Labour’s Five Year Time Warp
LABOUR’S FIVE YEAR TIME WARP
12 October 1994:
Peter Dunne resigns from the Labour Party, citing as the main reasons its plans to repeal the Employment Contracts Act and put taxes up for those earning over $60,000. He says Labour has become more interested in appeasing the Alliance, than meeting the needs of people in electorates like his.
12 October 1999:
Labour’s bottom-line commitments
for the coming election, which it says it will not deviate
from, are still to put taxes up for those earning over
$60,000, and repeal the Employment Contracts Act.
“Labour is trapped in a time-warp and fixated by icon
politics.”
“It is as facile today as it was in 1994 for Labour to seriously suggest that all New Zealand’s ills can be resolved by putting up taxes and repealing the Employment Contracts Act, yet that is the only mantra Labour seems capable of clinging to,” Mr Dunne says.
Mr Dunne says that, according to the latest polls, Labour may well need United’s support to form the next Government.
“While Labour remains trapped in its self-imposed time warp of high taxes and union-dominated industrial relations, there is absolutely no prospect of United supporting a Labour-led Government.”
“I simply have no desire to re-enter the time warp I so gladly left in 1994,” he says.
ENDS
New
Zealand’s Liberal Party
MEDIA STATEMENT
HON PETER
DUNNE, MP
LEADER UNITED NEW ZEALAND
Parliament
Buildings, Wellington 1.
e-mail:
peter.dunne@parliament.govt.nz. Internet Address:
http://www.united.org.nz
New Zealand’s Liberal
Party