Free Press
ACT’s regular bulletin
RMA Schemozzle Continues
The Resource Management Legislation has hit the wall, with the Māori Party severely overplaying their hand. They are
continuing to wag the dog even after securing major concessions that make the reforms tepid at best and separatist at
worst. Rural New Zealand is in revolt, if our email inbox is anything to go by.
ACT’s Position
Always willing to help, ACT has drafted four amendments to be moved in the Committee stage. These would respectively:
remove the Iwi Participation Clauses, ban Rural Urban Boundaries, introduce private property rights into the Act (no,
they haven’t been there for the past 26 years) and ban the powers of Ministerial diktat proposed in section 360D. Watch
this space.
Coming to Palmerston North
ACT is holding its Lower North Island Regional Conference in Palmerston North this Saturday. David Seymour’s keynote
speech will address the Boomer vs. Millenial debate that has erupted since Bill English promised to raise the age of
entitlement to NZ Super by 2037. Register here.
Private Members’ Bills Show What’s at Stake
The Private Members' ballot is an opportunity for different parties to show what they’re about. National put in bills
about lost luggage as a strategy to clog up the ballot – politics before policy. Labour entered no fewer than four
anti-Partnership School bills – say no more. ACT has a principled bill on a major issue of civil liberties – assisted
dying. New Zealand First and the Greens are in a different ball park, however.
Free Rugby (and Cricket, and Netball, and Pétanque)
New Zealand First has a bill that would require almost all sport to be provided live and free on TV. We already know
that free-to-air channels don’t produce enough revenue to fund sports, that’s why the rights were sold to pay-TV. The
taxpayer and/or the NZRU/NZ Cricket/NZ Netball/et al will end up footing the bill. As if we needed further
demonstration, this bill shows that New Zealand First will happily run up a bill against the taxpayer and treat private
organisations with contempt.
Free Student Loan Repayments
Having already taken interest off student loans, the Greens now want to absolve borrowers from student loan repayments
while they save for a house. Wrong on so many levels. It will increase the amount of tax that goes to subsidizing
student loans. The biggest beneficiaries will be those with the biggest loans, those who probably went to better schools
to get into longer more expensive and more highly subsidized tertiary courses. Worst of all it won’t even help those it
is supposed to help. The targets of the scheme will find it harder to get mortgages due to the liability they still
carry in the form of a student loan. That’s the Greens, with so little regard for economics and fairness they propose to
spend taxpayer money making rich kids better off, but hardly.