The Doctor's prescription for a violent, Americanised NZ
Green Co-Leader Jeanette Fitzsimons says Don Brash's 'law and order' speech this afternoon is just the latest step in
his programme to Americanise New Zealand.
"The United States has the highest proportional rate of imprisonment in the developed world and as a result it also has
the highest levels of violent crime," said Ms Fitzsimons.
"When today's speech is put alongside his US-inspired policy of making benefits a short-term measure, one can only
conclude that a Brash led government would make New Zealand a more violent and dangerous place. He signals that the
money for more prisons would come from 'welfare reform', meaning benefit cuts. In itself that would guarantee a
burgeoning prison population as social and economic marginalisation increases and people steal to feed their families.
"Few disagree that the most violent and unredeemable criminals should be locked away for life, but the law now provides
for that. There is nothing left for Dr Brash to change in that regard. But such inmates are a small minority, the ones
prison is really for.
"There are fundamental contradictions in Dr Brash's prescription for controlling crime. He acknowledges that prison
makes people worse and that the longer people are in prison the more likely they are to re-offend. Yet he says more
imprisonment is the answer.
"He criticises the lack of resources for parole monitoring, and the Greens would agree with that. But instead of better
funding, he wants to abolish parole and with it the best hope of reintegrating people into the community. The figures
speak for themselves: two years after discretionary release on parole, even with the present inadequate resourcing,
re-offending is 15 per cent. Two years after mandatory release or no parole, re-offending is 28 per cent. He pays lip
service to early intervention and rehabilitation, but makes no commitment to ensuring either actually occur.
"The Greens also agree with Dr Brash when he says the profit must be taken out of crime, especially for gangs, and that
time is being wasted on minor offences. Long-standing Green policy would achieve both goals by destroying the black
market for cannabis, from which gangs make most of their money. So far Dr Brash hasn't publicly supported that practical
proposal.
"But not only criminals make money out of crime. Private prisons are one way in which 'honest' business profits from
crime, so Dr Brash's law and order and welfare proposals would certainly ensure that one item on his privatisation wish
list can be delivered with a healthy profit attached. The Greens remain implacably opposed to anyone other than the
State imprisoning people.
"Political parties have fanned the flame of the public's fear of crime for generations, so as to present themselves as
the saviours. Tragically, if the 1989 Roper Report, which focussed on stopping re-offending through habilitation and
planned reintegration into the community, had been implemented crime would now be much less and people would be more
secure. Dr Brash's speech today is just the latest episode in this sorry history," said Ms Fitzsimons.