Key: Speech to National Party Mainland Region Conference
Rt Hon John Key
Prime Minister
National Party Leader
29 April 2012
Speech to National Party Mainland Region Conference
Forsyth Barr Stadium, Dunedin
Ladies and Gentlemen,
fellow National Party members, welcome to the Mainland
Region conference for 2012.
It’s a pleasure to be
here in Dunedin at this great new stadium. What an asset it
was during the Rugby World Cup, and continues to
be.
I’m proud to be here as leader of this great
Party – the National Party.
And I’m proud to be
here as your Prime Minister.
I’d like to thank
you all for being here today.
You are loyal
National Party members and you make this Party
strong.
It is because of you that National is in
government today.
It’s now five months since we
won the support of New Zealanders to lead this country for a
second term.
On election day last year over a
million New Zealanders voted for our clear plan to build a
brighter future.
Kiwis said yes to more jobs and
less debt.
They said yes to reforming welfare and
raising achievement in schools.
They said yes to
our tough stance on crime.
And they said yes to our
comprehensive plan to build a more competitive
economy.
Last election we achieved the highest
party vote share ever seen under MMP – 47.3 per
cent.
And we lifted that vote from a position of
being in government – that’s a great
achievement.
Fellow National Party members, we couldn’t
have done it without you.
From the volunteers right
through to our candidates, we ran a well-funded,
well-directed campaign that won the support of New
Zealanders.
I’d like to acknowledge and give my
special thanks to our Party President, Peter
Goodfellow.
Let me also thank your Regional Chairs,
Roger Bridge and Ele Ludemann. What a huge effort you put in
across the South Island.
Only a handful of
electorate seats in the South Island are not blue – and
even in those seats, our all-important Party Vote was very
strong at the election.
Let’s take a moment to
reflect on that.
Last election National reached
49.4 per cent of the Party Vote in Christchurch – that’s
higher than Auckland and Wellington.
That’s a
great endorsement of what we’re doing, following the
earthquakes in Canterbury.
And here in Dunedin, we
increased the Party Vote by six per cent in Dunedin South
and three per cent in Dunedin North.
Thank you for
making that happen.
I’m sure you’ll join me in
also thanking the great team of Ministers and Members of
Parliament representing this region.
My friend and
deputy Bill English.
Bill is about
to deliver his fourth Budget and he’s doing a great job to
get the best results for every taxpayer
dollar.
Gerry Brownlee, the
Minister for Canterbury Earthquake Recovery.
Gerry
can’t be here today because he’s travelling overseas,
but I’d like to thank him for his leadership as Canterbury
recovers and rebuilds.
David
Carter, our very able Minister for Primary
Industries, who has also taken up the challenge of Local
Government reform. David can’t be here today, but thank
you David.
Kate Wilkinson, our
Minister of Labour and Conservation. Kate’s making sure we
have the flexible and fair labour markets we need to grow
our economy and create jobs – thanks,
Kate.
Amy Adams – an excellent
addition to our Cabinet. Amy is looking after the roll-out
of ultra-fast broadband and she’s also helping Gerry with
the earthquake recovery. Thank you, Amy.
Finally,
Jo Goodhew, our Minister for the Community
and Voluntary Sector and Senior Citizens, among other
things. Jo is a welcome new addition to our
line-up.
Ladies and Gentlemen, I think you’ll
agree we have a great team of Ministers from this Mainland
region.
And right alongside them are our committed
MPs working hard for the people of the South
Island.
Michael Woodhouse, our
senior whip.
Nick Smith – a
significant contributor to the National Party over many
years, who continues to make a real contribution in
caucus.
Eric Roy, Deputy Speaker
and MP for Invercargill.
Jacqui
Dean, our hard-working MP for
Waitaki.
Colin King, looking after
Kaikōura.
Chris Auchinvole,
continuing to work hard for the people of the West Coast and
Tasman.
And last but not least, Nicky
Wagner – what a great result, turning
Christchurch Central blue on election night. Well done,
Nicky.
Fellow National Party members, I am proud to
lead a very talented Cabinet and caucus.
It is a
tremendous privilege for us to have won the trust and
goodwill of New Zealanders for a second term in government.
I don’t take that for granted and I never
will.
I believe that a government has to earn the
trust and goodwill of voters again and again, every day –
and that’s what we’ll be doing.
We have a solid
foundation to build on from our first term in
government.
We’ve worked constructively with a
number of parties in Parliament to get things done for New
Zealanders. And we’re going to keep doing
that.
I’d like to pay special acknowledgement
today to our confidence and supply partners – the Act,
United Future and Māori Parties.
As with all
partnerships, from time to time we
disagree.
That’s healthy and normal – after
all, we’re not the same party.
But our
relationships work because they are based on trust, respect
and a willingness to find solutions together.
We
have proven that we can deliver strong and stable government
in difficult times.
And despite challenges like the
global financial crisis and the destructive Canterbury
earthquakes, we’re making good progress towards that
brighter future we promised New Zealanders.
Let me
take a moment to remind you of the progress we are
making.
Under Bill English’s stewardship our
economy has grown for 10 of the past 11
quarters.
And Budget 2012 will show we are on track
to return to surplus – as we promised – in
2014/15.
So we’re in much better shape than many
other countries. But we are not resting on that.
We’re
in better shape than other countries because of careful,
responsible economic and fiscal management.
Getting
back to surplus is a challenge but we are making the
decisions required to get there, so that we can pay down
debt and have more choices about what we want to
do.
It would be so different if our free-spending
political opponents had their way.
Unfortunately
they don’t seem to have learned anything from the
turbulence of the past three years - they’re still out
there promoting expensive policies with money that hasn’t
been earned yet.
New Zealanders expect better than
that. They deserve better than that.
One of the
lessons from last year’s election was that New Zealanders
expect their government to do what they’ve been doing –
tightening its belt, paying down debt and spending
carefully.
My fellow Kiwis, the National-led
Government is doing just that.
Through our careful
management of the books we’ve been able to make economic
progress and we’re doing a number of things to benefit the
country – let me give you some evidence of
this.
In education, National Standards are in place
and we’re firmly focused on raising achievement so kids
have the skills they need to succeed in the modern
world.
We’re lifting participation in early
childhood education to the highest it’s ever
been.
We’ve opened 16 Trades Academies across the
country to give young people the opportunity to gain skills
in an environment that suits them.
In health,
we’re delivering on average an extra 27,000 elective
operations a year, and we’ve lifted child immunisation
rates from 67 per cent in 2007 to 92 per cent.
In
law and order, we’ve strengthened bail laws and brought in
tougher penalties for the worst offenders.
I’m
proud to say we’ve also made it an offence to stay silent
when it is known that a child is at risk of death, grievous
bodily harm or sexual assault.
The crime rate has
fallen to a 30-year low, and fewer people are entering the
criminal justice system. The number of people in our prisons
has dropped and we’re forecasting the first sustained
decline in the prison population since the Great
Depression.
We’ve also made it easier for
businesses to get on with doing business by reforming the
Resource Management Act, changing industrial relations law,
and lowering the costs they face.
Our multi-billion
dollar infrastructure programme is investing in rail, roads,
electricity transmission and ultra-fast
broadband.
We’ve embarked on significant welfare
reform driven by the principle that people who can work,
should work. And the Government is investing up front to
help them into work.
We’re taking the pressure
off interest rates for businesses and everyday homeowners
with our careful fiscal management.
And last but
not least, we have protected the most vulnerable by
retaining entitlements through difficult
times.
Ladies and Gentlemen, we have a record to be
proud of.
But we still have a lot to
do.
I’ve said before that the next three years
are about rebuilding and strengthening our country. We need
an economy where businesses have the confidence to invest,
grow and create new jobs.
Our four key priorities
for this term all aim to achieve that.
Our first
priority is to responsibly manage the Government’s
finances.
In a world as it is today, the state of
the country’s finances is all-important.
You’ve
all seen the volatility of world markets and the uncertainty
that still pervades through Europe.
The lesson from
what is happening in those countries is that we have to live
within our means and we have to earn our way in the
world.
That means prioritising what little money we
do have to get the best results for every dollar. You’ll
see us do that in Budget 2012 just three weeks from
now.
As we’ve indicated, this year’s Budget
will be a zero Budget – our second consecutive one with
virtually no new money.
Zero Budgets are a
challenge to pull together. But I can assure you we will
continue with the same balanced, moderate approach we’ve
adopted for the past three Budgets as we chart our path back
to surplus.
Our second priority is to build a more
competitive and productive economy.
That means an
export-focused economy which is selling more of what the
world wants, at a competitive price, and is built on a solid
base of innovation.
You may have noticed that
during Parliament’s Easter recess a number of our
Ministers, including me, travelled overseas to countries
like Indonesia, Singapore, China, Saudi Arabia and Oman to
further New Zealand’s trade interests.
There are
some great opportunities out there for New Zealand
businesses to sell their products to the world.
And
the National-led Government has an ambitious trade agenda to
harness those opportunities.
We are in negotiations
for trade agreements with nine countries in the
Trans-Pacific Partnership, including the United States, and
separately with a number of other countries including India,
Korea and Russia.
New Zealand is geographically
well placed to benefit from the still high rates of economic
growth in the Asian region.
We don’t need to look
any further than our FTA with China to see what these deals
can bring us.
New Zealand has had an FTA with China
since 2008, and since that time we have seen two-way trade
increase by 50 per cent. China has now leapfrogged the
United States to become our second-biggest trading
partner.
And Kiwi companies are moving into
overseas markets.
When I was in Indonesia just over
a week ago I was alongside Fonterra as it announced new
investment in a plant in that country. Fonterra has also
just unveiled plans to develop two new large-scale dairy
farms in China, adding to its presence
there.
Ladies and Gentlemen, our third key priority
is to deliver better public services to New Zealanders
within the tight budget the Government is operating
under.
To do this, we’ve turned around the public
service model to focus squarely on results.
New
Zealanders rightly expect a world-class health service, an
education system that delivers for every child, a strong and
effective justice system and social services that protect
our most vulnerable.
But it became clear to us
during our first term in government that the way public
services are organised needed to be improved.
So
we’ve made changes to ensure that the state sector becomes
much better at delivering value for money and achieving
results at the coalface.
The public sector will
become more innovative, efficient and focused on delivering
what New Zealanders really want and expect.
That
means getting traction on difficult issues like reducing
crime, reducing long-term welfare dependency and reducing
educational underachievement.
The public service
has been set challenges and it is now accountable for
achieving them.
Just a couple of months ago I announced
the 10 challenging results that I want to see achieved over
the next three to five years.
I won’t go into all
of them today but I’d like to talk about a few you will be
interested in.
First, I expect a reduction in long-term
welfare dependency and in particular, I want to see a
significant drop in the number of people who have been on a
benefit for more than 12 months. At the moment there are
about 215,000 people in that category, and that’s far too
many.
Second, I expect a reduction in the number of
assaults on children. Far too many children in New Zealand
suffer abuse and assault, and that is simply not
acceptable.
Third, I expect more young people to
come through the education system with a solid base of
skills, whether they get those at school or at a tertiary
institution. So I want to see an increase in the proportion
of 18-year-olds with NCEA level 2 or equivalent
qualification.
And fourth, I expect to see a
one-stop online shop for all government advice and support
that businesses need. Doing business with government, and
getting information from government, should be
easy.
These are just four of the 10 results we are
driving the public sector to achieve.
They are
difficult and demanding, in fact some of them will be
extremely difficult.
But that is as it should be.
New Zealanders have high expectations of their public
services and so should the Government.
Delivering
those results with little or no new money is a challenge the
National-led Government is well and truly up
for.
Ladies and gentlemen, that brings me to the
last of the Government’s four key priorities for this term
– rebuilding Christchurch.
Many of you here today
have been living through the aftermath of the earthquakes
and many of you have been helping with the
recovery.
I’d like to say a special thank you to
our Canterbury MPs who are doing such a great job in
difficult circumstances.
I’m proud of our
Government’s response to the series of earthquakes.
We’ve worked together with the people of Canterbury and
faced challenges alongside them.
Christchurch is
our second-largest city and it’s an important gateway to
the South Island.
It is home to so many people and it has
a big role to play in our economy.
That’s why we
moved decisively to support the people of Christchurch and
set aside $5.5 billion in a recovery fund in Budget
2011.
We supported businesses in Canterbury through
the initial aftermath of the quakes with financial help so
they could keep their staff – as many as 63,500 people
were covered by our wage subsidies.
And while I
know there are some frustrations with the recovery, there is
good progress being made, progress which compares very
favourably with international examples of disaster
recovery.
As Bill English outlined just a few days
ago, construction is underway on more than 20 significant
commercial buildings in the CBD.
Work on around 80
per cent of the 1,500 buildings required to be partially or
fully demolished in greater Christchurch has been
completed.
More than 300 infrastructure repair
projects, worth more than $700 million, are underway or
about to be completed across the city.
Over 11,000
quake damaged homes have now been repaired.
And
about 60 per cent of the more than 7000 property owners in
the residential red zone have formally accepted the
Government’s offer to purchase their
properties.
Rebuilding Christchurch is a huge task
but it is a top priority for our Government and we will
stand alongside Canterbury for as long as it
takes.
Ladies and Gentlemen, today I’ve broadly
outlined what your National-led Government is working hard
to achieve over the next three years.
We have an
extensive work programme to rebuild and strengthen the
economy, and to deliver better public services within tight
fiscal constraints.
We are focused on building a
more competitive economy so that New Zealanders can have the
jobs, higher incomes and opportunities they want here at
home.
Over a million Kiwis voted for us to
implement our plan to secure a brighter future.
They
chose aspiration over envy.
They chose careful
fiscal management over reckless spending.
And they
chose strong and stable government over an unwieldy rabble
of competing parties.
National Party members, we
have been given the mandate by New Zealanders to go ahead
and secure a brighter future for this country.
We
have a big job to do.
Let’s go out there and do
it.
Thank
you.
ENDS