Kiwis Say ’Yes’ Auckland Is Sucking the Life Out of NZ
MEDIA RELEASE
FOR IMMEDIATE
RELEASE
Wednesday 14 August, 2013
Kiwis Say ’Yes’ Auckland Is Sucking the Life Out of New Zealand On Tv3’s the Vote
Does New Zealand need Auckland to keep growing, and growing fast – or are Auckland’s gains at the expense of the country and economy as a whole?
Tonight Kiwis voted YES to the moot ‘Auckland is sucking the life out of New Zealand’ during national debate programme The Vote, which screened on TV3.
Duncan Garner and the Affirmative team were declared the winners of the debate at the end of the hour-long show with the votes tallied at 73% YES, 27% NO.
Viewer votes:
Facebook | Website | Text | TOTAL | |
66%
YES 34% NO | 56% YES 44% NO | 72% YES 28% NO | 76% YES
24% NO | 73% YES 27% NO |
The theatre audience voted before and after the debate. The results are:
Theatre audience
vote – prior to debate | Theatre audience vote – end of debate |
24% YES 70% NO 6% UNDECIDED | 19% YES 80% NO 1% UNDECIDED |
During the debate, viewers were also invited to vote in a Facebook poll which asked ‘Is Wellington dying?’ The results were 44% YES, 56% NO.
Dubbed ‘competitive current affairs’, The Vote sees co-hosts Duncan Garner and Guyon Espiner each month lead two teams to debate a hot topic, with Linda Clark keeping order as referee.
In tonight’s debate, Duncan Garner led the ‘For’ team, with Economist Ganesh Nana, comedian Urzila Carlson, and former Mayor of Christchurch Garry Moore. Joining Guyon Espiner on the ‘Against’ team are businessman Tenby Powell, actor, director and broadcaster Oliver Driver, and Auckland Mayor Len Brown. Broadcaster and lawyer, Linda Clark was again charged with keeping the debaters in line and on topic.
The arguments FOR:
•
“We need a team New Zealand framework, we need a team New
Zealand approach and Auckland growing on its own is not
working, we need the regions to grow as well … we’re
focussing on Auckland and our economic policies are focusing
on trying to solve Auckland’s problems and that’s to the
detriment of our heartland in terms of our exports.”
- Ganesh Nana
• “The way that
Auckland has grown in the past, it has sucked the life and
it’s continuing to suck the life in terms of our economic
policy framework. We’re not focussing on exports, we’re
focussing on domestic production.” – Ganesh
Nana
• “It’s kinda like a hostage
situation ... I would love to live somewhere else, you know.
Like Feilding, my partner’s from Feilding, we’d love to
live down there but the work is here and so I’m stuck
here.” – Urzila Carlson
•
“Auckland behaved badly, and central government gave them
a central city and I think Len is leading them very well but
I think what’s happened is that the rest of the country
has got caught in a Auckland dominates the thinking of
Wellington politicians and what we need in New Zealand is
proper regional development strategies that actually embrace
the whole country, so I’m talking about raising all the
boats just not knocking Auckland.” – Gary
Moore
• “I look at Auckland and I see it
as sort of the kid in middle school that has developed
muscles first and is bullying the rest of the country and
saying I can take your lunch money if I want to and it does
most times.” – Urzila Carlson
•
“What we actually have to do as a country is say – how
will central government understand us? Because in the South
Island, I think we need to form a South Island Party, we’d
have the balance of power forever.” – Gary
Moore
The arguments
AGAINST:
• “New Zealand wouldn’t exist in
its current form without Auckland and I’m just backing off
what Ganesh said we need to be a combined team.” –
Tenby Powell
• “I love New
Zealand, all of it. And I really love Auckland and one of
the things that’s always broken my heart as a New
Zealander is the fact that we diss our own cities and we
diss our own country and as for somebody who has lived here
my entire life, we’ve just reached the stage where we’re
just proud of it!... Isn’t it fantastic that we finally
have a city that you can achieve things in?” –
Oliver Driver
• “We’re not a
drain. By the sounds of the poll that we had here in the
audience tonight, half of them want to go somewhere else,
maybe around the country.” – Len Brown
• “We’ve talked about the potential with
entrepreneurial development but there’s also tourism and
so 75 per cent of the international visitors come in through
the Auckland international airport. We are really focussed
as a city on bringing more and more tourists into our
nation, so they’re coming through this gateway. They may
stay for a while, but we want them to come in through our
cruise ship terminal and the airport and then go around the
nation.” – Len Brown
• “It is
a myth [that Auckland doesn’t produce anything]. Every
region in New Zealand has their own economics and Auckland
can be defined very specifically around tourism, the marine
sector, export education is particularly strong in Auckland,
the film industry – both feature films, television
commercials and sitcoms, it’s hugely big in Auckland and
growing, ever-growing. Food processing and manufacturing –
there are 74-thousand manufacturing jobs in Auckland alone,
double the next biggest centre which happens to be
Canterbury.” – Tenby Powell
•
“Two and a half million, three million [Aucklanders],
those are seen as the optimal in terms of international best
practice and I think that that would be just right for us.
But we do need a couple of other extra cities to really
start taking some pace on … We need to build on average 12
to 13 thousand houses per annum.” – Len
Brown
• “I’m at the top of my career,
I’ve got three flatmates. I live in a house [I don’t
own, but] I still get to live in this great metropolis. I
could own a house and live in Blenheim but as Urzila says I
couldn’t have the lifestyle and the work that I have there
so I choose to live in this city.” – Oliver
Driver
The Vote is produced by TV3’s News and Current Affairs division with funding from NZ On Air, and screens once every four weeks in the same timeslot as 3rd Degree.
ENDS