The Nation: Northland Candidates
On The Nation
Northland
candidates, National's Mark Osborne, Labour's Willow-Jean
Prime and ACT's Robin Grieve, debate with Lisa
Owen Headlines:
Latest 3News-Reid
Research poll shows Northland voters split on whether there
should be more mining and drilling in Northland, with 48%
supporting and 47% against. National candidate Mark
Osborne says there are plenty of “very successful” mines
and quarries that have no issues, Labour candidate
Willow-Jean Prime says the community needs to decide not
Wellington and ACT candidate Robin Grieve says more mining
will lead to more jobs and prosperity. Poll of 500 voters
also shows majority (56%) think Winston Peters’ decision
to stand in the electorate is a serious bid to represent the
region, 29% say it’s a stunt to get attention. $1.76
billion Puhoi to Wellsford highway gets the green light from
59% of Northland voters in the poll, with 34% against the
project. Osborne says a bullet train to Northland “would
be a great idea” but the most effective way to move
freight is via motorways. Prime says she knew former
National MP Mike Sabin was under police investigation during
last year’s general election campaign and voters should
have been told then too. Osborne says he didn’t hear
rumours about Mike Sabin investigation until the end of
December, Prime says that’s “hard to believe” the
National party didn’t know about it earlier. Osborne:
“I categorically didn’t know and that’s the absolute
honest truth”
Prime says “It’s not in my nature to
pull back” after Labour leader Andrew Little doesn’t
rule deploying that strategy in Northland. Grieve says
“it’ll be the end of the world as we know it if Winston
was to win”, Peter Dunne will have more power and
“that’s the end of RMA reform”. Grieve stands by his
view on having the Bible in schools, “because the country
is officially a Christian
country”
Lisa Owen: Good morning.
Thank you for joining us this morning. If I can come first
to you, Willow-Jean Prime? Briefly, why are you standing in
this electorate?
Willow-Jean Prime: I’m
standing because I stood last year in the general election,
put up my hand to represent Northland, and I’m standing
again in this by-election. We’ve got an opportunity here
to vote in somebody who will be a strong voice for Northland
in Parliament, and we need that because we have had years of
neglect in Northland and there are a lot of issues, and
therefore we need somebody who’s going to be strong,
who’s going to advocate on our behalf in
Wellington.
Robin Grieve from ACT, why are you
standing?
Robin Grieve: Well, I’m standing
up for Northland because Northland is a region that I
absolutely love. I’ve lived there most of my adult life,
and I know Northland. I’m also standing for the party that
I believe in. I believe the ACT Party is the party that has
the philosophies and the policies that would really boost
Northland and make it the wonderful region that it could and
should be.
Okay, National candidate is Mark
Osborne. Why are you standing, Mark?
Mark
Osborne: Well, look, firstly, I’d just like to say thank
you for the opportunity to do this from up in Kerikeri.
We’ve had a crazy day out round the region and really
appreciate the opportunity. But I’m standing because I can
make a difference for Northland. I’m a local man. Got good
family and business up here in the north and two children in
the local school system. I’ve got a great set of skills
across a broad range of areas that will deliver real results
for Northland. And I’m prepared and ready to take the
voice of Northland to Wellington to make a real
difference.
Isn’t the reality that you are
standing because someone else in your party stuffed up?
Doesn’t that put you on the back foot right from the
get-go?
Osborne: Oh, look, no, not at all.
We’re not taking anything for granted at all. We’re out
there gaining the trust of the people. I’m out there
talking to people, and, you know, we’re building on a
great programme of work—
But you have to
regain their trust, don’t you?
…7500 new
jobs last year.
You have to regain their
trust, given the situation you find yourself
in.
Osborne: Well, look, that was then. This
is now. You know, I’m looking to take it forward. I’m
the candidate, and I’m looking forward to build on the
great work that we’ve done and make a real difference for
Northland across a broad range of economic opportunities
that are up here.
Okay, when was then, Mr
Osborne? When did you know that Mike Sabin was the subject
of a police investigation?
Osborne: Look, I
only found out when everybody else found out, so I don’t
know any of the detail at all. And when he resigned at the
end of January was when I knew that that had
happened.
Okay, so only when he actually
resigned? That’s when you’re saying that you found out
something was going on? Just to be
clear.
No, look, I heard the rumours at the
end of December last year, but I didn’t know anything
before that at all.
Okay, Mr Grieve, when did
you know something was up with Mike Sabin and there was a
police investigation?
Grieve: Oh, the only
thing I heard was through the media, so as soon as the media
knew, that’s when I heard. So I didn’t hear anything via
other means.
Mrs Prime?
Prime:
Well, I actually heard rumours of it during the general
election last year through the Northland grapevine, so I am
very interested in who knew what when. And I think that
Northlanders deserve to know at the time whether there were
issues going on. They should have had that information
before we had the vote last year.
Mr Osborne,
that’s a fair question. Should voters have known that Mike
Sabin was the subject of a serious police investigation
before they went to the polls? Should he have been up front
and let voters know before they cast their vote in that
electorate?
Osborne: Well, that’s an issue
for Mike Sabin. I can’t talk about that. All I can tell
you is when I found out or heard the rumours, and that was
at the end of December. And, you know, his resignation at
the end of January came as quite a shock,
so—
Is that an issue for the National Party,
though, Mr Osborne, because some people within the party
were given a heads-up that an MP was under investigation.
Isn’t it an issue for the party – an honesty
issue?
Osborne: Well, I have no knowledge of
what that heads-up may or may not have been. I can only tell
you what I knew, and that was nothing right through that
period.
Prime: I find it hard to believe that they
didn’t know at the time, and so I am very interested in
getting the answer to that question. I understand that
Official Information Act requests have been made to get
information about whether briefings were given on this
issue, and they haven’t been forthcoming. They have been
denied, in fact, declined. So I think it was important for
Northlanders to know last year in the general election if
there were these issues.
Mr Osborne, you were
the treasurer. You were the treasurer in that electorate.
How is it possible that you did not know this was going
on?
Osborne: Well, I categorically didn’t
know, and that’s the absolute honest truth. So the reality
is I didn’t know, so I can’t talk about something that I
didn’t know if I didn’t know
it.
Shouldn’t you have known,
though?
Osborne: Well, I don’t know. I
don’t even know the details of what the allegations are.
So, look, the reality is I didn’t know, I don’t know
what the details are, I still don’t know, Mike has
resigned, we’ve gone through a by-election, we’ve gone
through a process, and I’m sitting here today looking
forward to the future of Northland.
Well,
let’s bring Paddy Gower in here. Winston Peters couldn’t
be with us today, but let’s go to Paddy and see what
Northland voters think of him standing in the
electorate.
Patrick Gower: Yes, this is the
closest we’ll get to Winston Peters today, and we went out
and asked voters in a special 3News Reid Research poll
‘why is Winston Peters standing in Northland’? And we
asked Northland voters, and look at this. 29 per cent said
it was a stunt to get attention, but the rest of them –
the majority of them – 56 per cent said it was a serious
bid to represent Northland. And the rest didn’t know. So
Winston Peters viewed as serious out there but pulling a
stunt on The Nation today – a disappearing act. Back to
you, Lisa.
Robin Grieve, quick-fire – stunt
or a legitimate candidate in this
race?
Grieve: Oh, absolutely a stunt. I
mean, the man hasn’t stood in the last three elections.
They haven’t cared about Northland. They don’t care
about Northland at all.
Willow-Jean, a stunt
or legitimate? Winston Peters
Prime: I hope
he’s genuinely wanting to stand to represent Northland.
I’m genuinely standing to represent
Northland.
Mark Osborne, a stunt – Winston
in this race?
Osborne: Well, I think
that’s an issue that only Mr Peters could answer. All I
could tell you is that I’m standing here because I believe
I can make a genuine difference to the prosperity of the
north.
All right, Mrs Prime, your own leader
says that you have a slim chance of winning this, if any
chance at all, so are you going to pull your punches on
this? Is it going to be a ‘lite campaign’ to let Winston
win?
Prime: Well, I started campaigning the
day Mike Sabin resigned. I wasted no time in getting out
there and talking to people about the great opportunity that
this by-election presents for Northland.
But
are you going to pull back and let him
win?
Prime: It’s not in my nature to pull
back, and we are out there every day campaigning hard for
our region, for our members up there. I’m giving them an
option to select—
But that’s a gift for
National, isn’t it, Mrs Prime? If someone comes to you and
says, ‘We’re desperate to get rid of National,’ and
you say, ‘Vote Labour,’ you’re actually gifting a vote
to National, aren’t you?
Prime: Well, this
is for the voters to decide, so we’ve got 11 candidates in
this by-election, and really it’s up to them to decide who
they think is going to be the best person for the job.
We’re all out there campaigning, showing what we’ve got
to offer in terms of skills.
But the numbers
show you’ve got no chance. You’ve got half the votes of
the National candidate at the last election. The numbers
tell you.
Prime: Well, I did manage to bring
back that majority by over 2000 votes, and that was my first
time standing. I think when the voters take into
consideration the factors that have led to this by-election
we’re going to see those numbers change
again.
Okay, Mr Grieve, you are helping to
stabilise the government by throwing your hat into this ring
by splitting the right vote. You’re doing exactly what
Winston Peters wants, aren’t you?
Grieve:
No, not at all. We’re not splitting the vote at all.
It’s the voters that actually get to vote. And this is a
democracy. This is a good old by-election democracy. This is
about standing up and voting your values, so there’ll be
people who will vote their values, and they’ll look at
we’re there representing their values. And we have a
responsibility to stand so that they can support those
values.
But the reality is it’s a good thing
for you, isn’t it, if Winston wins? It’ll make ACT more
relevant. You’re going to have more leverage with the
government. It’s what you want, isn’t
it?
Grieve: It’ll be the end of the world
as we know it if Winston was to win. That’s the last thing
we want, because Winston winning gives us Peter Dunne. And
Peter Dunne gives us the end of RMA reform, and that’s the
end of Northland as we know it. That’ll be a decade before
we get back to looking at the RMA again.
Okay,
let’s bring Mark Osborne back into the discussion.
Generations of loyalty to National have got Northlanders
what? An 8 per cent unemployment rate and I think it’s
about 57 per cent of people up there earning $12,000 a year
or less. How is that an advertisement to vote for
National?
Osborne: Oh, well, let’s get
some facts on the table here.
Those are facts,
Mr Osborne.
Osborne: Seven and half
thousand— Sorry?
Those are
facts.
Osborne: Well, 7500 new jobs in
Northland last year. You know, that’s great progress. A
thousand less people on benefits. You know, tremendous
opportunities coming through with the Northland economic
growth around a range of areas. So there’s some great
progress being made. You know, we can always make more
progress, and we’re looking forward to a strong, solid
National-led government to make that happen. And the only
way to make that happen is a vote for me.
Prime: I’m
really interested to see where those 7500 jobs are that Mark
is referring to. The claim is 7500 jobs last year. I am out
in the communities canvassing during the by-election, and
I’m asking them if they know where these new jobs are, and
the response I’m getting is they aren’t
there.
Grieve: Well, there are jobs. I’m an
employer.
Prime: 7500 new jobs?
Grieve: We don’t
know how many jobs have been lost. The thing is, firstly,
there’s National been there this long. Now they’re
saying what’s going to happen – like we’re on the cusp
of something. Well, what is this cusp? It’s about what
should’ve been happening and what we want to happen right
away. Why are National sitting on their hands? The
government confuses its role. The government’s role is
quite clear. It’s there to provide infrastructure and
protect citizens. And that’s the two things that Northland
needs more than anything else.
We’re going
to talk more about development in Northland after the break.
We will talk more about this after the break. We’ll be
back with more from our candidates shortly, and Paddy will
have an exclusive poll result on what Northlanders think
about mining, drilling, and also the Puhoi-Wellsford
Highway.
Gower: And welcome back. And
another key issue in the North. Should the Puhoi to
Wellsford Highway go ahead? Well, here we go. 59 per cent of
voters say, “Yes, get that road going up there,” and the
rest that say no – 34 per cent -- while the others don’t
know. So a clear majority for, “Should the Puhoi to
Wellsford Highway go ahead?” And looking at another big
issue in the North. More mining and drilling in Northland?
Well, here we go again. 48 per cent say yes, but it is very
divided. In fact, totally divided. 47 per cent say no; the
rest didn’t know. Another big issue in the North, where
things are divided. Over to you, Lisa.
Thanks,
Paddy. Let’s see what our candidates think of that. Mrs
Prime, more drilling and mining in Northland. Yes or no?
Prime: Well, according to that poll, you
can see it’s really divided in the community, and that’s
what I’m hearing on the campaign trail is that the
community is divided over mining in Northland, and I
believe it is important that that is a conversation our
community has before any decision for extraction is made. I
stand for it being a community decision. It needs to be
process that we’re involved in.
But that’s
sitting on the fence.
Prime: No, it’s
not.
And when you’ve got them split down the
middle like that, it’s not—
Prime: No,
it’s not sitting on the fence. What I think is important
is this issue has to be taken to the community. We
shouldn’t simply make the laws in Wellington and allow
extraction to go ahead without involving the community in
that. It’s about our environment; it’s about our future
generation.
Robin Grieve. Is Mrs Prime sitting
on the fence?
Grieve: Absolutely she’s
sitting on the fence. She’s probably pretty sore already.
The thing is you have to make a call. I mean, it’s quite
clear everywhere you go – regions, states, round the
world, regions in New Zealand that have drilling, mining,
exploration – they do well. They prosper. Northland needs
to prosper. We have the resources. We’re rich in
resources.
Prime: How will Northland prosper from
mining?
Grieve: We’ll prosper because we have the jobs.
And the stats are quite clear. You look at the average
incomes across Australia -- between mining states and
non-mining states – look at New Zealand – Taranaki area
– big increases in incomes across the board. And that’s
what you get with mining industries. They generally pay
pretty well.
Prime: Well, I actually think that business
case is yet to be seen. We haven’t seen that information.
This is what people are promising or quoting as going to
happen in our area, but we haven’t actually seen the
proper business case for it. So I think before we move
exploration into extraction, we actually need to sit down,
look to make sure we’ve got the appropriate environmental
protection mechanisms. We need to consult our
community.
OK, let’s bring Mark in. Mrs
Prime seems to be against this, maybe, sitting on the fence.
What are you thinking, Mark?
Osborne: Look,
I think it’s pretty clear. Northland needs significant
economic development and jobs. That’s the way to the
future of prosperity up here. So we need to take the
opportunity now to explore and understand what opportunities
might be available to us out there around oil, mining, etc.
Once we understand those opportunities, we can then look at
how they may or may not be engaged with, and how we may or
may not extract –
Hang on. It sounds like
you’re sitting on the fence as well.
Grieve: Government needs to stay out of it.
This is about the people.
Prime: No, the government needs
to absolutely have a role in this so that we ensure that we
mitigate any risks for Northland. This is our environment;
this is our coastline; this is our communities; these are
our people. You can see the community is divided over this
issue, and I think that the role of an MP from Northland is
to strongly advocate on behalf of our
communities.
Mark Osborne jump in. You wanted
to say something to that.
Osborne: Can I
just finish my answer, please? What I was saying is we
absolutely need the economic development and the
opportunities that may bring, but we need to absolutely
understand what those opportunities are and what the risks
are and make sure that measures are in place to manage that.
I drive 1000km a week around the district right now, and I
see plenty of quarries and mines all over the place. We’ve
got the china clays in Matauri Bay; we’ve got lime pits.
And they’ve been there for years. They’ve been working
very successfully without any issue whatsoever.
Prime:
But actually, what I think the issue is for our people in
Northland is not about that type of mining, Mark; it’s the
oil-drilling and toxic mining that the community are divided
over.
Grieve: Well, there you go. No wonder the poll says
what it says. Because people hearing words like “toxic
mining”. We’re opposed to toxic mining. Everyone’s
opposed to toxic mining. But what is toxic mining? It’s a
made-up word by people who sit on fences and don’t make
calls for the economic development of the country.
Prime:
Or read research (!)
Okay, I want to talk
about the Puhoi-Wellsford Motorway here. Mark Osborne. 58
per cent of Northlanders say that they want this to go
ahead. But the thing is more than twice as many people
travel on the Auckland rail system than do on that motorway
on any day. So why spend all of that money on a road?
Osborne: Well, it’s not just about people
travelling, is it? It’s about goods and produce and
opening up the North. Auckland is Northland’s closest
major centre, and it’s a pretty big one and a pretty
impressive one. And if we really want unlock the enormous
potential that Northland has, that motorway must go ahead,
and the only way to make sure that motorway goes ahead is to
vote me in as the National MP for Northland, to ensure
strong, stable, John Key-led government.
Mr
Osborne, one of our viewers, Elizabeth Batt, says, “Why
don’t you just go the whole hog and get a bullet train if
you want unlock the region?” Why
not?
Osborne: A bullet train? Well,
absolutely. What a great idea.
So you’re
going to campaign on that, Mr
Osborne?
Osborne: On a bullet
train?
Yeah.
Osborne: It’s
more about moving people. It’s about moving produce.
It’s about getting good services in and out. And the most
effective way to do that is through the motorway
system.
Prime: Well, that’s only one part of our road
system in Northland, obviously, and I’m on the Far North
District Council, and we are dealing with huge
infrastructure issues there. We are doing a
scratch-and-patch job on our roads in Northland. So the
Puhoi to Wellsford is one part of the roading network. But
what about the roads further north? There are just over 30
per cent of our roads that are tar-sealed. The rest are
still metal. So where is the commitment from government to
help us?
So what are you saying, Mrs Prime?
That they should, as Labour suggests put that highway on
hold and spend the money on those other
things?
Prime: The first stage of it is
going to go ahead. The project’s going to be commenced in
this term anyway. Beyond that, I think we need to have a
good look at the business case for it. This failure of the
State Highway 1 network during last year’s storm event in
Northland cut us off for more than 10 days, getting our
produce out to—
Because Labour’s Kelvin
Davis, he wants that highway. He supports
it.
Grieve: And good on him.
Prime: The
highway and the rest of the roads in Northland as well. What
about the people in Kaitaia who I met with on Monday? It’s
important to them. Their infrastructure. They’re having
issues.
Grieve: Well, this is a mistake that people make,
and you’re one of them. This is not about one or the
other. It’s not about because we have the Puhoi extension
motorway, we don’t get the road over there. If you look at
roading funding, there are big problems with roading
funding, and it’s more to do with the formulas, and
you’d know about this, and it’s more about councils
getting out of the way of people who are trying to build
roads and get their RMA reforms so people can build roads
cheaper. But the point is…
Osborne: Can I come in on
this, Lisa?
Let Mark have a say. Let’s bring
Mark in. Your response, Mark?
Osborne: Okay.
Look, I’ll give you a couple of facts and figures. You
know, look, we accept that Northland has some quite unique
conditions. There’s a clay base. We get significant and
severe weather instances up here, and that causes major
issues for our roading. Look, I’ll give you a couple of
numbers. The National Government in its most recent two
terms has spent $750 million on the Northland roading
infrastructure. The Labour government—
I
want to move on from roading, Mr
Osborne—
Osborne: …in the equivalent
period spent 390.
Prime: And the roads are still in a
mess.
I want to move on from roads, please. I
just want to know very quickly from you all, starting with
Mr Grieve, should more government offices be moving out of
the big centres and heading to places like
Northland?
Grieve: Hell no. What’s the
last thing we want to inflict the people of Northland with?
Bureaucrats. We don’t want more people coming into the
region.
Mrs Prime?
Prime: We
want more jobs in the region, so if that’s going to create
more employment in Northland, absolutely we should look at
that.
Mark Osborne, what about moving migrants
– making it a condition of coming into the country that
you might have to move up to Northland? What do you think of
that?
Osborne: Well, we’ve got plenty of
people in Northland looking for jobs, as you pointed out
earlier, and we’ve got a great plan to create jobs and
economic growth for them. So we’d like to make sure that
our people here get jobs first.
Grieve: So we’re not
going to force migrants to go and live in the regions. I
mean, you know, that’s an idea that comes out that
you’re going to bully people around and say, ‘You’ve
got to live there and live there.’ Governments have got to
stop living people’s lives for them. People will go where
they were— where they want to go. I was in Dargaville
yesterday, and I tell you what a lovely town Dargaville is.
I drove through Dargaville; I parked my car; I didn’t
have to pay any parking; I parked; I walked
across—
What are you saying? People will go
and live there of their own free
choice?
Grieve: It’s a lovely place to
live if you want to live, but you want to force people to go
and live somewhere?
Mr Grieve, you just
mentioned free choice there. Very quickly, in a tweet last
year, you said that New Zealand’s a Christian country and
that is why parents should accept the Bible in schools. Does
your leader believe that? Leader of the ACT
Party?
Grieve: Well, I’m not sure what the
leader believes, but that’s actually a state of fact.
That’s not— We are.
I thought ACT was
about letting people decide what they do. You just said that
in relation to moving to Northland.
Grieve:
Well, absolutely. I mean, we support that, but the country
officially is a Christian country, so therefore we have
Christian things which go on. If you don’t want to be a
Christian country, then you wouldn’t have the Bible in the
schools. The point of the tweet was we teach Bible in
school, not Buddhism or other religions because we are
officially a Christian country.
Right. Just
before we go, I want to give you each the opportunity to
tell me your favourite secret getaway spot in Northland.
Willow-Jean Prime, what’s yours?
Prime:
Hihi.
Grieve: Mine is Russell. My daughter married there
the other weekend, and it’s the most romantic, beautiful
spot in the world.
And Mark
Osborne?
Osborne: Oh, look, there’s so
many, but if I had to pick one, where I live in Taipa in the
Far North. It’s beautiful.
All right, thank
you very much to all the candidates who joined us today.
Willow-Jean Prime, Robin Grieve and Mark Osborne, thank you
very much.
Transcript provided by Able. www.able.co.nz
ENDS