Dunne Speaks: Who is a migrant?
29 May 2014
At one level, all of us are migrants – it is just a matter of when we arrived here. At another, if you believe New
Zealand First’s bigots and Labour’s xenophobes, we are being overrun today by hordes of migrants arriving here with the
expressed purpose of buying up all our houses.
This is not one of those arguments where the truth lies in the middle – because it does not. The first proposition (that
we are a migrant nation) is far closer to the truth than some of us might care to appreciate. The second is merely
racist buncombe. But that is not really the nub of the argument.
Of far more concern is the developing race between various political parties – now from National downwards – to take the
allegedly “responsible” line of proposing immigration curbs. (Perhaps the most ludicrous of the many comments so far was
that of the Labour leader who said the problem had arisen because too many New Zealanders were returning and not enough
are leaving!)
The reality is that immigration is not just a crude tap to be turned on and off to fit the prevailing political mood. It
is in fact a core component of population policy, something we have never had, but which should lie at the heart of our
environmental and societal sustainability.
In the rather unseemly debate now occurring, where we are just one fragile step away from defying history’s sober lesson
and formally blaming migrants for a range of social ills, only one party – UnitedFuture – is so far prepared to stand in
opposition to the approaching tide.
This is because of our strong belief that New Zealand does need a dramatic boost in its population over the next few
years, if New Zealand is to retain a sufficiently viable economic base to protect its sovereignty. And then there is the
contribution that immigration makes to our national diversity.
The mix of immigrants to New Zealand, from Europe, Asia, Africa, and the Pacific, alongside our indigenous Māori
dimension, has the unique capacity to shape the New Zealander of the future as a person like no other in the world. Our
children and grandchildren can have the privileged opportunity of growing up in the world’s first genuinely equal
multi-ethnic society, and in turn being equally at home in the various worlds that compose our national tapestry. Our
generation has the chance to make this happen, and it is an exciting challenge we should not shy away from.
But then, the grim reality of the contemporary New Zealand debate arises again – a narrow, increasingly bitter and
small-minded discussion focused on securing short-term political advantage.
This is a race to the bottom we do not need, nor deserve. Our country’s future, literally, depends on leadership
prepared to be firm and principled, and acting in the long-term interests of our country. We need politicians with the
boldness to provide that.
Ends