PQ 1. Ministers—Confidence
1. Ministers—Confidence
[Sitting date: 29 July 2014.
Volume:700;Page:1. Text is subject to
correction.]
1. METIRIA TUREI
(Co-Leader - Green) to the Prime
Minister : Does he have confidence in all his
Ministers?
Rt Hon JOHN KEY (Prime
Minister): Yes .
Metiria Turei
: Does the Prime Minister agree with his Minister of
Conservation that Fish and Game should be quiet and let our
rivers become more polluted?
Rt Hon JOHN
KEY : I think that the member is misrepresenting
the Minister of Conservation.
Metiria
Turei : Well, does the Prime Minister then back the
Minister of Conservation’s threats to sue David Haynes,
the president of the Federation of Freshwater Anglers, and
to stifle Fish and Game from advocating for cleaner rivers;
if so, why?
Rt Hon JOHN KEY : Firstly,
I am not sure that the Minister ever actually said that,
and, secondly, the Minister has made it quite clear that he
is not pursuing a course of legal action.
Metiria Turei : How can the Prime
Minister have confidence in his Minister for Economic
Development when he is planning to cut real funding to
science and innovation by 21 percent over the next 10 years,
or does he think that smart Green innovation is not the
future for New Zealand?
Rt Hon JOHN KEY
: The member is quite wrong. She was wrong when she tried to
say those things last week, and she is wrong this week.
Metiria Turei : Does the Prime Minister
retain confidence in the Minister for Social Development
when she twice claimed not to have read the most important
epidemiological research on the health impacts of poverty
from Otago University, showing that in New Zealand one baby
a week dies from conditions associated with low income?
Rt Hon JOHN KEY : I have tremendous
faith and confidence in the Minister for Social Development.
I think when people look back on the history of this
Government in many years to come, they will remark on what
an incredible job she has done in terms of welfare reform,
in terms of getting people into work, in terms of her caring
about vulnerable children, and in terms of the work that she
has done to shepherd that important issue through this
Parliament. If that member could achieve about 10 percent of
what the Minister for Social Development has, she would be
doing well, but I do not hold out—
Mr
SPEAKER : Order!
Metiria Turei
: Does the Prime Minister back statements from his Minister
for Social Development that she absolutely stood by her
decision to deny newborn babies born into severe poverty at
serious risk the same baby payment that is given to other
babies, or does he think that all children in New Zealand
have the right to thrive?
Rt Hon JOHN
KEY : Yes, in the context she made them, which was
around the in-work tax credit, which, I might point out, was
actually a part of Working for Families. It was established
and implemented by the previous Labour Government.
Metiria Turei : How can the Prime
Minister have confidence in his Ministers when they are
threatening Crown entities that stand up for the
environment, meddling with scientific research, and
deliberating denying support to the poorest newborn babies
in New Zealand? Is that level of arrogance his idea of
working for New Zealand?
Rt Hon JOHN
KEY : Well, I would reject the characterisation
that the member has made , but what I would say is that not
only are we a group of people, on this side of the House,
who are focused on the important issues—the economy, law
and order, health, education, and the environment—but we
are actually a group of people who agree on the direction in
which we are going. Every time we see the Greens talking
about what they might do with Labour, with Kim Dotcom, and
with other political parties, we find complete and utter
disagreement. No wonder it is a shambles—
Mr
SPEAKER : Order!
Hon David
Cunliffe : Does he have confidence in the Minister
of Immigration given that thousands of records from the
immigration contact centre have gone missing as a result of
an IT “upgrade”?
Rt Hon JOHN KEY :
Yes, I do have confidence in the Minister of
Immigration