robson-on-politics 22 August
robson-on-politics 22 August
Mark 20th , 21st Sept in your diary Four weeks from today I will be getting ready for the Progressives' inaugural conference at the Waipuna Hotel & Conference Centre on the banks of the Panmure Basin.
I expect that over 150 delegates will come together Sat 20th & Sun 21st Sept to celebrate our formation, success in getting elected to the 47th Parliament, and the pro-gress we have made in a year in coalition government.
We've had a good year: more people in jobs (1,911,000) than ever before; unemployment at the lowest since 1987; progress on four weeks leave; achieved a Corner-stone Commitment on work/life balance; and more.
Everyone is welcome to the public sessions and
members of course can attend the whole conference. Contact
Sally Griffin, sallygriffin@xtra.co.nz
The full programme is
at
http://www.progressive.org.nz/modules.php?name=Sections&op=viewarticle&artid=78
Ross Wilson and Sir Howard Morrison Two
prominent New Zealanders will be delivering keynote
addresses to conference on the Saturday morning from 11am.
Ross will be speaking on working life issues, an important
issue for the Progressives as we work to deliver more jobs
and a better quality of life. Sir Howard speaking on Maori
development will be able to talk about his hands-on
experience in providing education and leadership for young
people. He works under contract to Te Puni Kokiri delivering
initiatives for rangitahi (youth development). I expect both
speakers to attract significant attention.
Making
progress on work-life balance Progress on work-life
balance issues is a cornerstone commitment for the
Progressives - a top priority issue, which we wrote into the
coalition agreement. On Tuesday, the coalition announced an
integrated work programme to develop family-friendly and
other policies promoting work-life balance. As the Jobs
Party, work for all who can work is the our top priority.
Not for the sake of it, but to enable all to enjoy a
fulfilling life. There needs to be a balance between work
and the enjoyment of life outside work. See:
http://www.progressive.org.nz/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=398
and the Cornerstone Commitment at
http://www.progressive.org.nz/modules.php?name=Sections&op=viewarticle&artid=10#workandfamily
with policy links
Pacific Forum The Forum got
off to a spectacular start with an amazing cultural
performance which showed the journey through Polynesia to
New Zealand for many Pacific peoples. It reflected both the
hardship and the triumph in the new country of New Zealand.
The conference itself had the hard job of concentrating on
key developmental issues that are at the root of instability
in the Pacific. There was clearly a clash between the
Australian concept of policing the Pacific as against New
Zealand's more balanced approach to development and
security. Sadly, little progress was made on the tough issue
of West Papua, although Vanuatu pushed hard.
Media
analysis on safer communities Of course I like it when
the media say positive things about the Progressives, but it
was more than that when I read New Plymouth's Daily News
paper of 16 August. Under the headline 'Catching lawless
before they can commit their crimes' they said: "The award
for the most commonsense suggestion on crime prevention
recently has to go to Progressive Coalition MP Matt Robson,
who says there needs to be a stronger push to intervene with
young people before they start a life of crime. He says
helping an angry and defiant five-year-old costs $5000 and
has a 70% chance of success. It is a lot cheaper than
locking the same person up as an adult offender at a cost of
$50,000 and with a 75% chance of re-offending." The Daily
News recognizes that there is more to the justice debate and
safer communities than the simplistic lock-'em-up-for-longer
arguments of some politicians. We need to stop crime before
it happens. I will keep on saying that early intervention is
one of the best tools to do this, and we must have more of
it. See:
http://www.progressive.org.nz/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=395
and Matt Robson's About time report (pdf format) at
http://www.corrections.govt.nz/pdf/publications/abouttime.pdf
More on these issues at www.progressive.org.nz