Transtasman Political Letter – 17 April Digest
Transtasman Political Letter – 17 April Digest
Transtasman is a subscriber newsletter published weekly and read widely in New Zealand and abroad. The following is a summary of this week's edition. To subscribe and read the full newsletter see.. http://Transtasman.co.nz
April 17th 2008
A rip-tide is running through the economy - and its political effects are significant...The PM seeks to build on her Beijing triumph...Winston Peters gets a bounce (but is it a dead cat?)...Bill English gets under Labour’s skin on electoral funding...“Demand Shock” for agricultural commodities...And the globe needs another “Green Revolution” - NZ should be in the forefront.
“Rip Tide” Hurts Households - And Govt
The favourable run of publicity the Govt earned from
its free trade deal with China may have been blunted by
fresh evidence this week of how the cost of living is
hurting households.
New Free Trade Agreement Mission
For Clark
Helen Clark, fresh from her diplomatic coup
in Beijing, will be heading to Japan and South Korea next
month determined to impress on the leaders of those
countries how a free trade agreement can energise economic
relationships.
Peters Gets A (Dead Cat?)
Bounce
Politicians will be watching a series of polls
due out in the next few days closely, to detect any mood
change in the electorate.
Govt Scores “Own-Goal”
Over Electoral Finance Legislation
National’s
Deputy Leader Bill English has ripped Labour’s credibility
on election funding, and its poorly drafted electoral
finance legislation to shreds - to the point where one of
Labour’s support parties, United Future, is calling for an
all-party conference to sort out what must be the prime
legislative fiasco of this Parliamentary term.
CAPITAL TALK
NZ’s top bureaucrats, plus a few
former PMs, were on hand in Parliament’s Grand Hall to
hear Helen Clark praise retiring Cabinet Secretary
Diane Morcom for her work in the engine-room of Govt.
Play Of The Week: Beyond Trivia
A speech by
former Listener Editor Finlay McDonald, originally to the
Centre for Science Communication, did the rounds early this
week. The speech, which appeared on a number of
Labour-leaning blogs and other internet sites, laid out why
McDonald thinks John Key should not be PM.
Transtasman is a subscriber newsletter published weekly and read widely in New Zealand and abroad. The above is a summary of this week's edition. To subscribe and read the full newsletter see.. http://Transtasman.co.nz