The Nation: Patrick Gower interviews Gareth Morgan
On The Nation: Patrick Gower interviews Gareth
Morgan
Headlines:
Opportunities
Party leader Gareth Morgan says he doesn’t support raising
the age of superannuation but does want means testing. Under
his policy everyone would get a Universal Basic Income of
$10,000 a year from the age of 65 - you could get more if
you retire or are on a low
income.
Morgan says
younger voters need to “get off their butts”. He says
his party has done a poll on what would get voters to the
polling booth and the top issue was cannabis law reform. But
he won’t commit to legalising cannabis, saying “that’s
a different issue” and ‘we’re going to have a
deliberate democracy discussion on
that”.
Lisa Owen: When
aspiring politician Gareth Morgan launched The Opportunities
Party, he compared himself to an anti-establishment Donald
Trump. Of course, Trump went on to win, but Morgan is seen
as even more of an underdog, so can he make it into
Parliament? Well, Gareth Morgan joins Paddy
now.
Patrick Gower: Gareth Morgan, when you
started this whole thing, you said you were going to light a
fuse under Parliament, but nothing has happened. There’s
been no boom — anything but. It’s a whimper. What’s
gone wrong?
Gareth Morgan:
Just be patient. We only started talking to the people
directly this week. Spoke in Invercargill, Dunedin —couple
of hundred people in Invers, sell-out 350 in Dunedin. It’s
happening. I mean, it’s really good fun to talk to people
directly rather than through media, you know, and the
quality of the Q + A is just phenomenal. So I’m quietly
confident.
There’s six months to
go.
Yeah, well, you know, I
said before with seven people in the team, seven policies
and seven months to go, how’s that for an
underdog?
Let’s look at one of them, then.
Superannuation, you’re going to announce that on Tuesday.
I presume you are interested in raising the age up to 67 or
beyond?
No, you assume
wrong.
What? Means
testing?
Yeah, yeah. What I
want to do is, as part of an announcement on the start of
the UBI — you know, universal income for everybody — and
I’ve got to get the money for it from somewhere. And at
the moment, the only universal benefit that I can see out
there is Super. So when I do all the maths of what a UBI for
the whole population can be, that’s about half the level
of Super per head. So the first thing to do with Super is to
means-test it. We’ll divide Super in two. 10 grand,
here’s your UBI. And the top-up — yeah, you can have it,
but only if you need it.
So everybody in New
Zealand gets $10,000 under your
UBI.
That’s where we’ll
end up eventually.
And under means testing,
someone who owns five houses wouldn’t get superannuation?
What about someone who’s
working?
Fine. They get
it.
No,
superannuation.
No, well,
they get the UBI. They don’t get the means-tested top-up,
no. Well, it depends on what their total income is. But, you
know, Paddy, I’m about to get— Joanne and I, we’re
about to turn over here, so we’re about to get 40K into
this family. I don’t need a blimmin’ cent of it.
Meanwhile, we’ve got, you know, people with young families
and that who are at the bottom end of this inequality gap
and this poverty thing and this unaffordability of housing.
I mean, what are we doing? This is just insane, and the
interesting thing from these talks in Dunedin and
Christchurch is when I talk to oldies like me, they are
ready to invest in their grandkids. So it’s a myth to
actually say that the boomers want it all to
ourselves.
Yeah, but are we looking at—?
With what the government’s done here, are we looking at
some sort of intergenerational divide building between
boomers and the rest? Or are we looking at the vibe that’s
already there getting
worse?
I think it’s going
to get worse. I mean, basically, what Bill English announced
was a policy that’s not a policy. I mean, I’ll be 76 by
the time that thing even starts, so he’s not actually
facing up to the problem, and you’ve seen Andrew Little,
who said, ‘Let’s take it to 67,’ and now says, ‘Oh,
no, let’s not take it to 6…’ I mean, these guys, these
establishment parties full of these career politicians
specialise in doing nothing, so what I act—because that
saves their jobs, so what I’m saying — if you want to do
nothing, vote for Labour or vote for National — makes no
difference. If you want to go forward, vote for us. If you
want to go backwards, vote for Peters.
Yeah,
but looking at that, I mean, you’re looking at getting Gen
X or Gen Y and millennials, I take it, in terms of taking on
the baby boomers. Is that what it would sort of take to stop
these—?
No. No, I just
want any person who cares about New Zealand beyond
themselves and their immediate family, and those people are
right across the board. They’re not necessarily just
lefties.
But what would it take to shift this,
though, to shift the, kind of, baby boomers having a hold on
things like superannuation? Surely you believe that it’s
getting the younger generations out to
vote?
Well, that’s part
of it. They’ve got to get off their butts. I mean, we did
a poll on that. ‘What would get you out of bed in the
morning, you know, to come down to the polls and actually
say you care?’ And do you know what the top thing
was?
What?
Cannabis
law reform. I mean, if ever there was a blimmin’ first
world problem, it’s that, isn’t it? So, yeah, they are
responsible, the younger voters, to a degree. You know,
their negligence is causing this.
Would you
legalise cannabis?
Well,
that’s a different issue. It’s a different issue. What,
just to get them into the polls?
Yeah, no,
just, quickly.
No, we’re
going to have a deliberative democracy discussion on
that.
Okay, moving back to where we are. Why,
then, would young people or younger generations get off
their butt for you? You’re a 67-year-old
millionaire.
64!
A
64-year-old millionaire! Sorry, sorry, sorry. You’re a
64-year-old millionaire, why would they get off their butts
for you!
Because it’s the
strength of the argument. And it’s the same with anybody
out there. I’ve got this enormous faith - if you give the
public full information, it’s incredibly rational on any
decision. That’s my job this year. It’s just to inform
people. That is why they’re turning out. They will make
the call, not me. They’ll either say, ‘Back on your
bike, Gareth. Very nice, but we don’t wanna know you,’
or, ‘Let’s get on with it now.’
I think
there you said it, you know, you’re trying to inform
people. Is that what you are, an ideas man? You’re not
really a politician, are you? You’re not really here to
make it into parliament. You’re here to get your ideas out
there.
I’m here to get
the seven policies as much traction as I can. I mean, my
ideal scenario would be the Nats or Labour, whoever’s
going to be government, say, ‘We’ll do it all, Gareth,
now bugger off.’ I would love that. So I’m not going in
there for a job. I’m going in there to try and make New
Zealand better because we can do it.
What
I’m saying is, are you really serious about it? Because it
seems that it’s your ideas that you’re more pushing,
rather than a realistic chance of making parliament. I mean,
have you got anyone who’s even interested in standing with
you yet?
Most people who I
respect, who I would want to stand, so I have worked with in
the past or are authorities in the area, when I’m talking
to them say, ‘Jeez, I’m not going near that toxic
environment. You think I’m going to put my family at
risk?’ And I’m thinking, ‘Come on, you’re a New
Zealander.’ It’s a bit like when I took on cats, you
know, and I got these phone calls saying, ‘We support
you.’ And I’d say, ‘Well, stand up with me then.’
‘Oh, God, no. Not doing that.’
So,
politics is as toxic as taking out cats. I think that’s a
good place to leave it. Gareth Morgan, thank you for joining
us.
Thanks,
Paddy.