The Letter
3 June 2003
THE FADING GREENS
The Green Party conference at Karapiro was potentially the Party’s most important since they split from the Alliance.
The Party that had expected to be in government with Labour finds itself irrelevant and facing electoral defeat. The
Green politicians are still keen on office and can see opportunities: move to the left and take the Alliance’s electoral
support; modify their anti-GE stance and become Labour’s only option. The Greens agree the United Party is finished. How
could Peter Dunne allow his “biblically based” Commission for the Family become the politically correct Families
Commission?
GE OR NOT GE?
The Green position has been that once GE is in the environment, it’s the end of the world - so the Party has pledged
it’s a non-negotiable bottom line. The Greens had promised extra parliamentary protests when the moratorium is lifted in
October. The Party leadership went to the conference with a new strategy – oppose GE but still let us be in coalition
with a GE supporting Labour Party. Can a Party that comprises on GE credibly be called Green?
LEADERSHIP
Jeanette Fitzsimmons has promised her husband to retire at the next election. The greens’ constitution demands
gender-balanced leadership. Problem: none of the women MPs are Green. There is Sue Kedgley who is batty about battery
hens, Sue Bradford who is a red, and Metiria Turei is an anarchist/Maori sovereigntist who makes Tariana Turia look
mainstream. The next candidate on their list is Catherine Delahunty, a real Green. The Caucus has been trying to
persuade Ian Ewen-Street to take a long honeymoon with his new love and let Delahunty into parliament. He’s resisting -
so parliament may win over love for Jeanette also.
A GRAND CENTRE/RIGHT COALITION
If the left can’t form a government can the centre/right? Winston Peters has not lasted as a minister more than two
years on two occasions. NZ First’s irrational immigration views are unacceptable to ACT. An even bigger problem is
Winston’s popularist approach to big government and big spending. However National, ACT and NZ First do agree that the
Treaty industry is out of control. A coalition where ACT, not NZ First, was in second place ensuring sound economic
policies and NZ First was handling the Treaty issues, is a formula for stable government. Richard Prebble’s speech is on
http://www.act.org.nz/grandcoalition
INTEREST RATE CUT
It is expected that the Reserve Bank will cut interest rates yet again this week. The latest economic data shows a $1
billion dollar drop in earning from the farming sector last year – hard spring, drought and falling milk prices. The
Australian, British and the US Fed are all expected to lower interest rates. But should NZ? Inflation is under 3% but
only because the price of imports are falling. Strip out the imported prices and domestic inflation is at 3.5% and
rising. The critical shortage of skills is seeing wages rise faster than inflation. If the Kiwi falls (as the Governor
wants) the strong internal inflation will be revealed. Inflation is easy to create and very hard to eliminate.
HAND IN HAND WITH TERRORISM
Phil Goff’s picture, hand in hand with Arafat, was shown around the world. Goff knew when he requested his meeting with
Israeli PM Sharon that the meeting would be cancelled if he then sought to meet with Arafat. The Munich Olympic
terrorism was planned and executed by Arafat’s movement. He has done nothing to stop the suicide bombing. Goff, who
spent six months as a student on a Kibbutz in Israel has not explained why he has chosen to make this gesture of
defiance to Israel and the US. It is impossible to see how NZ’s interests have been advanced.
WHO IS A MAORI?
Associate Maori Affairs Minister John Tamihere has been predicting a dozen Maori seats, saying the Maori population will
reach 28%, 749,000, in 2021, and a million by 2051. Yeah right, and Christian Cullen is a Maori. Claiming every one with
any Maori blood is Maori is harmless when it’s rugby, but not so when it is used to pick those who govern us all.
CALL THE POLICE
The Government’s spin in Te Mangai Paho is that there is nothing wrong with the policies and procedures but they were
not followed. That’s like saying there is nothing wrong with law and order except some people break the law. Actually,
the report shows the procedures are not ok. Thousands of dollars were taken without a contract, agreements, or services.
That’s called theft. Why hasn’t the Government called in the police? Employees, including the chief executive, are
working, handing out $48 million of taxpayers’ money, without having a written employment contract. Illegal. Rodney Hide
has more to come.
GOING TO THE DOGS
Documents released under the Official Information Act show officials advised against Labour’s new dog laws. The Minister
was told, “Inform the public that there has not been an increase in the number of dog attacks and that the incidence of
dog attacks, under the current Act, is decreasing.” Officials advised that identification of dog breeds is “problematic”
and “Customs would not be able to identify and prevent the importation” of specific breeds. The UK Dangerous Dogs Act
1991 “has had no effect on the incidence of dog bites.” The ad hoc Ministerial group on dog control recommended against
the new measures. ACT will post the documents on http://www.act.org.nz/dogs this Thursday.
This message has been brought to you from the ACT New Zealand Parliamentary Office
ENDS