Plain English - 3rd May 2002
Plain English - A Weekly Update From Bill English, National Party Leader
Treaty policy - the
challenge
There is a real sense of frustration
that Labour is moving too slowly to resolve Treaty claims.
For all its goodwill and support among Maori, Labour have so
far only completed claims where the work was largely done
before they came to office. During the last three years they
have spent $75 million running the claims process. It is
expensive and bureaucratic, and Margaret Wilson is widely
seen by Maori as having neither the time nor the grasp of
the issues to move it forward. Officials estimate it will
take 25 years to complete current claims.
Treaty policy - the plan
National's policy will
aim to get all historic claims to be on the table by
December 2003. The claims book has been open for 18 years.
National wants to move quickly to resolve grievances, so we
will need to know what the grievances are.
Once these
claims have been lodged, we've set the ambitious goal of
settling outstanding historic claims by December 2008. This
will be demanding both for claimants and the government.
But this shows a strong will from National to resolve
legitimate grievances. The claimants have shown they are
keen to discuss with us just where the bottlenecks are
because they also have an interest in settling grievances
and moving on.
I'm determined that we don't hand onto the
next generation the grievance, guilt and mistrust that many
people feel today. We need to develop a shared sense of
history, and a focus on the future, rather than the
past.
Labour losing it
Labour is
showing a surprising lack of political management in the
House and of the media as the pressure grows around Helen
Clark's personal integrity. The political news is littered
with people who have become victims of the Government's
sloppiness and management. These range from the Race
Relations Conciliator Gregory Fortuin to the latest problems
with Maori Television. It is hard for them to be credible
on these issues when Helen Clark's own integrity has been
questioned not just by Paintergate, but also by the
Securities Commission about her comments on Air New Zealand
and her revelations about the ransom payment for baby
Kahu.
Their problems are compounded every day they show
up to the House with Jim Anderton pretending to be Leader of
the Alliance who recently expelled him.
What has
surprised the media, who till recently called Helen Clark
the best Prime Minister in a generation, is Labour's
inability to bounce back from a series of problems of their
own making. All this is distracting the focus from those
issues that are of real interest to the public like law and
order, getting teachers in front of classrooms, achieving a
workable health system and sustaining economic growth.
Labour has failed to mount any attack on National's
Economic, Treaty and Workplace policies (see
national.org.nz).
Alliance: Jim's New
Party
This week Jim Anderton launched a website
for his new party, the "Progressive Coalition". The website
asks for donations, and has a feature entitled "Jim
Anderton's announcement on leaving the Alliance". Yet
despite all this, we are expected to believe that he is
still the Alliance leader in Parliament.
This farce,
encouraged and condoned by Helen Clark, is making a mockery
of the House of Representatives. Large amounts of time are
now being wasted trying to clarify this bizarre situation.
It is evident in the House that Labour's middle-ranked MPs
and backbenchers are demoralised by Jim Anderton's obvious
duplicity and Helen Clark's inability to defend her
Coalition arrangements. Clark and Labour are consistently
on the defensive in Parliament and things are likely to stay
that way through to the election.
No need for an early
election
Talk about an early election confirms
Labour have become much more defensive about their prospects
as interests rates rise, commodity prices fall and their own
internal problems get worse. There is no need for an early
election. Helen Clark is right when she says they have the
numbers in the House. No matter what happens, all 10
Alliance and Progressive Coalition Party members will
support her Government. The public do not support an early
election simply for the convenience of Helen Clark and the
Labour Party. That means they must see out their term with
the consequences of campaigning on integrity and governing
with hypocrisy. However smart their arrangements in
Parliament, they are simply
wrong.