impart information and opinions of any kind in any form.'
"I have no problem with Margaret Mutu or any other academic expressing controversial opinions, as long as they respect the right of those who disagree with them to express their opinions also.
"It's a classic case of, 'I disagree with what you say but defend to the death your right to say it," Dr Brash concludes.
ENDS
ACT Leader's Dinner Keynote Address
Mr President, board members, John Banks, other candidates, ladies and gentlemen,
Thank you for your warm welcome. I particularly appreciate it because, in one sense, I’m an outsider – a newcomer to the ACT family.
Of course, in another sense, I’ve always supported the values and principles for which ACT stands, and our former president, Catherine Judd, once memorably referred to me as ACT’s tenth MP (just over a month later the National Party caucus elected me to be leader, so perhaps there’s hope for the National Party after all!).
Tonight I want to talk quite briefly about why I sought to return to Parliament under the ACT banner; about what ACT has achieved over the last few years; and about what we need to achieve over the next four months.
Why on earth did I seek to return to Parliament? I had an agreeable life, with good income, time with my family (some of whom are here this evening), and time to spend on my kiwifruit orchard in South Auckland.
Well, it’s an easy question to answer.
I was deeply worried about where this country’s heading.
Deeply worried about youth unemployment – 27% among all 16 to 19 year olds, 38% among 16 to 19 year old Maori.
Deeply worried about the fact that, despite a massive increase in spending on our education system over the last few decades, one in four teenagers coming out of school can’t read and write properly. Teenagers who can’t multiply by 10. Teenagers who don’t understand how to fill in a job application form. Teenagers who see going onto the dole, or the DPB, as the only viable option for them.
Deeply worried that 330,000 working age people are now dependent on a state hand-out, with all the social and financial costs of that.
Deeply worried about the fact that this National Government has failed to deal with the fiscal mess they inherited from Labour, so that two years down the track government spending is higher today, as a share of the total economy, than it was in any year of the Labour Government – and the Government is borrowing $300 million every week – the equivalent of $300 for every family of four in the country – week after week after week.
Deeply worried about the fact that, partly as a result of all that government borrowing, the exchange rate has been pushed to a level which makes life extremely difficult for many exporters, so that as a country we are still spending more overseas than we are earning overseas – as we have done every year now since 1973! With the inevitable consequence that our net debt to foreign investors is now right up there with that of Portugal.
Deeply worried about the fact that, despite the National Party talking grandly about the crucial importance of raising living standards in New Zealand, perhaps even closing the gap with Australia by 2025, living standards today are right back where they were five or six years ago. And the gap with Australia? Wider today than it was when this Government came to power. So that our sons and daughters, our brothers and sisters, our friends and our neighbours, continue to stream across the Tasman, perhaps to return for the occasional holiday.
Deeply worried about the steady drift towards a separate constitutional status for Maori New Zealanders. Of course Maori culture is an important part of New Zealand culture. Of course many Maori are on very low incomes, with few educational qualifications, trapped into a life on welfare. Of course government should compensate tribes which can demonstrate that they were the victims of confiscation. But that is absolutely no reason to create a Maori Statutory Board; or to retain separate Maori electorates; or to give tangata whenua the right to stop farmers cutting down scrub on their land; or to give iwi a right to veto developments on DOC land.
I strongly suspect that John Key knows what needs to be done. John Key is the most popular Prime Minister in my memory. And he’s highly intelligent. When I was Leader of the National Party, I had no hesitation in appointing him to be my Finance spokesman. I have no doubt that I can work with him again.
But rightly or wrongly, he holds the view that the Government can go no further than the electorate or his caucus will let him.
My job, your job, our job is to win enough seats for ACT in the next Parliament to enable him to do the things which, in his heart of hearts, he knows need to be done.
We’ve had some success over the last two and a half years.
Most significant of all, of course, is that ACT was a crucial factor in changing the government in 2008. Many people assume that a National win in 2008 was inevitable. Quite the contrary. Had Rodney not won the seat of Epsom and had Winston got just a handful of additional votes, Helen Clark would still be Prime Minister.
ACT was instrumental in getting a three strikes law in place – not the harsh Californian version of that law, but one which focuses on the small number of the most violent repeat offenders in our community and allows them to be locked away for a long time if they persist in violent offending.
In Auckland, Rodney was instrumental in getting the most far-reaching restructuring of local government New Zealand has seen in decades in place within a remarkably tight timeframe.
ACT gave the Government the courage to extend its initially very timid change in employment law to enable all employers to hire staff on a 90 day probationary basis.
ACT persuaded the Government to establish the Productivity Commission along the lines of the very successful Australian model, with former ACT candidate Graham Scott one of the three commissioners.
ACT persuaded the Government to set up the 2025 Taskforce to make recommendations on how to raise living standards in New Zealand to the Australian level by 2025 – and more importantly, to report on progress annually. (Unsurprisingly, Government decided to wind up the Taskforce before it was due to report shortly before this year’s election.)
I could go on. These were very worthwhile achievements.
But not nearly enough. Tragically for our country, the National Party had just enough MPs so they had a majority in Parliament with either ACT’s five MPsor the Maori Party MPs. This meant that whenever National had something it knewneeded to be done, but that it thought might cost it a bit of political capital, they were able to turn to the Maori Party to avoidtaking action.
And so we continue to have government spending running out of control. We continue to have a legal requirement for employers to pay inexperienced 16 year olds the adult minimum wage. We continue to have an ETS, despite the National Party in Opposition pledging that New Zealand should be a fast follower, not a world leader, in seeking to curb greenhouse gas emissions. And we have a Marine and Coastal Area Act which risks alienating valuable resources previously belonging to all New Zealanders into the hands of tribal elites.
Our aim in the election in just over four months’ time is to get enough Members of Parliament so that National can onlyform a government with us.
Let me repeat: our aim in the election in just over four months’ time is to get enough Members of Parliament so that National can only form a government with our support.
Retaining the seat of Epsom is a crucial part of our strategy, and I’m delighted that the Hon John Banks is our candidate in that electorate. He didn’t quite win the contest for the mayoralty of the super-city, but he certainly didn’t lose that race in Epsom!
He will win that electorate this year, both because he is a first class man, a man whom I greatly admire, and a man who is personally very popular in the electorate; and because the National Party knows that they can’t afford to have the party votes of those who will vote for ACT at the election wasted.
So with Epsom safely retained, the challenge of winning party votes for ACT will be our sole focus.
In part, this is about reminding voters, especially those who want a National-led Government after the election, that giving their party vote to ACT will strengthen a National-led Government. Why can we say that with certainty? Because it’s inconceivable that ACT would support a Phil Goff-led Labour Party, or a Green Party, or a Maori Party, or a Mana Party. Winston might like to play around offering his votes to the highest bidder. We do not.
Of course, that doesn’t necessarily mean we’d go into a coalition with the National Party: we might choose to sit on the cross benches. But we’d vastly prefer a National-led Government to any other kind of government.
So we’ll be making it clear that, at least after this election, the only party we’d be willing to support would be National. And we’ll be there to remind the National Party of the values it professes to believe in – personal responsibility, limited government, and equal citizenship.
What would we be trying to achieve?
We will have a clear focus on five main themes:
First and arguably most important of all, we want to improve living standards. Few people feel better off today than they did three years ago, or even six years ago. Our sons and daughters, our friends and neighbours, are moving overseas, or are tempted to do so. Those who remain, worry about making ends meet. Unemployment is still too high, especially for young people. Retailers continue to go to the wall.
So we will push for policies to raise living standards – getting inane regulations out of the way; reducing lousy government spending; reducing taxes to encourage investment and initiative.
Second, and vitally important for the longer term, we want to free up the education sector and give parents the choice of where to send their children to school.
It has to be one of the great ironies of our supposedly cradle to grave society that it’s only those on high incomes who have a choice about what kind of education their children get. Those on high incomes can afford to send their kids to the best schools in the country, whether they be state schools (by buying into the right school zones) or private schools. The rest of us have a lottery – our children get whatever education the local school provides. Of course, some local schools are superb. Too many are not, with the consequences that we see around us every day.
Third, we want to deal to the culture of welfare dependency which sees some 330,000 working age adults totally dependent on a taxpayer-funded benefit.
I heard John Key say in a speech a few months ago that Paula Bennett spends a million dollars an hour on benefits of one kind or another. Singapore spends $40 million a year on benefits.
We’re not Singapore and we’re not likely to get a Singaporean culture in New Zealand any time soon. But the present situation in New Zealand is having a devastating effect on everybody – taxpayers who are footing the bill and those whose lives are blighted by dependency.
I was once told by a prominent Maori leader that, in her opinion, the only way to deal with Maori unemployment was to totally eliminate the dole. I don’t think that’s realistic, but we should surely make it clear that anybody who turns down two job offers loses their right to the unemployment benefit.
And there should surely be some time limit on the DPB – perhaps six years, to ensure that a parent can receive that benefit until her youngest child reaches school age.
Fourth, we want to ensure that New Zealand honours the Treaty of Waitangi in its entirety – not just the bits which suit a radical Maori agenda.
You’ll recall that Article I of the Treaty involved Maori chiefs ceding sovereignty to the Crown – so we are one nation not two.
You’ll recall that Article II of the Treaty involved the Crown in return guaranteeing to protect property rights – something the ACT Party believes in very strongly – and it’s on that basis that we’ve always supported compensation being paid where it can be shown beyond reasonable doubt that confiscation of property took place.
And you’ll recall that Article III of the Treaty was a promise that all New Zealanders – no matter their ancestry, no matter when they or their ancestors arrived in New Zealand – would have the rights and privileges of British subjects. No legal preferences for any race. No separate Maori electorates. No Maori Statutory Board for the Auckland Council.
And finally, we’re committed to continuing to push for policies which ensure New Zealanders are safe – safe in their homes, safe in the street, safe wherever they go.
In the last year or so, there are some signs that the crime rate may be beginning to fall somewhat. I’d like to think that our Three Strikes policy may have had a positive effect on helping to achieve that reduction.
But there’s much more to be done. I believe that some of the most constructive things to make us safer lie in our policies on education and youth rates.
People who get a good education and have a secure job may still get into trouble with the law, but the evidence suggests they are much less likely to get into trouble than those who face a life without the rewards – financial and other rewards – of a steady job.
So better education, and allowing young people to accept a job at whatever wage an employer thinks they are worth, is important in making us all safer.
But I have no doubt we need to do more, and right now we’re consulting with experts in this field – including the Sensible Sentencing Trust – to ensure that our policies in this area are sound.
Mr President, John, if we fail to get the votes needed to ensure that ACT can make a major difference to the policies of a National-led Government, I believe that the future of our country is bleak. A country which gradually unwinds and becomes rather like an over-sized version of Fiji – relatively poor, a place of simmering tension between races, a place where people fight to increase their share of an ever-diminishing cake, a place which people seek to leave as soon as they can find another country to take them.
And that would be the ultimate tragedy because it doesn’t need to be like that.
We have a beautiful country, rich in natural resources – richer in natural resources than almost any other country in the world.
We have a country founded on a Treaty which guarantees the protection of property rights and the legal equality of all citizens.
We have a country where, for all their faults, politicians and bureaucrats are almost entirely devoid of corruption.
We have a country where we resolve our political differences with the ballot, not the bullet.
We have a country which has produced some extraordinary sons and daughters:
- the woman who fought for New Zealand to become the first country in the world to give women the vote;
- the boy from Havelock School who went on to split the atom, win a Nobel prize, and be described by Albert Einstein as “a second Newton”;
- and years later the second boy from Havelock School who, not to be outdone, led the team that put a man on the moon;
- the beekeeper from Tuakau who became the first person to conquer the world’s highest mountain;
- the woman from Wellington who was the most decorated of all the women in the Allied forces in the Second World War.
We in the ACT Party want New Zealand to be a country where people are encouraged to take responsibility for themselves, but where those who, through no fault of their own, have stumbled upon hard times, are supported through those times and actively encouraged to again have the dignity of self-reliance.
We want New Zealand to be a country where government seeks to expand the choices our citizens have, not close them down.
We want New Zealand to be a country where there is a business environment that attracts the investment that will boost productivity and incomes in New Zealand, so that Kiwis enjoy living standards every bit the equal of those in other developed countries.
We want New Zealand to be a country where we ensure that every child has access to a first class education by providing parents with choices about where their children are educated.
We want New Zealand to be a country where everybody has access to good quality healthcare because we are getting value for money in healthcare spending.
We want New Zealand to be a country where people respect the rights of others, and are kept safe from those who would abuse those rights.
We want New Zealand to be a country where people have equal rights under the law, regardless of race.
And we must be a country where, in spite of the diversity of our community, we share sufficient common values to bind us together as a nation.
This would be a country to which our children and grandchildren would want to return.
Apirana And ACT: Real Solutions To Maori Problems
ACT New Zealand leader Dr Don Brash is bemused by suggestions that he has “stooped to an all-time low” in invoking the name of Sir Apirana Ngata as part of his campaign against Maori separatism.
Na Raihana, the Maori Party’s Ikaroa Rawhiti candidate, says Dr Brash’s conjecture that Sir Apirana would be an ACT supporter if he were still alive is “despicable.”
“I’d be genuinely curious to hear from Mr Raihana why he thinks this,” says Dr Brash.
“Ngata was a proud and fierce advocate for his people, for Ngati Porou in particular. But he was adamant that Maori should credit the saving of their race to the ceding of sovereignty to Queen Victoria in the Treaty of Waitangi, granting all New Zealanders the rights of British subjects. He was also adamant that once breaches of the Treaty had been rectified, those affected should look forward, working side by side with Pakeha and not treating them as colonial oppressors from whom they should ideally secede.
“He believed in individual achievement, self-reliance, and making the most of the opportunities afforded by education. Practising what he preached, he became the first Maori to earn a university degree. In the decades that followed, he consistently urged Maori to re-embrace the spirit of self-reliance and resist what he saw as the lethal trap of welfare dependency.
“In our current context, I’m confident he would feel his values were best embodied in the ACT Party’s philosophy and policies. He surely would agree with me, for instance, that it’s better to have young Maori, of whom 38% are currently unemployed, in the work force on low wages than languishing on the dole because they may not be employed at rates lower than the adult minimum wage.
“Similarly, I strongly suspect he’d be enthusiastic about the benefits for Maori of ACT’s education policy, which would fund children into schools of their parents’ choice rather than the schools that happen to be handiest (and possibly lowest-achieving).
“Ngata was aspirational and inspirational. That’s why, as Governor of the Reserve Bank, I had his image imprinted on $50 banknotes. No one called that stooping to an all-time low.
“I wholeheartedly commend the world view of Sir Apirana Ngata to the Maori Party’s Ikaroa Rawhiti candidate. Should he become convinced of its merits, I look forward to welcoming him into the ACT Party,” Dr Brash concludes.
ENDS
Sharples Lost for Words
Maori Party co-leader and Minister of Maori Affairs Dr Pita Sharples is still unable to state a case for preferential treatment for Maori, notes ACT New Zealand’s Parliamentary Leader Hon John Boscawen.
In Parliament’s Question Time this afternoon, Mr Boscawen asked Dr Sharples if he stood by his claim during a debate on Maori TV with ACT Leader Dr Don Brash, that special measures were necessary to change the situation whereby Maori were under-achieving.
“Dr Sharples answered, ‘Aye, yes,’ but when pressed by me for examples of how ‘special measures’ had lifted Maori out of under-achievement, was unable to do so,” says Mr Boscawen.
“I wanted to know how ‘special measures’ had reduced illiteracy, unemployment, diabetes and other obesity-related diseases among Maori, in line with his statements during the Native Affairs debate. Again, Dr Sharples dropped the ball, vaguely suggesting I ask the question of society-at-large, or myself.
“Dr Sharples shouldn’t so readily trivialise these issues. ACT has incurred much odium from Dr Sharples and his colleagues for its campaign against separatism, yet when asked to point to the benefits of separatist measures, Dr Sharples could only offer monosyllabic and meaningless responses.
“Maori deserve better. ACT’s policy on youth rates, for example, would see thousands of Maori youth currently languishing on the dole, in work.
“Dr Sharples voted against Sir Roger Douglas’s private member’s Bill that would have reinstated youth rates.
“I invite him to rethink his approach and join the ACT Party in rejecting separatism and promulgating policies that really help Maori - and all disadvantaged, regardless of their skin colour,” Mr Boscawen concludes.
ENDS
Brash Challenges Sharples To TV Debate
ACT New Zealand's weekend advertisement, "Fed up with pandering to Maori radicals?" has been vindicated by the Maori and Mana Parties' responses to it, says ACT leader Dr Don Brash.
Mana Party leader Hone Harawira has branded Dr Brash a redneck dinosaur who has no place in New Zealand politics.
Maori Party co-leader Tariana Turia has called the ads "offensive" and said she won't be commenting further.
Her colleague Dr Pita Sharples has written an open letter to Dr Brash accusing him of bringing Maori aspirations into contempt and ridicule.
"The one thing missing from all of this is an argument," says Dr Brash.
"The ad stated the case against special treatment for Maori and listed 13 instances of it. Dr Sharples' defence of them consists of abuse and platitudes.
"For instance, he claims 'the inclusion of a Maori voice in the EPA and the RMA reflects our bi-cultural origins as a base from which to service all our NZ cultures.' But since when was 'biculturalism' a license for a separate and privileged voice for one of the two cultures? That's what these special, unelected authorities create. Calling me a Maori-basher doesn't alter that fact.
"Far from ridiculing Maori aspirations, the ad encourages and applauds them. Invoking the spirit of Apirana Ngata, it points out that separatism is the surest way to kill those aspirations.
"In my press release accompanying the advertisement, I wrote of the attempts by separatist militants to close down debate by resorting to epithets such as 'racist' against anyone who questions their agenda.
"I challenge Dr Sharples to debate the substance of the ad with me on television ... and to leave the ad hominems outside the studio door," Dr Brash concludes.
It’s Time to Tell the Truth
ACT New Zealand leader Don Brash says he’s proud of the content of his party’s advertisement published in this morning’s New Zealand Herald.
The advertisement is headed “Fed up with pandering to Maori radicals?” and itemises ways in which radical extremists have succeeded in imposing a separatist agenda on a long-suffering New Zealand.
“I have been warning of this creeping separatism for some time, as part of ACT’s One Law for All campaign,” says Dr Brash.
“Whether it’s the continued existence of the Maori seats when National promised to abolish them, unelected Maori boards at local government level, special status for Maori under the RMA, the proposed control by Maori over flora and fauna, the intention to make it compulsory for teachers to learn Te Reo, or any form of preferential treatment for Maori, it’s time this insidious cancer was diagnosed for what it is – a type of apartheid – and excised.
“ACT upholds the Treaty of Waitangi. Article III guarantees to all New Zealanders, Maori and non-Maori alike, the rights of British subjects. That is the standard to which we should repair again.
“Redressing property rights violations under Article II is one thing (and entirely proper); statutorily entrenching Maori in a position of privilege and superiority is quite another (and entirely improper).
“Separatist militants have been trying it on. The fact that the Dominion Post, unlike the Herald, was too cowardly to run our ad shows how well those militants have been succeeding, not only in advancing their agenda but in closing down any debate on it.
"It's time to tell them their game is up," Dr Brash concludes.
Resist Creeping Separatism, Brash Urges Wellingtonians
A Wellington City Council proposal to give Maori a formal decision-making role in the management of the city’s town belt is yet another instance of the promotion of race-based privilege to which ACT New Zealand is vehemently opposed, says ACT New Zealand Leader Dr Don Brash.
The proposal, while seeing the council remain in control of the area, would obligate it to “work in partnership with Maori” in exercising that control.
“These are simply weasel words whose true meaning is: give unelected Maori special powers denied to everyone else,” says Dr Brash.
“Council documents recognise that the proposal could be construed as giving Maori unequal say. There’s a very good reason for that. It does.
“Under the Town Belt and Basin Reserve Deed of 1873, responsibility for the area is vested in the mayor, councillors and Wellington citizens. Maori are Wellington citizens. To bestow special advisory status upon them under the guise of mana whenua is condescending, politically correct nonsense.
“There are perfectly adequate legal mechanisms already in place for dealing with any Treaty issues that may exist regarding the town belt.
“I would urge Wellington citizens to avail themselves of the consultation period beginning next month to let their council know in no uncertain terms that they don’t accept this creeping separatism.
“There is no place for apartheid in New Zealand, and ACT is determined to resist any new instance of it, as well as to remove existing examples of it, such as the Maori seats,” Dr Brash concludes.

