22 November 2004
Hon Matt Robson MP, Progressive Deputy Leader
Raising the drinking age is the most effective step to take
Overseas evidence shows that the most effective single step Parliament could take to curb binge drinking by teenagers
is to raise the drinking age, says Progressive MP Matt Robson.
"I wasn't going to comment on the recent tragic death of a teenager who had drunk extraordinary quantities of alcohol on
licensed premises. However, I've been asked to comment on United’s repetition, after this tragic case, of their call for
different alcohol purchasing ages for bars, restaurants and bottle stores.
"Sadly, the case involved merely highlights why United's proposal that New Zealand retain an 18 year age limit at
licensed premises wouldn't have helped," Matt Robson said.
The Progressive Party is campaigning to have the next coalition agreement require Parliament as a whole to re-examine
the drinking age, lowered to 18 from 20 in 1999.
Progressive wants to raise the drinking age to 20 and is confident that other parties, including United, will act once
Parliament looks at all the evidence.
On Friday, United MP Marc Alexander used his weekly column to highlight his party's policy which is to retain the 18
year old age limit in licensed premises, but raise the minimum legal purchasing age to twenty in bottle stores. He said:
"The avoidable death of 19 year old Willy Cranswick through alcohol abuse will raise the call for tougher alcohol laws.
It is an understandable reaction. While everyone seems to want to blame the industry, the bar manager, and even that
nebulous concept, the culture of binge drinking, we should acknowledge that Willy himself was complicit; at 19 years he
could have made different choices. Although we can put some blame on the bar manager for not monitoring the clearly
dangerous manner in which Willy was drinking, it was Willy's own choice to consume the staggering number of 24 double
bourbons in just four hours. No one forced him . . he was of legal age . . and he died."
http://www.marc-alexander-mp.org/marc_my_words.htm . . . . more “Blaming Willy Cranswick for his own death allows the liquor industry, which vigorously promotes alcohol
consumption, to be absolved of all responsibility. Binge drinking is a fact, and Parliament has a responsibility to take
the necessary steps to reduce alcohol harm,” said Matt Robson.
ENDS