ACT Standing Up For Rural Property Rights
ACT Leader Hon Richard Prebble today launched ACT's
rural policy in Tariki,
just south of Inglewood, in
Taranaki.
"Three years ago I came to Taranaki as the
leader of a new party and told the
leasehold farmers at
a public meeting in Eltham that ACT is a party
that
believes in private property rights," said Hon
Richard Prebble.
"ACT believes in the sanctity of
contract and no Waitangi claim should be
settled at the
expense of private property rights," he said.
"ACT and
ACT alone opposed the unilateral alteration of farmers
leases without
full compensation.
"The West Coast
lessees have been battling to get reimbursed for their
legal
costs incurred through the process of the Maori
Reserved Lands Act. They are
still waiting to get a
reply from the Government.
"Meanwhile, Alamein Kopu has
got $28,000 from the Government, paid for by
taxpayers,
for her legal costs. What the media hasn't reported is
that the
Alliance also put in for legal costs.
"Farmers
who have accepted a lump sum, have received between 35-40%
of their
rightful compensation. Any claim that there is,
is against the Crown.
"This is not an isolated case.
"Responding to urban extreme environmentalists the
Government put legislation
through Parliament changing
the property rights of South Island high country
farmers.
There are only a handful of high country farmers. ACT stood
alone in
Parliament fighting for their property
rights.
"ACT pointed out that farmers have a better conservation record than the State.
"Again and again ACT has been the voice of rural New Zealand.
"The proposal
put forward by Labour's Michael Cullen, and agreed to
by
National's Bill English, that agriculture is a sunset
industry, is rejected by
ACT.
"Agriculture produces
over half of our export income. There will always be
a
demand for clean, green, top quality food.
"National
and Labour's advancement of the knowledge industry as our
future is a
cargo cult like "think big," "value added,"
and other election year slogans.
"There are challenges
facing agriculture but it's primary production
that
offers the best prospect for export growth. Our
farmers have done the hard
yards. New Zealand farmers
have never been more efficient.
"It's off farm costs
from government and local government that are
destroying
the profitability of our country's most
important industry.
"The good news is, that it is
within our governance to rectify. When ACT
arrived at
Parliament, National and Labour were congratulating each
other on
the Resource Management Act, the OSH Act, the
Biosecurity Act, ACC and the rest
of the 5200 new laws
and regulations affecting business and rural New
Zealand
in particular. Rural New Zealand is in the
global economy. Our producers
cannot pass on these
costs.
"With just eight MPs, ACT has pushed through
ACC reform, got Government to
remove Stamp Duty and the
Broadcasting fee. With twenty MPs we could remove
the
stifling red tape and bureaucracy so that our
farmers are once again on an
international level playing
field.
"ACT has on its list more farmers and primary
producers than National, Labour
and the Alliance
combined. ACT is offering rural New Zealand positive
change.
Farmers do not want three more years like the
last.
"Labour, in its betrayal of its loyalist
supporters on the West Coast, has
served notice on
heartland New Zealand. A Labour Government will impose
'feel
good' laws on rural New Zealand even when
there is no scientific or sound
environmental reason.
If Labour thinks there is votes in it - whether it
be
requiring farmers to pay more to register their
farm guns or to employ
engineers to get reports on a
farm track - they will do it.
"Of course, the Alliance wants to be your unwanted partner in every farm.
"It
appears that the militant Greens, who are
fundamentally hostile to
commercial agriculture, may
be part of a future
Labour/Alliance/Green
government. Such a government
would be rural New Zealand's worst nightmare.
"I know
that many rural voters, to protest at the ignoring of rural
issues by
the two major parties, voted New Zealand
First. In office New Zealand First's
spending spree
was a disaster for our export industries. Mr Peters has
shown
again that he cannot pick good candidates.
ACT says to New Zealand First
voters, look at ACT's
policies and record:
· ACT alone confronts the Treaty
issue
· ACT alone calls for welfare to be a hand up not a
hand out
· ACT alone calls for truth in sentencing so
we stop letting offenders out of
jail after just a third
of their sentence
· ACT alone has stood against red
tape and bureaucracy that is crippling our
export
industries.
"Then I invite electors to look at ACT's
list that does offer the heartland
real
representation.
"I promise you the most effective
representation of rural New Zealand that this
country
has seen since the first National Government," said
Hon
Richard
Prebble.