Cunliffe Interview: Q+A
Sunday 3 November,
2013
Labour sets
out differences to government
Labour leader David Cunliffe has told TV ONE’s Q+A programme that Labour will gradually raise the age people can start receiving the pension to 67, and Paid Parental Leave will be increased to 26 weeks.
Speaking to political editor Corin Dann at the Labour Party conference, Mr Cunliffe also says a Labour government would reserve the right to buy back state assets if the State Owned Enterprise was in trouble or if it was in the public’s interest.
In terms of oil and gas exploration, Mr Cunliffe says there’s also more research to do before Labour has a clear policy on deep-sea oil-drilling.
“Not without proper environmental standards and clean-up capacity, and I am not personally convinced that what the public has yet seen and what we have yet seen would qualify for that. There’s more work to be done before we sign off on that,” Mr Cunliffe says.
He also dampened talk of dissention within Labour over the Trans-Pacific Partnership agreement which the National-led government is currently negotiating with 11 other countries including the US.
Labour’s Trade spokesman Phil Goff is keen for Labour to support the TPP, telling Corin Dann that he’d been briefed by Trade minister Phil Groser that the deal was worth $5 billion in jobs, but Mr Cunliffe says the party has to weigh up the pros and cons of an agreement.
“The verbal assurances of Mr Groser do not satisfy the president of the CTU. And my job as the leader of the Labour Party is to ensure, as leader of the whole party, that the bits fit together, that we have a coherent approach that rationally looks at both the trade upside, which is Phil’s proper job to represent, and that we also look at the domestic fish hooks – the impact on intellectual property, the impact on farming, but, most importantly, the ability of the agreement to constrain future governments from their normal regulatory function.”
“So this is a massive agreement whichever way you go. It’s a massive move to go into it; it would be a massive move not to go into it. It is a big call. It is one of the generational questions in front of New Zealanders, but it is one that we are perfectly able to handle. We have a robust but a very good internal process. We’ve had good discussions at the caucus level.”
Mr Cunliffe laid out Labour’s four pillars of policy heading into next year’s election.
“We set up four pillars of policy around creating an economy that works for all New Zealanders, closing up some of the social gaps, building a fair society, protecting our environment and, of course, building a nation.”
He also says the difference between his opponent, Prime Minister John Key, who came from a similar background to him, comes down to how they want to help the next generations.
“The difference between my opponent and myself is that— or the similarity is we both came from modest homes and families. We both worked our way up with the benefit of a good state education. The difference is I’m not going to pull the ladder up. I’m going to make sure that it’s there for the next generation, and I’m going to make sure that it’s even better than it was when I was a kid. I think that’s what all New Zealanders who are fair-minded want – a good chance for everybody to get ahead, whether it’s education or housing.”
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CORIN
David Cunliffe, thank you very much for joining us
here on Q+A this morning. You’ve been in the job now six
or seven weeks. You came in with a huge amount of optimism
after winning that leadership battle, yet you’ve made no
impact, really, in the polls. 34 per cent in the two polls
– the TV ONE poll and the Fairfax poll. What’s going
on? Why haven’t you made or brought through some of that
momentum into the polls?
DAVID CUNLIFFE –
Labour Party Leader
Well, I think for a start
you’re ignoring the Roy Morgan, which was 35 and a half,
and that’s about where our own polling is showing us at
the moment. Yes, of course there’s a first blush of
optimism, and then it’s settling down to business as
usual. And I’ve always said polls will go up and they
will come down, but the direction of travel will be that
Labour will rise and, on today’s numbers, could already
form a government with the Green Party. We are on our way
to the Beehive.
CORIN Is it that you’ve only been really talking to people on the left; you aren’t engaging with that middle chunk of New Zealand voters?
DAVID
Oh, look, I’ve been really clear that my first
job as leader of the Labour Party and co-leader of the
labour movement is to engage with our base. If this team
that you see here is not on board with the task of running
the race of their lives, then there won’t be much of an
election. So I’ve always seen it as essential that the
broader team here is clear about that project, that they
know that we’re going to be true to Labour values, that
we’re going to be delivering policies that are in line
with our policy platform, and I think that’s the first
priority.
CORIN
So you came up with this insurance policy yesterday
in your major speech. You had a great opportunity to talk
to New Zealanders. Was that it? Is that all you came up
with – the insurance policy? Because it didn’t look
like much else that was new.
DAVID As I said to
a number of commentators, behind yesterday’s speech is a
great deal of work and work in setting a strategic framework
for us. We set up four pillars of policy around creating an
economy that works for all New Zealanders, closing up some
of the social gaps, building a fair society, protecting our
environment and, of course, building a nation. And I think
if you look into that, you’ll see that behind each of
those topics there’s a great deal of policy. It’s the
tip of a much, much broader iceberg. And as my first major
speech, I think it’s good to see it as a whole and to see
that structure and framework as well as the new stuff, which
is, of course, is Kiwi-Assure – very important in its own
right.
CORIN Okay, well,
let’s take that. Isn’t that really just a ploy?
You’ve brought the conference here; you’ve announced a
policy which really is targeting people in Christchurch and
Christchurch East. This is just about shoring up your vote
in that seat.
DAVID Not
at all. Kiwi-Assure is a nationwide thing. Look, it’s
very much like KiwiBank, which has been wildly popular with
New Zealanders, which I was a foundation customer.
Kiwi-Assure will be part of the New Zealand Post Group,
alongside KiwiBank. It will offer home, contents, personal,
car insurance.
CORIN
But you can’t guarantee it will bring down
premiums, though?
DAVID Well, just like
KiwiBank helped to keep that banking market competitive, in
fact, did bring down some interest rates.
CORIN But we have a
competitive market, so why bring in a state one when you
can’t even lower the prices?
DAVID
Well, actually, we only have a— No, I’m sorry,
we have a semi-competitive market, where over 60 per cent of
the market is held by two foreign-owned insurers, and it’s
not a market which has our confidence that it is perfectly
competitive. And so we are simply working with the market
here to introduce more competition. This isn’t
heavy-handed nationalisation or regulation. We’re working
with the market.
CORIN
Granted that there are plenty of people in
Christchurch that have had poor experiences with insurance
companies, and I think we’ve all heard those stories, as
the Government has pointed out in response to your policy,
these insurance companies are paying out $20 billion. It
has worked. They are going to hand over the money, and
they’re able to do that because they’re able to spread
the risk internationally.
DAVID So, I met one woman
just before the conference – Christchurch woman – who
works for one of the social agencies. She personally had
had 17 assessments of her damaged home and no payout, and
she’s been waiting three years after the earthquakes.
Now, she tells me that she knows of dozens of people who are
in the same situation.
CORIN No one’s
disputing that there are plenty of people in
Christchurch—
DAVID
But that’s not good enough. No, I’m sorry,
that’s not good enough for the people of Christchurch. I
don’t know how Christchurch people are as patient as they
are, but we are not content with the service standards in
that industry. Now, on the economic front, it’s in New
Zealand’s national interests that we have a Kiwi-owned
insurer, because we do not want all of the profit of that
insurer—
CORIN
But why is it in New Zealand’s interests for
taxpayers to take on the extra risk of an insurance
company—?
DAVID Well, that is a little
gem that the current—
CORIN Especially
those who aren’t— for example, who have had a bad
experience?
DAVID Do you
mind if I answer the question? So the Government has said
that we’re taking on all this extra risk, but it’s not
for two reasons. Firstly, this is a private entity which
will be held by the board of New Zealand Post Group. So
it’s not going to be something that is going to be a
direct thing that government agencies are going to manage
directly. The second thing is, of course, it will access
the global wholesale reinsurance market, and any retail
insurance company secures its risk on the wholesale market,
and this would be no different.
CORIN Again,
what’s the point if you’re not going to be able to
guarantee a reduction in premiums? Is it just the service
that you’re going to be able to improve?
DAVID It will be
good service, it will be Kiwi-owned, and it will be highly
competitive. Now, just as KiwiBank helped keep bank
interest rates down, we think that this will help keep
insurance premiums down.
CORIN All right, if
I could come to where Labour is going? We saw yesterday the
head of the Trade Union movement, Helen Kelly, very clearly
saying that she did not want to see Labour support the
Trans-Pacific Partnership, this giant free-trade deal
involving the United States. Yet you have the likes of Phil
Goff in your party who are very clearly keen to see your
party support it. How can you marry those two conflicts
together? How can you marry them together?
DAVID Well, just as we did
yesterday when the Labour-affiliated unions met and decided
to amend their own motion to simply withhold support for the
TPP pending further information becoming available. Now, I
think that shows a lot of responsibility and goodwill by our
affiliated unions.
CORIN
What information?
DAVID What
information?
CORIN What do you
need?
DAVID What is the
value of the upside of this agreement to New Zealand in
terms of jobs?
CORIN
Well, Phil Goff told me yesterday he’s been
briefed by Tim Groser and it’s about $5
billion.
DAVID
There are some studies in that order of magnitude,
but we haven’t had access to the Government’s full set
of briefing documents on that. No way.
CORIN Phil Goff says
he’s had 60 questions answered by Tim Groser or something
in that vicinity and that he’s been assured by him that
this policy— you know, things like Pharmac are not going
to be watered down, so clearly he’s having those
discussions. What’s the problem?
DAVID
Well, clearly, the verbal assurances of Mr Groser
do not satisfy the president of the CTU. And my job as the
leader of the Labour Party is to ensure, as leader of the
whole party, that the bits fit together, that we have a
coherent approach that rationally looks at both the trade
upside, which is Phil’s proper job to represent, and that
we also look at the domestic fish hooks – the impact on
intellectual property, the impact on farming, but, most
importantly, the ability of the agreement to constrain
future governments from their normal regulatory
function.
CORIN
Sure, and you know this will be a massive move if
Labour was to break on free trade, and you’ve got a union
movement pushing really hard for you not to go down that
road. How on earth are you going to sort that
out?
DAVID
So this is a massive agreement whichever way you
go. It’s a massive move to go into it; it would be a
massive move not to go into it. It is a big call. It is
one of the generational questions in front of New
Zealanders, but it is one that we are perfectly able to
handle. We have a robust but a very good internal process.
We’ve had good discussions at the caucus
level.
CORIN Do you support
free trade personally – the concept of free trade?
DAVID Well, that’s a bit
like saying, ‘Do you support this or that-ism?’ and it
would depend what you mean.
CORIN
Philosophically, do you see a benefit?
DAVID
Look, I’ve worked as a diplomat before I became a
politician. I’m fully aware of the advantages to New
Zealand of good, open fair international-trade rules, and as
a minister in the previous government, I supported things
like the China Free-Trade Agreement—
CORIN Could we just
go through a few issues just to get a sense of where Labour
is at at the moment?
DAVID
Sure.
CORIN
The super age – will you be campaigning on 67 –
increasing the age to 67?
DAVID We’ll
certainly be lifting the age gradually, and we’ll
certainly protect New Zealanders who are unable to work. My
expectation is that will stay at 67.
CORIN Deep-sea oil
drilling – yes or no?
DAVID
Well, not without proper environmental standards
and clean-up capacity, and I am not personally convinced
that what the public has yet seen and what we have yet seen
would qualify for that. There’s more work to be done
before we sign off on that.
CORIN Paid parental
leave – increased to 26 weeks.
DAVID 26
weeks.
CORIN Will you do
that?
DAVID Yes, we
will.
CORIN
You will do that?
DAVID Yes, we
will.
CORIN You’re not
putting any financial constraints on that?
DAVID It’s budget
reform.
CORIN
So that’s done?
DAVID That’s
done.
CORIN Okay. Will
you buy back state assets?
DAVID
We reserve the right when they’re in trouble or
for other reasons, if it’s in the public
interest.
CORIN
So hang on, you reserve the right if they’re in
trouble, so the likes of Solid Energy?
DAVID Or for other
reasons if it’s in the public interest.
CORIN So you’re
not ruling out a possibility of buying back energy
companies?
DAVID We’re
not ruling anything in or out.
CORIN Okay, and one
last one on the monarchy – a little bit of debate at this
conference about that. Your party’s looking at issues
around it. Do you support scrapping the
monarchy?
DAVID
Look, I support a constitutional conversation as
the Labour Party does, which will allow New Zealanders to
evolve a more mature and stable constitutional form, but
that’s not something that I, as Labour Party, would want
to impose, either on the party or on the public. It’s for
New Zealanders to come to their own decisions about what’s
right for them.
CORIN Okay, what’s
the message—? Firstly, have you been meeting with
business leaders around the country?
DAVID
Sure.
CORIN
What is the message you’ve been giving? Because
my sources suggest that they are coming away and feeling
that you’re not going to rock the boat too much, that
they’re reasonably happy, they’re worried about the
Greens. What are you telling them?
DAVID I think that
they understand that as a broad-based political party
that’s likely to be the government in less than a year’s
time, we will govern responsibility and we’ll govern for
all New Zealanders. They know that we are a party committed
to growth, they know we’re also a party with a very strong
social heart, and we can do both of those
things.
CORIN Yeah, well,
that’s interesting, because Mike Treen from the Unite
Union said in his blog, ‘Even the relatively modest
policies that David Cunliffe is talking about – living
wage, small tax increases for the rich – are likely to
generate significant business opposition.’ He says,
‘The usual response from social democratic governments in
those circumstances is capitulation. I expect no difference
from a Cunliffe-led government, but I’m happy to be proved
wrong.’ Will he be?
DAVID
He’ll be happy.
CORIN Why? You
won’t capitulate?
DAVID Because I am
moderate but resolute, and just like you’ve asked me to
take positions on some issues, I don’t write a cheque I
can’t cash. And so I’ll be working closely with my
Labour colleagues, with the caucus, with the broader party
to ensure that we move consistently, responsibly and
determinedly in a way, in line with the speech I gave
yesterday, that’s good for New Zealanders.
CORIN I imagine
Helen Clark was resolute too when she came into government
and walked into the so-called ‘winter of discontent’ and
faced a business backlash. Are you saying that you would
stand up to a similar backlash?
DAVID
Well, of course, that occurred after the Clark
Government had implemented many of its initial policy
positions in labour law, in tax reforms, and we’ve made
commitments to do some very significant moves in our first
hundred days.
CORIN
If we could move on to the issues of the living
wage? Treasury this week, you would’ve seen the rebuttal,
I guess, of that policy. They made a very strong point
that, in fact, the living wage will only help— well, it
won’t help the families— these types of families that
you’ve got on your living wage documents. This is
Aotearoa Living Wage, but they’re not going to benefit
from this, because the abatement of Working for Families –
even if they get $18.40 an hour, they don’t get any
benefit because they’ll lose that from their Working for
Families. So how is that policy going to target poor
families?
DAVID
Well, look, run the counterfactual. Are people
really saying that they believe that workers and their
families shouldn’t be paid a wage sufficient for them to
feed their kids? That’s why we’re going to be, firstly,
increasing the minimum wage to $15 an hour and, secondly,
pioneering the living wage for the core public service, and
as we can, we’ll seek to roll that out to the broader
state sector and also provide incentives for contractors.
So, for example, an employer who is an accredited
living-wage employer will be able to get a preference for
government procurement.
CORIN And you
don’t believe that will lead to job losses, as Treasury
suggests?
DAVID No, I
don’t think it will lead any significant job losses.
That’s a thing which is often rolled out by the business
community when they, you know, don’t like something, but
often enough it doesn’t occur.
CORIN A lot of
rhetoric in your speech yesterday about two New Zealands –
a rich New Zealand—
DAVID I’m very concerned
about it.
CORIN Which New
Zealand do you come from?
DAVID
Oh, I come from I guess you could say both, which
makes me a kind of interesting character for the current
government. I grew up a kid in a vicarage, and I think we
all know that ministers, religion—
CORIN So you’ve
done well; you’ve got ahead.
DAVID
Absolutely.
CORIN Why then is
the message that you seem to be also giving is that, ‘If
you earn over $150,000, we will tax you. If you just work
hard and buy an investment property, we will tax that as
well.’ The message you’re sending to a lot of young New
Zealanders, ‘We will penalise you for that
aspiration.’
DAVID Not
at all. Not at all. In fact, we’re going to be helping
young New Zealanders to get into their first home by rolling
back the Government’s mortgage restrictions on the
loan-to-value ratios.
CORIN
But that’s what the right would say, wouldn’t
they? They would say, ‘There you are. You’re helping
them,’ when, in fact, the right would say, ‘Let them do
it themselves.’
DAVID The
difference between my opponent and myself is that— or the
similarity is we both came from modest homes and families.
We both worked our way up with the benefit of a good state
education. The difference is I’m not going to pull the
ladder up. I’m going to make sure that it’s there for
the next generation, and I’m going to make sure that
it’s even better than it was when I was a kid. I think
that’s what all New Zealanders who are fair-minded want
– a good chance for everybody to get ahead, whether it’s
education or housing.
CORIN You seem to
argue pretty strongly that inequality is the big issue
that’s going to dominate this election year, that people
are very concerned about inequality.
DAVID
I think they are.
CORIN And the rich
getting richer. Yet MSD’s report here – the Household
Incomes Report from 2013 – clearly says there’s no
evidence of any general rise or fall in income inequality
since 2007, since your government.
DAVID
Well, there’s an economist’s tool called Gini
coefficient—
CORIN That’s
exactly what this is from.
DAVID
…which rose throughout the 1990s, which was still
rising in the first years of the Clark Government, which the
Clark Government managed to turn around and get to fall
slightly. And my advice is that has risen significantly
since the current government.
CORIN Well, they
said it hasn’t happened.
DAVID
Oh, well, I understand that it has so I’ll be
looking very closely at that. My understanding is that the
Gini coefficient has been rising again and—
CORIN The point is
this government encountered two earthquakes and a global
financial crisis and has now produced an economy that is
going to be growing three to four per cent a year.
DAVID Well, look, an
earthquake is no excuse for rising social division, either
in Christchurch or elsewhere. In fact, there’s an old
saying ‘never waste a good crisis’. An opportunity to
have a $30 billion reinvestment cheque means that it’s
perfectly possible to rebuild a city here which is both
inclusive and socially well designed, as well providing a
good platform for economic growth.
CORIN So are you
saying that that’s the only reason we’re seeing this
growth in New Zealand is because of the earthquakes?
DAVID Oh, look, I think the
Government’s made a range of choices which absolutely
reinforce privilege, as I said yesterday. To give massive
tax cuts to the top while putting GST up on everybody else
was obviously going to have that effect. To slash services
from Crown agencies while seeing wage rates stuck in very,
very low gear has also widened the gap.
CORIN David
Cunliffe, thank you very much for joining us on Q+A.
DAVID You’re very welcome.
Thank you.