Right Talk
From The Office Of Bill English
4 April 2003
Positioning for 2005
The next steps in positioning National for the 2005 election fall into place at our Constitutional Conference on 12
April. The proposed changes are the biggest since National was founded and are designed to create the best organisation
for an MMP environment. Following the conference, a new Chief Executive will be appointed. Last week, I announced the
appointment of former Dominion Editor, Richard Long, as my Chief of Staff, and that has been widely welcomed. National
has confirmed its key policy areas - Growth, Welfare, Education and Treaty. A steady stream of major discussion
documents in these areas will be released in the coming months. I will not be distracted from our main purpose.
Stop the PC Nonsense
We have a mission to put a stop to the cringing political correctness that is suffocating development. That's the
message I took to hundreds of New Zealanders at public meetings in provincial cities this week. Here's an example of
what Labour is up to. They are changing the law to force councils to recognise and provide for "ancestral landscapes" as
"matters of national importance" when considering planning applications. The definition of "ancestral landscapes" is
dangerously vague. It includes land owned by your ancestors (Maori only), places of cultural significance and their
surrounding environment. It could also include rivers, lakes and seas. This piece of legislation could give Maori a
disproportionate say over the development of large tracts of New Zealand. It deserves detailed discussion, but Labour
has banned public submissions to the Select Committee about these changes. You get no say. The current law has caused
problems; the new law will certainly make them worse. In a couple of years, National will repeal this.
Regrettable Damage to long-term interests
Arab newspapers ran Helen Clark's comment that the Iraq War would not have happened if Al Gore were US President as
pro-Saddam propaganda this week. Her diplomatic gaffe led the US to ask for a please-explain from the New Zealand
embassy in Washington and the administration has described her comments as "regrettable." Clark has yet to express any
regret. What may be more worrying is the Australian reaction to New Zealand, which is why I sent my Foreign Affairs
spokesman, Dr Wayne Mapp, to Canberra recently. He tells me there is growing anger across the Tasman about Clark
undermining Australia's stance. She would have done better to take Canadian Prime Minister Chretien's advice that "we
should not say anything that would give Saddam Hussein comfort at this time." No matter what her views, there was no
need to alienate traditional friends and allies. New Zealand's long-term interests lie with countries like the US,
Australia and the UK, not lining up against them.
ENDS