Q+A interview with John Key
Sunday 24th July, 2011
Q+A interview with John Key.
PM won’t rule out reform of Pharmac as part of Trans-Pacific Partnership negotiations: will only do deal “in New Zealand’s best interests” but “everybody puts everything on the table”
Trade and TPP “the critical part” of the US-NZ relationship
Israeli spy claims: Key admits he didn’t “get it perfectly right… the impression I left wasn’t sustainable”
Goff was briefed on investigation by SIS chief, but other party leaders on Intelligence Committee not told because they don’t have sufficient security clearance
Spy file now closed: “was just a little odd the way they [Israelis] left the country”, but PM certain they have “absolutely no links” to spying
PM “not sure” if US coastguard vessels falls under Presidential Directive, despite having made visit invitation
National Party PM says nuclear-free law is “part of who we are” and “New Zealand was right to do what it did then”
US hasn’t asked for SAS to be deployed elsewhere after mission in Afghanistan is completed
SAS to come home on time as they need to “re-group and have some time back in New Zealand”
Sending the SAS back to Afghanistan: “Made it with my eyes open… and I’m pleased we made that decision”
New Zealand won’t “abandon ship” in Afghanistan. “We’ve got to see it through”
US invasion done with “the right intention”, but America is in “a very different position” economically than ten years ago
The interviews have all been transcribed
below. The full length video interviews and panel
discussions from this morning’s Q+A can be watched on
tvnz.co.nz at, http://tvnz.co.nz/q-and-a-news
Q+A, 9-10am Sundays on TV ONE. Repeats
at 9.10pm Sundays, 10.10am and 2.10pm Mondays on TVNZ
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JOHN KEY interviewed by GUYON
ESPINER
PAUL This week, you
will know, Prime Minister John Key met with Washington’s
most powerful people, culminating in half an hour with
President Barack Obama himself. He opened doors with a
final confirmation that the two countries have got around
what’s been called ‘the block in the road’ – New
Zealand’s nuclear-free legislation – and committed to a
new partnership, which is all well and good, but does it
bind us, this friendship, to America’s wars and is it
going to cost us Pharmac? In his first interview after the
Oval Office meeting, John Key spoke to Guyon Espiner about
those issues and the claims this week that Israeli spies
were again at work collecting identities in New
Zealand.
GUYON You spent considerable time
on this visit talking about Afghanistan and, indeed, spoke
with President Obama about that issue. Do you categorise
his thinking of wanting to get out of there as quickly as
possible, or is it more of a slower draw-down, do you
think?
JOHN KEY – Prime Minister
Well, I think the way you categorise it is they do think
they’re making progress. I mean, that’s one of the
things that came through in the Defence Department is that
they do think that they are getting e traction, but they
don’t underestimate the size of the challenge. And I
think everybody ultimately wants to leave Afghanistan, but
we want to leave it in a condition where it’s not a safe
haven for the likes of Al Qaeda. We’ve all invested far
too much time, and a lot of people have lost their lives
there, and I think we owe it to those people who have served
so gallantly there that we don’t actually abandon ship.
And from New Zealand’s point of view, we’ve got to see
that through.
GUYON So you didn’t sense an accelerated momentum to get out of there?
JOHN No. I mean, I think there’s a recognition that, you know, it’s a place that’s cost a lot of money and it’s cost an awful lot of lives. But on the other side of the coin, you go back to the very reason why they were there in the first place, and that was Al Qaeda and Osama bin Laden, and I think you can see by the amount of store they put into the fact that they finally killed Osama bin Laden that that’s been a very important part of the story here.
GUYON You mention a lot of money. It’s about US$443 billion from the figures that I’ve got. Has it been worth it?
JOHN Well, I don’t know. I mean, in the end,
you know, it’s not for me to sort of second-guess whether
they did the right thing or the wrong thing from a financial
perspective. I think they did it with the right intention,
which was, you know, in the end, 9-11 was, you know, a
tragedy for everybody, and the US knew they had to deal with
that situation and that they just couldn’t afford to have
a failed state like Afghanistan there, and so they’ve gone
and taken some leadership there. But, look, what we know is
this is the United States – it’s now in a very different
position than it was when it first went into Afghanistan.
GUYON You mean
economically?
JOHN Oh, economically very different.
GUYON That’s going to curtail it how?
JOHN What I think – if you
just read the papers, I mean, and just see the sorts of
stories that are coming out, it’s quite clear that
they’re bumping up against their debt ceiling. They’ve
got 10 days now to meet their target and come with a
solution. But, you know, ultimately the United States is
going to cut expenditure. That’s been made quite clear,
and so one of those areas is defence, which you see talked
about in the media constantly now. What that means, I
don’t know, but it’s pretty— it’s been a very
expensive war for them.
GUYON
You have mentioned that you have no expectation that the
SAS will stay in Afghanistan any longer than March, which
was the departure date. Has there been any suggestion,
either in your own administration or from sounding or
suggestions raised by government officials here in the
United States, that New Zealand could play a military role
anywhere else? Look at Libya or somewhere else in the
Middle East. Has that been raised at all?
JOHN No, that’s never been raised. I mean, what comes through constantly is they’re really appreciative of the role we’ve played and they see it as a serious commitment. One of the things that’s come through quite clearly is the SAS are seen what they are – an elite and world class fighting forces that’s played a critical role in mentoring the CRU – the Crisis Response Unit – and allowing for the transition. I mean, that’s where the objective here is – it’s to put rule back into the people— the hands of the people of Afghanistan and allow them to be able to manage that.
GUYON I guess if you strip my question down and perhaps ask it provocatively, they’re not guns for hire, though. You’re going to have to be satisfied that New Zealand’s interests are at heart.
JOHN Absolutely.
Look, I made that decision to send the SAS back to
Afghanistan. I made it with my eyes open, and I made it
very clearly and deliberately, and it was because I believed
that New Zealand had to demonstrate that it was taking its
responsibilities seriously as it came to being global
citizens. And I’m pleased we made that decision, because
I think we really have made a difference there, but the time
for our men to be serving in Afghanistan in terms of the SAS
has to come to an end because at one point, they’re only a
small unit, and they need to regroup and need to have some
time back in New Zealand.
GUYON
Perhaps one of the surprises on your visit was this
invitation for a US Coastguard vessel to visit New Zealand.
That surprised the US, I understand, that you had given them
some advance warning of the marines’ invitation, but they
didn’t know, did they, about the Coastguard.
JOHN I wouldn’t put directly in those terms.
GUYON Well, did they?
JOHN Oh, well, it depends who you talk to, but, I
mean, the way I would look at it—
GUYON
You would know, though.
JOHN Yeah, well, you know, I’m not going to categorise each and every meeting. All I can say there is that we put those things on the table for good reasons, and when we come to town as leaders to have discussions with our various counterparts, and, you know, if you don’t put things on the table, then you don’t make progress.
GUYON What were those reasons?
JOHN Oh, look, I think,
you know, in this case it’s largely symbolic, but I think
in the long term, you know, it’s just another
demonstration that the relationship continues to go from
strength to strength. I mean, it’s not the critical part
of the relationship. That is trade and TPP. It’s the
role of the economy—
GUYON
Sure, but I just wonder whether you’re testing the
waters both literally and figuratively there in that you
know that it could cause them some discomfort because they
ban certain vessels. Well, they don’t ban certain
vessels, but the arrangement that we have both with our
legislation in New Zealand and the way that they operate
their military under their presidential directive means that
certain vessels won’t be coming into New Zealand,
so—
JOHN Well, the Coastguard wouldn’t fall in that category. No one’s questioning that the Coastguard would be nuclear-powered.
GUYON Are you sure that the Coastguard doesn’t fall under the presidential directive, though.
JOHN
Well, I can’t be sure of that, but all I can say to
you is that we didn’t ask for a response in that area. We
put it on the table. I’m glad that we have. I mean,
progress might not be made in day one or day two, and if it
never happens, well, that doesn’t make any real
difference, but this is a relationship that’s going from
strength to strength, and we do things and we’re making
progress. And, you know, in the end, that’s why leaders
come to town. I mean, otherwise everything would be debated
by officials, and it would operate at glacial speed, with
all due respect.
GUYON We’ve
seen the greater degree of cooperation, and you talked about
those small symbolic steps. Isn’t the anti-nuclear
legislation now a bit of a relic? Isn’t it a bit
ridiculous?
JOHN I don’t think so. I think for New Zealanders it’s part of who we are and what we are, and, you know, I don’t think we need to spend any time debating that. I think, you know, in the end, this relationship with the United States is a mature relationship. It’s steeped in history and underpinned by shared values and principles. And at the end of the day, we spend our life arguing about something that, you know, we signed off on 25 years ago. I think New Zealand was right to do what it did then, and I’m not going to debate the merits or otherwise on the US side. In the end, that’s not the important point. The important point is that, you know, as two countries, we’re working together on the big issues and the world is becoming a smaller place, not a bigger place. And what the United States know – that in New Zealand not only do they have a good friend, they know they’ve got someone they can rely on and someone that they form a strategic partnership with in a part of the world that they’re very interested in now. I mean, all eyes are turning on Asia and the Pacific. It’s not just New Zealand that’s looking in that direction. The United States is as well. And it’s reciprocal. I mean, we know that we can rely on the United States. We have a relationship with them that is quite different from almost any others than those that you would logically think of, like Australia and the UK and Canada.
GUYON One of the issues that’s come in from the sidelines, I guess, on this trip was the accusations of Israeli spying in Christchurch. One of the things that I don’t think we have asked you is why or if you raised this with the parliamentary select committee which looks at intelligence issues.
JOHN I certainly haven’t raised it
with the parliamentary select committee.
GUYON Why was that?
JOHN Well, because that committee hasn’t met for that purpose. That’s not the— We wouldn’t share that level of information. Not all of those members will have that level of security clearance for that sort of thing. I mean, that committee meets and debates legislation. Now, there may be members of that committee that have understanding in that area, but certainly not the committee.
GUYON Did you brief Phil Goff?
JOHN Phil Goff was briefed, yeah,
that’s right. I personally didn’t brief him, but my
understanding from the director of SIS, Warren Tucker, is
that he was briefed and he was shown the same note and
report that I saw.
GUYON Is
the file closed?
JOHN Yeah. It closed on— I probably won’t tell you the day, but it’s closed.
GUYON How seriously do you regard the leak to the media?
JOHN Well, look, it’s
very, very hard to know whether that is genuinely a SIS
agent. There were things that were written in that
newspaper report that are just factually incorrect. And so,
you know, unless somebody is deliberately putting that
information there to try and hide their tracks, then we
don’t know that it’s really an SIS agent. I mean, at
the end of the day, I think that we did the right thing from
a New Zealand perspective. We had to take their actions
seriously because, you know, it was just a little odd in the
way that they left the country and the way that, you know,
journalists and others got excited by the issue and said it
was worthy of examination. We did the same thing as well.
At the end of the day, we found absolutely no links
whatsoever that they were anything other than what they
portrayed themselves to be. And there’s a lot of sort of
misinformation that’s been put into the public debate.
People have criticised me for not immediately—
GUYON What I was going to ask you
about that – do you accept that you made a mistake
then?
JOHN Look, I tell you what the challenge is here, and it comes with the territory, and that is that we have a lot of things that we deal with which are sensitive in nature. And the standard position from pretty much every prime minister has been that we don’t comment on issues of national security. Once we start doing that, we compromise the very people that might undertake that work, we compromise lots of different things. Now, you know, that’s fair enough, and so we’ve had situations where we have talked about things, like Helen Clark talking about the passport scandal that took place with the Israelis. That was a genuine proven case. I mean, this was a scenario where, actually, people did have a look. Our SIS and police did look into the situation and found nothing. So, look, at the end of the day, I mean, I realised by the morning, you know, the impression that I had left wasn’t sustainable. If I replayed the video and did it all again I’d probably start where I ended six hours later, but it comes with the territory. Sometimes you don’t get it perfectly right in the first moment.
GUYON Just a couple of minutes left. Can we finish with the Trans-Pacific Partnership? One of the concerns back home is about Pharmac and about whether the price of pharmaceuticals and medicines will increase. We met with some of the people who are representing some big businesses in this town in Washington and some pharmaceutical companies. They’re pushing those intellectual-property issues pretty hard. Do you expect that those will be finally part of the Trans-Pacific Partnership and that could lead to higher drug prices in New Zealand?
JOHN Well, the
starting position I’ve always taken – it’s the same
one that the Minister of Trade is taking – is we don’t
sign up to agreements unless we think it’s in New
Zealand’s best interests. Now, that’s always a
component series of parts that come together. You know, the
sum of the parts is hopefully greater than the individual
pieces. So, yeah, of course we have to go and negotiate
different aspects, but when it comes to the TPP, Pharmac
hasn’t been the issue that everyone’s been pushing.
Intellectual property is an issue of concern, and that’s
because this is a knowledge-based economy, not a
manufacturing-based economy. It creates knowledge.
GUYON Did you have specific
conversations on this, say, with [US Trade Representative]
Ron Kirk and other officials, and say, ‘Hey, look, you
know, we’re not trading too much away on Pharmac.’
JOHN It wasn’t really like that with Ron Kirk. I mean, we had a really good discussion with him and there genuinely is forward momentum there. They want to make progress. We’re working our way through the issues
GUYON You can’t rule out changes to Pharmac, though, can you?
JOHN Well, look, by definition we’re in the middle of the negotiation and so, you know, I can’t run those negotiations through the media. What I would say is, you know, I’m increasingly confident that we will get a deal done, but it’s not without its challenges. That means everybody puts everything on the table and starts negotiating our way through, but in the end, we’re going to do what’s in the best interests of New Zealand. It’s my view that Pharmac works extremely well. So we didn’t get into the weeds into the particular issues, but we did speak of wanting to complete a deal. And, you know, I think New Zealanders can take a lot of confidence from the fact that we have some incredibly skilled negotiators, they know what they doing and Tim Groser, the Minister of Trade, has had probably the most experience at being the minister of trade we’ve had, so I’m confident we’re going to come out the other end with a deal that’s good for New Zealand.
Q+A interview with US Congressman,
Rick Larsen.
US congressman wants resumption of US
ship visits to New Zealand
Invited to visit NZ
military ship, but would have had to have been taken out to
sea as NZ military not allowed to dock in US military
installations: “that seems kind of
ridiculous”
Pharmac: Better for global economy
if high intellectual property rights are set, even if “in
New Zealand’s case that might be a
detriment”
US dairy have “very strong
concern” about trade deal and see Fonterra as a
monopoly
TPP supporters need to “change their
prism” and demonstrate to US dairy the advantages of new
markets, more Asia-Pacific free trade
New Zealand
and US “more interconnected” by “common interests”
in global economy and through “partnership on national
security issues”
New Zealand plays important
“soft power role” in Asia-Pacific as “democratic
example” and “plays an important role in a lot of
national security issues that are important to the
US”
Larsen believes US politicians need to
separate debt ceiling debate from need to cut spending –
avoid default first, then worry about deficit
GUYON ESPINER INTERVIEWS RICK LARSEN
PAUL We already do a lot of trade with the
United States. The United States is New Zealand’s third
largest trading partner, with trade worth more than $7.5
billion. We send about $7 billion worth of stuff to the
United States. Earlier John Key was talking about the
Trans-Pacific Partnership agreement, which would include a
free-trade agreement with the United States as the critical
part of relations between the two countries, so what is the
view of the other side of the negotiating table? Rick
Larsen is a democrat congressman from Washington State, and
he’s co-chair of the Friends of New Zealand Congressional
Caucus, and he sat down exclusively with Q+A.
GUYON
Well, Congressman, thank you very much for joining us.
We appreciate your time.
RICK LARSEN –
Congressman (D-WA)
My pleasure. Thanks.
GUYON The relationship
between New Zealand and the United States is almost
unrecognisable from what it was a couple of decades ago.
Things are considerably warmer. What do you believe are the
major elements behind that change?
RICK Well, I think when Secretary Clinton signed the Wellington Declaration and we made that happen with our New Zealand partners, I think it was a recognition that things have changed. And we had looked at the relationship over the last two decades. A lot has changed, not just in the world, but between the US and New Zealand. I think a big driver is the economy has become more interconnected globally and the recognition that the US and New Zealand have some common interests there. I think a second is New Zealand’s continued partnership on national security issues, especially, you know, New Zealand’s efforts and defence forces in Afghanistan and partnering with the US and international community. So you look at those two issues, and you kind of begin— we all began to see that things have changed in the last few decades; we need to maybe ensconce that in a document so we can move forward from there.
GUYON Because the thing that we were moving forward was the standoff over the nuclear-powered ships. Was that policy ever really understood, or was it greeted with bemusement in America? Because we’re talking about nuclear-powered ships entering New Zealand waters. I mean, was that actually ever understood?
RICK I think at the time it was
maybe more understood, but in 2008, 9, 10, 11, you
wouldn’t find most, if any, Americans even recognise that
this is a problem.
GUYON Is it
a problem for politicians in America?
RICK I think it’s more of an issue for our military. For our military, you know, we certainly believe in freedom of the seas. We certainly believe that as well that regardless of the power that the ship is under that we ought to have an opportunity to be able to visit ports. And having that policy in place from New Zealand’s perspective really sets that side. And I think that’s something that our military continues to be very wary of. But, again, I think what we’re able to do to the Wellington Declaration is just say, ‘There are too many other things we need to work on. Let’s set that one aside and consider it a difference, and let’s put in place the things that we agree on and move forward on those things.’ I think that’s probably where we’re heading.
GUYON Do you think there’ll ever be a time when we do see US ships come back into New Zealand waters?
RICK As a member
of Congress representing the Washington State second
congressional district, I do believe there will be a time.
I would like to see that happen. I had an opportunity – I
wasn’t able to take it because I was in Washington DC
boating – had an opportunity afforded to me to visit and
travel on one of New Zealand’s ships on the last year, but
I was in DC, so I wasn’t able to make that trip out to my
district and connect with the ship. But my point was I
could do that. I’m a member of Congress, a representative
of our government, and I’d be allowed to visit on this New
Zealand ship. We would not allow it to come into a US
military installation, a naval port, to pick me up. I’d
have to go out to it. That seems kind of ridiculous, and it
just seems that there ought to be a way for everyone to get
over this.
GUYON What gives
you confidence? Just because it’s a bit absurd?
RICK That’s largely it.
That’s largely it.
GUYON And you have greater confidence in our two peoples to work that out?
RICK I do. I do.
GUYON Do you think that, though,
really we’re allies in all but name now? You mentioned
Afghanistan. New Zealand has had a presence there for a
decade or more now. And do you see that military alliance
deepening and strengthening?
RICK I do. New Zealand plays an important role. As small of a country as it is, it plays an important role in a lot of national security issues that are important in the United States. It’s not just the role they’ve been playing in Afghanistan, and that’s important to the US and important to the international community, but it’s also the soft power role that New Zealand can play as a democracy in the Asia-Pacific region with other democracies to just be an example to other countries that are moving towards stronger democratic principles, or to countries that have no intention of moving to democratic principles, knowing full well that there are countries in the region who are standing by democracy. And New Zealand plays that soft power role as well. There are other issues in counter-terrorism, counter-proliferation, climate change – they’re all very important to the US-New Zealand relationship.
GUYON There are many issues and commonalities. Can we move to trade, though? You’ve expressed concerns in some of the material that I’ve read about New Zealand access to the dairy market here, I guess, and agricultural goods coming in. You see that as a bit of a threat under a Trans-Pacific Partnership type of arrangement?
RICK Threat’s a real
strong word. I wouldn’t call it a threat. But the point
I’m trying to make, and I think it’s all pretty clear in
the relationship between us and New Zealand is the US dairy
industry and the district community has very strong concern
about New Zealand dairy access to the US market.
GUYON Why?
RICK I think because of the concerns US dairy has about how New Zealand dairy is supported. There are concerns about that and that would give New Zealand dairy a competitive advantage.
GUYON Because you see Fonterra as a monopoly? Is that what you mean?
RICK The US dairy community sees it that way,
and so what I’m trying to do here is reflect what the US
dairy community is saying. And as a member of Congress in
the United States, I have to try to reflect those concerns,
but as well, I think that the flip side is that a successful
trans-Pacific partnership opens up markets that are
currently not so open to US dairy as well. And I think the
US dairy committee could maybe change their prism a little
bit and see the numbers of consumers that would become
available to them. And, frankly, with, you know, not trying
to offend the New Zealand dairy community, I just don’t
think the New Zealand dairy committee could supply that
market like the US dairy community could.
GUYON No, not at all. So you’ve
got a nine-country negotiation on a trans-Pacific
partnership. You’ve got massive markets potentially
opening up for US dairy producers as well. Do you think you
can convince them, or do you think that the argument will go
that way that they see that there’s more in it for them to
gain than there is for them to lose?
RICK It’s all part of the negotiation, and I tell my sons and I tell my staff, ‘Don’t try to convince anybody of anything. Try to demonstrate the value of something to them.’ Try to explain to them how if you do something that’s going to help them, and I think that’s why we need to work on this negotiation on the dairy issue.
GUYON Just before I leave the Trans-Pacific Partnership, there are concerns in New Zealand also about whether our drug-buying agency, Pharmac, is going to have reduced power under any such agreement, and I know there are concerns on the US side from some of the big pharmaceutical companies that their intellectual-property rights aren’t being respected or given enough strength in some countries. What’s your view on that?
RICK Yeah,
I’ve signed a letter along with several other members of
the US House of Representatives to the President urging in
these negotiations that we set high standards for
everything, including intellectual property. We think that
everybody benefits if there are high standards in the
Trans-Pacific Partnership. When people talk about having a
21st-century agreement, I always push back on folks and say,
‘That’s a nice slogan, but what do we mean by that?’
And I think what we ought to mean by a 21st-century
agreement is that this has high standards. High standards
means high standards for everything, including intellectual
property, and I think that’s where we’re going to find
where most members of the US House of Representatives
are.
GUYON That’s really
tough, though, isn’t it, politically, because it could
mean our health system in New Zealand paying higher prices
for drugs. Is that just part of the ebb and flow of a trade
agreement?
RICK I would never suggest that’s just part of the ebb and flow of any trade agreement in that the New Zealand health system has to take it. I’m not saying that. What I’m saying is that it’s a better deal for the global economy if we set higher standards for intellectual-property rights for a lot of reasons. Now, in New Zealand’s case, that might be a detriment, but there’s a bigger reason to have higher IP standards in place, because of other countries in the Trans-Pacific Partnership and other countries that maybe want to come in later.
GUYON Can I just finish more broadly? I mean, we come at a time when your politics has got quite a high temperature, not just outside, but in the buildings as well as the two sides try to come to some sort of arrangement to raise your debt ceiling. It seems quite staggering from an outside to see a potential default on a debt be subject to such politicking. What’s your response to that?
RICK Yeah,
you ought to look at it from my end of things. Again, as a
member of Congress—
GUYON
What does it look like for you?
RICK Yeah. What it looks like for me is that America pays its bills; we will not default. And for some members of Congress, especially a lot of the new members of Congress right now, are willing to take that debt ceiling to the brink and perhaps have that result in a downgrading of the US bonds. It’s staggering to me. The US— Whether we like it or not, a lot of countries look to the United States for economic leadership in the world, and part of that economic leadership means that we have to take responsible actions, and responsible action in this case means that we have to delink the debt-limit vote, or as I call it the default-avoidance vote, from our long-term budget negotiations. We still need a long term, substantial deficit-reduction package. We have to do that regardless of any debt-limit vote, but we have to do the most important thing first, and the most important thing first is to avoid default. And America will pay its bills and meet its obligations.
Q+A interview
with Trade Consultant, Dr Peter Watson.
As far
back as 1989, US willing to move relationship with New
Zealand in a “positive” fashion; New Zealand reluctance
has cost us
Previous Labour government made
“quiet” progress on US relationship, with Helen Clark
not alerting Labour caucus or New Zealand public; current
government’s approach “transparent, businesslike and
robust”.
“New Zealand used to enjoy
disproportionate influence in Washington. Now it’s
starting to get that back again”
We’re seeing
a “natural and organic resumption of a robust political,
economic, diplomatic and security
relationship”
US is politically ready for a TPP
including dairy, with politicians using it as an impetus for
further global trade growth
Economy will be
“critical” in 2012 US presidential race; it will bounce
back but it’s “going to continue to be tough
sledding”
Tea-Party doesn’t want to play a
constructive role in US politics, “they want to spit the
dummy”
GUYON ESPINER
INTERVIEWS PETER WATSON
PAUL Dr
Peter Watson is a New Zealander. He’s lived in the United
States for the past 30 years, working hard to improve the
relationship between our two countries. He’s been chair
of the United States International Trade Commission. He’s
had some big jobs. He’s worked in the White House as
Director of Asian Affairs of the National Security Council
under George Bush I. And these days he’s a business
consultant in DC. Guyon Espiner spoke with him on Capitol
Hill and began by asking Peter Watson, after a generation at
the heart of the US-New Zealand relationship, which country
had moved further.
PETER WATSON – Trade
Consultant
Actually, I’m really not sure I could
say who’s moved the furthest. I think what’s important
is the two sides have moved actually quite significantly
together, actually. There’s been a lot of push certainly
from I think both sides at different times. But I would
say, actually, there’s been sort of a joint effort,
certainly in the last, I would say, two to three
years.
GUYON Do you think the
US was perhaps ready to move earlier than New Zealand
perhaps believed?
PETER I don’t
know about believed, because there was some very open and
transparent communications going as far back as 1989 that
the United States would like to see New Zealand go a
different direction and support a more positive
relationship. But I think instead of looking backwards, the
better thing to do now is to be pleased about the fact that
the relationship has normalised and we’re really moving
forward.
GUYON
Let’s do that, but do you think New Zealand has paid a
price in those interim years if you look, say, compared to
Australia, which has had a very different relationship?
PETER I think that’s, in fact,
exactly the right parallel because if you look back into
1984, 1985, when these broker took place, New Zealand is
about 26 years behind the normal progress that Australia’s
been able to make – free-trade agreement, preferred
immigration, business visitors. New Zealand used to enjoy a
disproportionate influence in Washington, and now it’s
starting to get that back again.
GUYON
So that’s quite a price, really, isn’t it, in those
interim years. I guess the other way that some people would
look at it is that New Zealand has been able to have a more
independent, non-aligned stance. And if you look at the
progress New Zealand has made with a country like China,
whether that perhaps would have been possible. Do you think
that there is merit in that argument at all?
PETER Well, let’s look at the
relationship between the United States and China. That
reapproach took place back in the Nixon era, so the United
States has enjoyed a very good relationship with China
before, during and after the problems with New Zealand. New
Zealand has, of course, quite correctly is proud of our
ability to speak freely, but that’s always going to be the
case.
GUYON So
it’s not an either or?
PETER
Absolutely not.
GUYON
Obviously, one of the theatres and areas that we’re
working in quite closely is the defence and security
relationship now. Do you think that that is essentially a
position now where we’re allies in all but name?
PETER You know, I’m not sure
phonetics are really important. I think you look at the
substance of the relationship. You’ve got the Pacific
cooperation in Tonga, Vanuatu with the navies earlier this
year. We’re looking forward to Pac Rim next year. This
is just a natural and organic resumption of a robust
political, economic, diplomatic and security
relationship.
GUYON
Obviously, the trade relationship is at the top of the
Prime Minister’s agenda and the Trans-Pacific Partnership
– wanting progress there. Do you think that the American
administration is actually ready for what they call a
comprehensive trade agreement which would include
agriculture and would include lowering tariffs over
time?
PETER I believe so. I
mean, obviously, there’s a couple of earlier steps that
have to be addressed. We obviously have got to deal with a
couple of the pre-existing trade agreements that are in
place, but I think the administration here understands that
a successful TPP would reignite the stagnant trade talks
that have existed in the WTO. I think they see this a
little like the North America Free Trade Agreement earlier
on as being an impetus to rebuilding broader trade
negotiations.
GUYON Is it
risky, though for them politically? Because a lot of
people, rightly or wrongly, equate these free-trade
agreements with job losses and threats and more competition.
Is it politically risky for an administration to go into
such a big deal like this?
PETER
I don’t think risky is the word. Obviously, they have
to be sensitive to managing those issues, but this is a very
comprehensive set of issues that the President’s working
with – President Obama. I think he can manage his way
through all this. He can walk and chew gum at the same
time.
GUYON Now,
John Key has run into this unmistakable issue of the debt
crisis. There were a couple of senators that he was going
to meet today which couldn’t make it, because they were
involved in these discussions. I mean, to an outsider,
seeing the two sides deadlocked over such an important issue
is quite staggering, really. I mean, is American politics a
bit crippled at the moment?
PETER
It’s been brittle and very very, I think, partisan for
quite some time and very unhelpfully so, both for the United
States economy and clearly, I think, for the international
economy. It’s very regrettable to see the state of
deterioration of bipartisanship in the United States
presently.
GUYON Why has that
happened? Is it just pure politics, or has that got worse?
Have you seen that get worse?
PETER
I have seen it get worse, but to a certain extent I
think there’s blame enough to go on both sides. We’ve
seen, unfortunately, a rump group arise within the
Republican Party – the so-called Tea Party. These are
folks who really don’t want to play, I think, a very
constructive role in American politics. They want to spit
the dummy and have it their own way. Certainly on the
centre left in the politics here, there’s some that really
prefer not to have a meaningful engagement on all of the
economic issues. So it’s been polarising for some time,
but we’re hopeful that the President and the leadership
– sensible leadership – on the Republican side is going
to be able to come to some understanding.
GUYON You talk about the Republicans
and perhaps some division there. What is the state of play
in terms of the contenders? I mean, Mitt Romney seems to be
the favourite to get the nomination. How do you see this
playing out?
PETER Well, you
know, money is the milk of politics in the United States, if
not a lot of places. He has got a war chest that is
extremely enviable, and everybody else has to make up for
all of the, frankly, capital that he’s brought on to the
field. There are a number of other contenders happy to chat
about a couple of them.
GUYON
Yeah, well, I mean, Sarah Palin – will she run?
PETER I hope she runs.
GUYON Do you? Why?
PETER
The reason I do is because I think it’s important for
America to have the opportunity of really seeing behind some
of the fallacies that people like Sarah Palin stand
for.
GUYON Like what?
PETER Well, I mean, just
close-to-home stuff. You know, this protectionism, the lack
of international focus and markets, and just a very narrow
parochial perspective.
GUYON
Sort of an isolationist—?
PETER
I wouldn’t go necessarily that far, but certainly not
what I’d call a robust international perspective.
GUYON So you think her running would
expose her to—?
PETER I’d
like to see it.
GUYON
It’d be pretty entertaining.
PETER
I’d love to see it.
GUYON
What about Bachmann? Do you think that she will?
PETER She’s tried to calibrate
herself slightly further away from Palin, but the fact of
the matter is she’s appealing to the same core
constituency. This is your, you know, again, your Tea
Party, your close-to-home, you know, rather protectionist
groups.
GUYON
There’s support out there, though, politically for
that. There’s a constituency there, isn’t there?
PETER There always has been in
American politics, and this is where one of the challenges
always is to keep United States, you know, forward-looking
and engaged internationally. That constituency has always
been there, and it’s not going away.
GUYON Given the quite a bit of
rivalry and division there to a degree in the Republicans,
do you think that it’s Obama— it’s a one-horse
race?
PETER No, I don’t
necessarily think so. I mean, the employment numbers are
not very good right now. His approval rating isn’t
necessarily as good as he’d want. You know, if there’s
a strong candidate who might come through and might be
appealing on the Republican side who could actually speak to
the economic issues in a way that also appeals to more of a
moderate perspective and, more importantly, captures the
independents, that’s the core group. If you catch the
independents in this race, you win the general
election.
GUYON And
you think the economy is key to that?
PETER
I think it’s critical to it. I really do.
GUYON And things aren’t looking
great. You’ve got, what, 9.2% unemployment and obviously
very high levels of indebtedness. I mean, is there light at
the end of the tunnel for the US economy? It’s been a
couple of years now of pretty dire news.
PETER
It’s going to continue to be tough, tough sailing, but
the great thing about it is it’s a large economy, it’s
still a very robust economy demographically. If you look at
the projections economically going up the next 30, 50, the
United States is going to continue to have a very robust
international engagement. It’s going to remain an
important international economy.
GUYON Just finally, what sort of
significance is it for John Key, a New Zealand prime
minister, to come here, come to Washington, have face time
with the president of the United States, meet all the key
players?
PETER The Prime Minister
is resuming the natural place that New Zealand had in its
historical role in Washington, and there are some heroes in
this. Certainly, Secretary Clinton, for her part, has been
important; Assistant Secretary of State Kurt Campbell has
been critical. On the New Zealand side, Prime Minister Key
has had a very businesslike, professional relationship with
the United States. I think Minister of Foreign Affairs
Murray McCully has done a fantastic job in quietly building
the undergirding. Ambassador Mike Moore has been
fantastic.
GUYON And do you
give credit too to the former administration under Helen
Clark?
PETER I think the former
administration has to be given credit for quiet diplomacy.
I use the word quiet deliberately.
GUYON What do you mean by that?
PETER Well, she very carefully
nurtured the development between the United States, but
without giving it too much prominence, whether it be in the
Labour caucus or to the New Zealand public at large. You
can’t understate it, though.
GUYON
Quiet diplomacy under the former administration. How
would you describe the current tack?
PETER
I think really businesslike, open, transparent,
robust.