7 September 2005
Labour’s Homosexual Agenda: Crushing Free Speech
The Labour Party’s ‘hidden’ agenda is to boost the number of high profile “gay” lobbyists, like Wellington lawyer
Charles Chauvel and former party president and outspoken lesbian, Ms Maryan Street, (placed at number 44 and 36
respectfully on the party list), within its parliamentary ranks. This will help it achieve its social engineering
legislative programme that is so dear to the heart of the “gay” and feminist cabal within the party: same-sex marriage,
“gay” adoption, anti-discrimination laws to protect trans-sexuals and hate-speech laws to crush all criticisms of
promiscuous homosexual lifestyles.
Charles Chauvel: “Gay” Labour Candidate and “attorney-general wannabe”
Labour’s candidate for the Ohariu-Belmont electorate, Charles Chauvel, is a Wellington lawyer who has been described as
an active “homosexual lobbyist.” [ref. 1] According to a “gay” website GayNZ.com, he is “hoping for support from gay
constituents who wish to help unseat the fundamentalist United Future party from Parliament.”
Chauvel is reported as saying that the removal of Hon. Peter Dunne, the United Future Party’s leader, from the House of
Representatives, “would rid Parliament of a party that has proved itself to be extremely homophobic” [ref. 2] (N.B.
“homophobic” is a term of abuse used regularly by extremist and intolerant “gay”- ‘rights’ political lobbyists).
At the last election the Labour Party stood another prominent “gay”–‘rights’ lobbyist against Peter Dunne, the Executive
Director of the NZ Family Planning Association and outspoken lesbian, Dr Gillian Greer. Dunne easily won the seat,
gaining 19,355 votes, a majority of 12,534 votes over his nearest rival (Greer). (The United Future Party gained 6.69%
of the party vote nation-wide).
One wonders whether Mr Chauvel has grasped the fact that Peter Dunne, who has held his electorate seat since 1984, after
winning it from National MP, Hugh Templeton, voted for the Homosexual Law Reform Bill.
This law that decriminalised acts of sodomy between consenting adults and was passed into law on 11 July 1986 by a
narrow margin (49-44), has allowed homosexuals to sodomise one another without fear of being criminalised. Dunne, who is
the only sitting MP to have served as a cabinet minister in both a Labour-led and National Government, is certainly not
regarded by the vast majority of his constituency as “homophobic” or “a fundamentalist”.
Mr Chauvel does not need to win the electorate he is standing in to get into parliament. He has been placed so high up
on the Labour Party List at No 44 (making him one of the highest ranking Labour candidates who is not a current MP),
that he could get in if Labour secures sufficient support in the party vote. He stood unsuccessfully for the Labour
Party in the Franklin electorate in 1990 against Bill Birch.
There are rumours in legal circles that the Labour Party hierarchy is grooming Mr Chauvel for the position of Attorney
General. The National Business Review (ref 5. 25/2/05) in its damaging exposé of Chauvel’s extravagant use of taxpayer
funds while Deputy chairman of the Lotteries Commission (2000-2004), describes him as the “attorney-general wannabe”. It
adds: “Legal sources say Mr Chauvel has designs on becoming the next attorney-general should Labour succeed in winning a
third term. He is close to [former] Attorney-General … Margaret Wilson…”.
Mr Chauvel’s website [ref. 4] claims that he “has taken important [legal] cases without charge. In 2001, before a Full
Court of the High Court, he successfully defended a censorship appeal to restrict the availability of anti-gay hate
literature.” The GayNZ website (ref. 2. 24/1/05) claims that he did this work in 2001 on “a pro-bono basis”.
However, one wonders what exactly Chauvel means by “without charge” when the firm he has been a partner in for the last
five years and receives a salary from, Minter Ellison & Rudd Watts, received a handsome payout from the Legal Aid Services for this case. Mr Chauvel was counsel to the
respondent in the case – the Human Rights Action Group (Wellington) - a “gay” ‘rights’ lobby group whose representative,
Calum Bennachie, applied and secured the pay out from the Legal Aid Services – money that went to Chauvel’s firm.
What Chauvel’s website omits to note, is that the High Court ruling in the Living Word case that he trumpets as a
success, was overturned on appeal in a unanimous decision of the Full (five member) Court of the Court of Appeal (CA
58/00 dated 31/8/200). The classification decision that had ruled the so-called “anti-gay hate literature” (the two
Living Word Christian videos highly critical of “gay”- ‘rights’ political activism and “gay” promiscuous lifestyle) to
be “objectionable” and that was upheld by the High Court; was quashed on appeal by the Court of Appeal.
The latter ordered the Film and Literature Board of Review to reclassify the films in the light of its decision and this
led to the Board classifying them as “unrestricted” publications. The ‘house of cards’ Mr Chauvel and his fellow “gay”-
‘rights’ lobbyists (the so-called Human Rights Action Group) had sought to construct based on trying to define the
videos as constituting “hate literature” that (they claimed) needed to be banned, collapsed.
Mr Chauvel who was appointed Crown Counsel in the Crown Law Office in Wellington in 1994, used his legal skills in the
Living Word case to try and ensure that two Christian videos, which he and his fellow “gay” activists called “anti-gay
hate literature.” remained banned. He succeeded in convincing two High Court judges, but the Court of Appeal overturned
the lower court’s flawed decision.
Fortunately Chauvel’s misguided attempt to crush free speech, curtail robust debate and stifle religious freedom,
ultimately failed. If he ever does get into parliament, it is clear he will be supporting any Labour-led Government’s
push to establish “hate-speech laws” so that all publications that he and the homosexual lobbyists consider “anti-gay
literature,” will have to be banned.
It is significant that in the High Court decision that upheld the ban on the Living Word videos, the Hon. Justice Heron
stated: "The Court we must say has been troubled by the inroad into freedom of expression of opinions which this
decision [to uphold the ban] represents, particularly in the area of uncertain factual assumptions and premises, and a
still evolving understanding of the phenomenon of homosexuality" (p. 14). Mr Chauvel was not in the slightest troubled
by this inroad into freedom of expression.
Mr Chauvel omits from his website the fact that his work as legal counsel for “gay”-lobbyists in 1994 seeking to ban a
book called “Exposing the AIDS Scandal” by Paul Cameron, failed. The Indecent Publications Tribunal did not accept his
lengthy and turgid submissions that this book should be banned. The book was classified “unrestricted”.
The GayNZ website states that Mr Chauvel did this work on a pro-bono basis:
“Chauvel has worked for the past 15 years on gay/lesbian legal issues, and is a former board member and chair of the NZ
AIDS Foundation. He was extensively involved in lobbying to pass the Human Rights Act in 1993, and also was involved in
the campaign to pass the Civil Union Act.
He acted as counsel on a pro-bono basis in 1994 in a case before the Indecent Publications Tribunal seeking to classify
fundamentalist Christian anti-gay hate literature, and again before the High Court in 2000 in the infamous Living Word
case, which involved videos of a similar nature.”
Earlier this year the Dominion Post reported that Labour's candidate for Ohariu-Belmont, Charles Chauvel, had quit the
board of government power generator Meridian Energy, after warnings of a potential conflict of interest from SOEs
Minister, Hon. Paul Swain. Chauvel was director from April 2002 until February 2005, when he resigned. His critics have
expressed surprise that he had to be advised by the Minister before making his decision to resign, a decision he should
have made independently of the Minister’s prompting.
However, Chauvel’s ‘explanation’: his claim that his resignation was not a response to the advice from the Minister, but
was simply an independent decision he made late, due to his busy schedule; is hardly credible. As political journalist
Vernon Small wrote at the time: “Mr Chauvel's public comment that his resignation was due to pressure of work – did not
work in his favour” [ref. 3]. One has to wonder why, as a ministerial appointee (Chauvel) thinks he can just ignore
ministerial advice.
Mr Chauvel was appointed Deputy Chair of the Lotteries Commission in October 2000 and remained on until December 2004.
The matter of massive taxpayer-funded travel expenses incurred by Mr Chauvel for his 10-day trip to Europe as an
employee of the Lotteries Commission led to serious questions being raised by the National Party MPs.
His trip from 25 January to 8 February 2003 covered just five meetings (Hamburg, Helsinki, Stockholm, Watford) and his
expenses (disclosed via parliamentary questions and answers: 3 September 2003) were the subject of a punishing probe by
the New Zealand Business Review. NBR reports that he “invoiced at least $80,00 to the Lotteries Commission for travel
between 2000 and 2003 and has earned a reputation as an extravagant spender”.
NBR has made two complaints to the Office of the Ombudsman, one relating to the commission’s conduct over its refusal
and one for the refusal itself [to disclose information]. In his time on the Lotteries Commission Board, at taxpayer
expense, he visited Florida, New Orleans, Watford, Helsinki, Austria and Finland in five separate trips. He spent
$53,000 in one year alone and said that his Commission Board portfolio area was “remote interactive gambling.”
A key Labour Party goal in the 2005 election is to boost not only the number of active homosexual strategists, like Mr
Chauvel, within its parliamentary ranks, but to place them into as many influential positions as possible, including
statutory bodies. One key to the success of Labour’s social engineering legislative programme (eg. prostitution reform,
civil unions etc.) has been the influence of “gay” MPs such as Tim Barnett and Cabinet Minister Chris Carter and the
transsexual MP Georgina Beyer who have been able to push the “gay” ‘rights’ cause using the Human Rights Act 1993.
If Charles Chauvel does succeed in getting into parliament, the pro “gay” – ‘rights’ cabal within the Labour Party will
be a formidable force. He has a special interest in using the Human Rights Act to push the “gay” ‘rights’ cause,
including the banning of publications critical of those who promote and engage in sodomy.
References:
[1] Gay competition for Peter Dunne
24 January 2005
“A homosexual lobbyist is taking on United Future leader Peter Dunne in the Ohariu-Belmont electorate….”
[2] Gay opponent for Dunne at election
18 January 2005
[3] Early Poll Unlikely
Vernon Small
29 March 2005
“… However, all is not total sweetness and light. In Wellington, supporters of gay lawyer Charles Chauvel, who has
impeccable credentials in the party going back to Auckland's iconic Princes St branch, are miffed their man was ranked
so low that his chances of election look marginal.
“… (Media reports of his travel expenditure at the Lotteries Commission found no wrongdoing, but did not help. SOE
minister Paul Swain's heavy hint that he should quit the Meridian Energy board because of a potential conflict of
interest as a candidate – and then Mr Chauvel's public comment that his resignation was due to pressure of work – did
not work in his favour either.) …”
[4] Charles Biography
[5] Government favourite quits as travel questions mount.
By Coran Lill
National Business Review February 25, 2005, pages 1, 6-7.
ENDS