Free Press, 26 March 2019
The response to Christchurch
Last week, the Free Press paid tribute to the victims of the Christchurch terrorist attacks. David Seymour’s speech to the House last Tuesday is here. It contained a warning about knee-jerk reactions that are starting to become real already. We try not to quote Canadian socialists, but Naomi Klein got it right when she said: "...in moments of crisis, people are willing to hand over a great deal of power to anyone who claims to have a magic cure." New Zealand’s own history bears this out.
A
victory
In that speech, ACT called for a Royal
Commission of Inquiry: "Given that it involves the
performance of government agencies, I cannot see how the
issue arising could be visited by anything less than a Royal
Commission reporting to the Governor-General, at arm's
length from the Government of the day." Five days later,
National agreed. Yesterday, the Prime Minister said there
will be a Royal Commission into the tragedy.
What
about the Police response?
The Police response
is out of scope for the Inquiry. Why is this? Free
Press is a strong supporter of frontline Police and the
widely-held view is that Police responded admirably.
However, we have heard several unconfirmed reports that
police arrived at Al Noor mosque before the terrorist left.
If this is true, why couldn’t they stop him, or at least
follow him to the Linwood mosque? It may well be untrue, but
the timeline of events is unclear and that makes the point
that the Police response should be in scope for the Royal
Commission.
He had one job
Winston
Peters fell asleep on his mission to Turkey and failed to
deliver a simple message to Turkish President Recep Tayyip
Erdoğan. These reports confirm everything Free Press
has long said about him. All he had to say is "President
Erdoğan, our two countries have a long history. Legend has
it your predecessor said to ANZAC mothers: 'You, the
mothers, Who sent their sons from far away countries, Wipe
away your tears, Your sons are now lying in our bosom, And
are in peace, After having lost their lives on this land
they have become our sons as well.' We appeal to you to
be as magnanimous as Atatürk and stop playing the massacre
video at your rallies." He didn’t do it. At base, he
simply does not care about the people he
represents.
War and peace
Our greatest
losses of freedom occurred during the world wars. No enemy
ever set sight on New Zealand, but they didn’t have to
because our own government took our freedoms. The War
Regulations Act 1914 effectively abolished parliamentary
oversight of the law, allowing to Government to make almost
any rule it liked by regulation. Taxes were raised in both
wars, and never returned to pre-war levels. The notorious
Economic Stabilisation Act that Muldoon used and abused into
the 1980s was a consolidation of lingering wartime powers.
Then there was the censorship and
conscription.
Illogical timing
There
is some logic in the Prime Minister’s will to change gun
laws. It is not sustainable for such a deranged individual
to easily get hold of such lethal weapons. However, there is
no logic in the timing. If there was genuine urgency,
Parliament could have acted last week instead of adjourning
early on Wednesday afternoon. If there is still urgency now,
the Prime Minister could ask the Speaker to recall the House
from recess this week. Instead, limited changes will be
rushed through when the House resumes next week, completed
in only nine days in time for the Easter
Break.
The normal run of
events
Normally legislation is drafted and
introduced to the House, voted on once and referred to a
Select Committee. The Select Committee seeks public input on
the legislation, deliberates, and recommends changes before
reporting back to the House. MPs vote on the revised version
and, if it passes, a second Committee stage gives them a
chance to make further amendments. The law is only passed
after one more vote on the final amended version. This
usually takes at least six to eight months. It is a process
that’s evolved over centuries and serves us
well.
Intentions and outcomes
It’s
not enough that lots of people agree with the general
intent. We need to make sure the law as drafted actually
does what is advertised. The fact that the Prime Minister
has asked for submissions on a law that hasn’t actually
been drafted shows contempt for the law-making
process.
What could go wrong?
The
Prime Minister proposes to ‘ban every gun used in the
terror attack.’ That’s a fine intention but putting it
into law is harder than it sounds. Usually, public input and
parliamentary scrutiny fill in the gaps, but there will be
no time for this. We risk ending up with bad
law.
The wrong message
If there was
ever a time to stand up for our freedoms and traditions it
is now. The terrorist wanted to change New Zealand. By
abandoning our usual law-making process with unhealthy
haste, we are giving him a small victory. That some have
pilloried (but many have supported) David Seymour for saying
‘I can’t say if I’d vote for this legislation without
having seen it,’ shows what extraordinary times we are
living in.
A compromise
Free
Press acknowledges that the Prime Minister now cannot
not pass a law. She is far too politically invested in doing
something. We also acknowledge that there will be further
legislation later on. In fact, we predict it will be
necessary to fix up inadequacies in the legislation about to
be passed. ACT is offering to support any immediate
legislation on the basis that it has a sunset clause. That
is, the law would have a clause saying it expires after
twelve months. This way, the Prime Minister would be able to
take immediate action, but it would be clear that lawmakers
are still committed to parliamentary scrutiny and public
input.
Other matters
There are similar
arguments to be made around censorship, surveillance of the
internet, and the performance of the intelligence services.
We won’t go into them here, but ACT will continue to stand
up for our liberties.
You don’t beat identity
politics with more identity politics
There has
been a disturbing amount of identity politics in response to
the terrorist attacks. Those who rightly point out it is
wrong to say all Muslims are somehow complicit in Islamic
terrorism seem comfortable blaming all white people for one
psychopath. This is not the way to show defiance of the
terrorism. If there is one change Free Press would
like to see in New Zealand as a result of the terrorist
attacks, it is an end to identity
politics.
ends