Speech: Peters - Eight Years of Promises
Speech by New Zealand First Leader and Northland MP
Rt Hon Winston Peters
Kelston Community
Centre,
126 Awaroa Road, Sunnyvale,
West
Auckland
2pm, Sunday, 30th October, 2016
“Eight Years of Promises, But Where
is the Performance”
Ladies and gentlemen, eight years ago many of
you would have voted National because, understandably,
having heard their promises, you thought they would do
better.
That’s not unusual. All of us have taken a punt
in the past. And have learned to our regret when things turn
out differently.
New Zealand First is here today because
we understand the concerns you have for your
community.
We know you want jobs for your
families,
That you want affordable homes.
That you
want to be assured your streets are safe.
We know you
want your children to have opportunities for a good
future.
The question for you to consider is – have
things gone better for you under National since they came to
power promising so much in 2008?
Has Auckland become a
better place to live?
Are you better off now than you
were back then?
CRIME
Let’s face it, the National Party resembles
nothing so much as a bad used car salesman.
All pre-sales
talk, no after-sales service.
You have a serious crime
issue here in West Auckland. Like many other areas in New
Zealand.
We have too few police.
The police budget has
been frozen since 2010, despite the huge population
increase.
In 2009 there were well over 3000 general duty
constables. (3161)
Now there are about 500 less.
(2593)
We are well behind Australia in police relative to
the population.
Australia has one officer for every 432
people.
In New Zealand that officer has almost a hundred
more people to deal with (526).
If we remove those on
traffic duties, we only have one police officer to 600
people.
That is unacceptable, but that’s what happened
under National.
They never kept their election promise in
2008 to maintain the modest goal of one officer to every 500
people.
Months ago New Zealand First pledged to train
1800 extra Frontline Police as soon as possible. The cost is
slightly more than $300 million.
This is a bottom line.
We don’t expect you just to believe our promises. We have,
uniquely, got the record to back it up.
In 2005-2008 we
got an extra 1000 more Frontline Police and 235 Back-up
Staff.
POLICE SUPPORT
To help make NZ safe again we would provide
real support for Neighbourhood Support, Community Patrols,
and Māori and Pasifika Wardens.
They act as extra eyes
for the police.
The signing of an agreement between
Community Patrols and the NZ Police this year was a positive
sign of teamwork.
The newly formed Auckland Safety
Community Patrol is made up of people applying to join the
NZ Police.
Community patrols do a wonderful job all over
New Zealand.
Here in West Auckland you have community
patrols at:
Te Atatū, New Lynn, Kelston, Massey and Glen
Eden.
New Zealand First will provide them with greater
government resources to ensure local ratepayers and
businesses do not have to fund them alone.
We would make
it a priority as part of these extra resources that the
community patrols monitor dairies and bottle stores to
combat the epidemic of robberies.
AUCKLAND
PROBLEMS
Many in the media
have “discovered” immigration as an issue, the same way
Columbus discovered America – purely by accident. They
have taken a long time to admit what is going on, in
Auckland and elsewhere now.
The soaring cost of housing,
congested roads, the struggle to get doctors, hospitals, and
numerous other problems, is changing Auckland for the
worse.
In July, Minister of Housing Nick Smith said it
was crucial to have skilled workers in Auckland for the
building boom.
This Minister has bored the whole country
witless with endless excuses for a growing crisis every
other party ignored.
That it’s impossible for many to
buy or rent a home here Nick Smith totally ignored.
So,
we have the bizarre situation of foreign workers coming here
while skilled Kiwis avoid the city.
Auckland has been in
deep trouble for some time.
It cannot attract either a
lower paid workforce or many professionals. For example,
teachers are exiting Auckland or not applying to come here
because they can’t afford a home.
Whilst New Zealand
First has been saying that others have preferred to hold
their noses and spout “racism”.
HOUSING
The
housing shambles in Auckland is so bad that even “Mr Spray
and walk away”, Prime Minister Key, has woken up to
it.
Recently he confessed, finally, that housing
development here would “take some time”.
But “eight
years ago he was campaigning on a four-point plan to solve
what he called the ‘housing affordability crisis’, to
fix what he said was the “second worst affordability
housing problem in the world”.
Eight years on we all
know it’s got much worse.
Eight years ago he was
promising to deliver as PM. What he wasn’t going to do
wasn’t worth talking about.
Remember he was the Merrill
Lynch man from Wall Street.
He claimed to have the
experience, the know all and the where all, to fix
it.
Well, eight years ago he got his chance and he
hasn’t fixed anything – except the gap between the haves
and have-nots has grown and there are far fewer haves
now.
In Auckland last year, 9,251 housing consents were
approved but barely half were completed (5,073).
Overseas
buyers and property speculators have had a great time in the
Auckland property market.
In under a year, 97 properties
in West and South Auckland were sold three times
each.
More than 1400 were sold twice.
The speculators
who buy these houses don’t want to live in West
Auckland.
These speculators don’t give a rat’s
derriere about any of you.
MORE HOUSES - NZ
FIRST POLICIES
Instead of
selling off state houses around the country, the government
should have built many more decent houses.
Be assured New
Zealand First has the housing policy to clean up the
mess:
We would provide real government assistance for
first home buyers.
We would establish a new state agency
to secure the land to build the houses for sustainable
residential development.
NZ First would have a Housing
Commission to do the strategic planning.
We would
establish Kiwi Housing to buy and develop land where and
when needed, and to sell homes to first time house buyers on
affordable 25 year terms.
We will be releasing details on
our housing policy later in the campaign.
IMMIGRATION
Ladies and gentlemen, “an immigrant is
someone living legally in a country not of his or her
birth”.
Immigration can have a very beneficial effect
on a country’s economy and social life – provided it is
managed, rational, and focused on economic and social
improvement to that economy.
What we have seen in New
Zealand for over two decades is everything but that.
Many
of our problems stem from the surging torrent of immigration
- the direct cause of our biggest ever annual increase in
population.
Last year New Zealand’s population
increased by a record 97,000 plus. (97,300)
Net
immigration is running at over 69,000 a year.
Most are
coming to Auckland.
That means we are creating in
Auckland a city the size of New Plymouth through permanent
immigrants – every year.
Only a fool would think that
was sustainable.
Jobs, housing, hospitals, healthcare,
schools, roads and transport – are all under massive
pressure and it will get worse.
Add to this, tens and
tens of thousands of international students from 176
countries that came here last year, many having work
visas.
Auckland has climbed from being the world’s
ninth most expensive city for housing to the
fifth.
It’s still climbing.
Ignore the silly
comparison of Auckland to London, New York or Sydney.
That’s ridiculous when the comparison should be with
Brisbane or maybe Birmingham.
Some of our political
opponents have at last sensed the public mood and made dog
whistles about how immigration might be getting out of hand.
Before that they were New Zealand First’s biggest critics,
dismissing the consequences of an immigration
tsunami.
Now Treasury, MBIE, ANZ and others are saying
the same thing, albeit insipidly - almost apologetic for
having to own up to what’s been staring them in the face.
You’ve known it, they haven’t.
However, rational
economists like Kerry McDonald have described our current
rate of immigration as “a national disaster.”
We’re
cramming more and more people into Auckland without any
plans or infrastructure to handle it.
What you’ve read
so far of their plans is pie in the sky Neverland.
Put
your hand up, anyone who thinks the new Auckland Supercity
is going to provide the answers without massive rate
increases for all of you.
And whilst we are at it – who
would trust someone who created the problem to solve that
problem. They just haven’t got the guts to. They never had
the guts to own up to the problem and they don’t have the
guts to fix it.
The tap must be turned down to around
10,000 skilled immigrants a year.
We should only accept
immigrants our economy needs – not those who need our
economy.
And New Zealand First will restore integrity to
Export Education.
We’ll stop ripping off both foreign
students and our economy.
New Zealand First policy is to
train, educate and employ our people first.
We’ll stop
immigration being used as a lousy excuse for failing to do
that.
NZ SUPER
It is obvious the government knows they must do
something about immigration.
Recently Immigration
Minister Michael Woodhouse, in a complete about face,
temporarily suspended the immigration parent category to
deal with a two-year backlog. Almost 2500 parent category
people are waiting for their applications to be
processed.
The fact is the parent category has been an
appalling drain on NZ taxpayers. That would not be tolerated
anywhere else in the world.
But John Key glorifies in it.
When much of the world is a hell hole he says mass
immigration is a sign of confidence in our economy.
Or he
says most of it is New Zealanders returning home which is
demonstrably false.
You would have to be as shallow as a
bird bath to think you could get away with those
statements.
Where else on earth can you arrive in a
country, get full medical benefits on day one, then after
only 10 years receive full entitlement to national
superannuation?
Only one political party has said that is
wrong and we are asking you to ask all of the other
political parties to explain why they support that.
To
address this issue NZ First has long had our:
NZ
Superannuation and Retirement Income (Fair Residency)
Amendment Bill.
In a sane political environment that bill
would have gone to the top of the order paper and been
passed.
This bill raises the minimum residency
qualification for NZ Super from 10 years to 25 years.
EMPLOYMENT
Last year just under 25 per cent of 15 to
24-year-olds in the Henderson-Massey area were not in
training, education or work.
Twenty-nine per cent of
Maori in the area were unemployed, followed closely by
Pasifika youth at 27 per cent.
The number of unemployed
NZ European youth in the area was 19 per cent.
Overall,
20 per cent of Auckland's youth population were unemployed -
around 23,000 residents.
The statistics have changed much
since then.
Why are so many of our youth left
idle?
Why are they not being encouraged to get into the
building and other industries here in Auckland? There was a
time when NZ did just that.
The building industry is
crying out for workers.
The government is years late with
quick fire courses to get these young people off the dole
and into work.
Recently a journalist criticised me for
being nostalgic about a past that she said “never existed
in NZ”. That journalist has been in this country five
minutes, knows nothing of NZ’s proud past, but of course
that did not stop her from airing her worthless opinion. As
have others.
You here know exactly what I mean.
THE ONE FACT THIS GOVERNMENT AND ITS “KLING
ONS” WILL NEVER TELL YOU
In recent years under
different governments there have been all manner of
“experts” who argue high immigration is good for New
Zealand.\
The one fact they dare not mention is that
whilst GDP has grown with population growth, GDP per person
has gone down.
Any fool knows that a family with mum, dad
and two children, that has two more children, whilst their
household income goes up marginally is worse off per person
in that house.
Every family man and woman in this
audience knows that – how come the geniuses on high
salaries in Wellington don’t?
CONCLUSION
The fact is the National
government takes areas like West Auckland for
granted.
Remember how your “Westie MP” Paula Bennett
couldn’t be seen for dust and small pebbles when a new
electorate in Auckland gave her the chance to get out of
here.
They have no constructive policies to address your
issues.
Rather than showing concern for West Auckland,
they’d rather pander to the requirements and demands of
other economies and international corporates.
They tax,
levy and charge you to the eyeballs whilst doing absolutely
nothing about international corporate tax dodging in this
country.
In terms of tax, GST and other government
charges many of you are paying well over 50 per cent of your
income to the government. In contrast some of these billion
dollar corporates are paying less than half a cent of tax in
this country.
A fair government would fix that. But there
is nothing fair about this new breed of National.
New Zealand increasingly resembles a puppet province of
China.
The Chinese are not buying up our farms, or
acquiring control of our biggest red meat export business,
or buying our houses and businesses out of benevolent good
will.
They’re here to gain what they want from this
country. New Zealand First understands that. New Zealand
First does not blame the Chinese for that.
We blame
temporarily empowered transient politicians who forget the
day after the election who gave them the power in the first
place.
National is doing its utmost not to upset
international interests.
They are letting them do what
they like.
They have done nothing about dodgy plumbing
products and steel being dumped into our domestic
markets.
National has allowed Chinese and other
nationals in their tens of thousands to immigrate here and
speculate on housing and land. But don’t blame them. If
you came from some parts of the world you would do your
utmost to improve your family’s future. But patriotic
governments weigh that against the future of their own
citizens first.
National did nothing when China moved
against NZ infant formula exporters and drove them out of
business.
National actively supported the take-over of
our biggest meat exporter.
The Chinese lean on reputable
Kiwi exporters like Zespri and National takes it without
batting an eye.
And the TPPA might be dead now, as we said a year ago it would be, but be under no illusion, there are those in Parliament, including National, who will sell you out for that deal if you give them a future chance to.
National should be forced to take the capital
“N” out of their name – or live up to it.
Recently
the government refused to meet democracy advocates form Hong
Kong – again through pressure from China.
Anson Chan
and Martin Lee were denied a government hearing but they met
US Vice-President Joe Biden and Australian Foreign Minister
Julie Bishop.
The government is more interested in
keeping in good with their wealthy financial donors than
working in the best interests of all New Zealanders.
Have things gone better for you under National since
they came to power in 2008?
- Has Auckland become
a better place to live?
- Are you yourself better
off?
If the answer is no to those three questions, we are
asking you to do something about it.
We are offering the
chance to change New Zealand’s economic and social
direction for the better. And before it is too late.
With
your help we can most certainly do it.
So let us all make
a commitment here today to change our New Zealand.
To
regain the quality of society that we once had.
To
rebuild our economic wealth and to share that wealth more
fairly.
When we all commit to doing that, history will
record 2017 as being the year New Zealand regained its
soul.
ENDS