The Nation: Lisa Owen interviews Winston Peters
On The Nation: Lisa Owen interviews Winston
Peters
Headlines:
New
Zealand First leader Winston Peters says in government he
would fire the board of Solid Energy if they would not agree
to go into the Pike River Mine to retrieve the bodies of the
miners who died
there.
Peters
says he would pass an exemption in health and safety law
that would allow entering the mine, and says Labour and the
Greens would agree to that “because they have been
embarrassed into taking
action”.
Winston
Peters says foreign students in this country on student
visas should not be allowed to work 20 hours a week, as they
currently can. “The students are going to come here to be
educated, not to work.”
Lisa Owen: Good morning, Mr Peters. There’s
been big developments in this Pike River story this week.
We’re going to get to that in a second. But I’m just
curious about one thing – a podcast that was released this
week, The 9th Floor. In it, Helen Clark talks about the fact
that in 1996, someone from your team floated the idea of a
shared prime ministership, and I’m just wondering – was
it a serious idea at the
time?
Winston Peters: Look,
she didn’t say that I did that.
No, she
didn’t.
Somebody else who
was on my tactical team apparently did that. I think it was
because in 1932, the then leader of the second biggest party
in the coalition was, in fact, the prime minister – a guy
called Forbes – a man called Forbes. And I suppose he went
in there saying, ‘Now, look, if you think this is novel or
new, it’s not; it’s already happened.’ And I think it
was a tactic to get them in the right mental frame of mind
in terms of negotiating.
But in terms of that,
do you think now New Zealanders would be ready for an
arrangement like that – a shared prime ministership or a
prime minister who comes from the smaller coalition
partner?
Let me tell you,
neither myself or anybody in my organisation and in my
caucus is thinking of that sort of talk. We are focused
utterly on maximising our vote in a three-way fight on the
23rd of September this year. That’s how serious the
economic and social circumstances are, and we’re not
thinking about anything else because we want to put all our
efforts into that. And speculation and answering
hypothetical questions is not what we’re going to be doing
in this campaign.
But just as a general
principle, do you think it would be workable to have the
prime minister come from another
party?
I just told you I
haven’t thought about it. I’m telling you we are not
going into this arrangement to sell the people out and
compromise them and all sorts of arrangements which are
against the national interest. This country’s economy’s
in serious trouble, our social structures are in serious
trouble, our infrastructure is desperate. And you can either
go with the present and try and defend the indefensible or
you can strike out to have the country the way it used to be
– a world leader. And we are in the second camp, and
that’s all we’re going to be talking about, all we’re
going to be focused on, all we’re going to deliver. Every
other egotistical, egregious self-interest is not in our
book.
Okay. Let’s move on to Pike River. So
we know that this week there’s been more vision, there’s
been development in this story. I just want to confirm your
position on this. You give a cast-iron guarantee that if
you’re in government, there will be a manned re-entry and
recovery operation. And you’ve said that it would be a
condition of confidence and supply or a support agreement.
Is that a fair summary of your position on
this?
It’s shameful that
I’ve got to repeat this, but I made that commitment to
them down at Pike River when I went down to see those
families. I’ve worked 11 miles underground in a mine. I
know a bit about the dangers – not in a coal mine but in a
different type of setting. So I’m not saying it lightly. I
heard their experts rescue people around them, and I believe
them and said at the time I’m prepared to go in myself –
not as some sort of boast, as some people in the media say,
but as an indication of my confidence that safe re-entry is
possible. The Queensland Mines Rescue said so. The New
Zealand Mines Rescue said so. Tony Foster, the leading
expert who came back from the UK to give evidence in front
of the select committee said so. And all we’ve got is a
whole lot of self-interested establishment people engaged in
a cover-up, and I’ve said that for a long time and that
this cover-up could not
succeed.
Okay.
No,
wait. The sooner they fly a white flag and stop behaving
this way, the better, because it’s a contempt for a modern
democracy, and above all, it’s a contempt for those
families.
I know you don’t like the phrase
‘bottom line’, but it would be a bottom line for
you.
Look, for the
umpteenth time, I gave my word, and I intend to keep
it.
All right. So, let’s talk about how you
would make that happen, then. So because Solid Energy still
controls the mine, what would you
do?
No, they
don’t.
A law change of what
kind?
Solid Energy is a
taxpayer-owned organisation controlled by politicians and
engaged right now in a massive cover-up.
So
how would you practically do this? What would you do? Change
that law?
No, I’d fire
them for a
start…
Okay.
…and
get them to honour the law of this country, which is that if
there is a potential for a crime scene to be there, an
investigation should take place.
So when you
say—
At every
level.
Mr Peters, I just want to be
clear.
Can I just say one
thing?
When you say ‘fire them’, do you
mean get rid of the
board?
Can I just say one
thing? This debate and the academic, ephemeral way you’re
conducting it is not good enough. This is a potential crime
scene, and these people and our institutions deserve better
than that. I want discovery. And everything they’ve seen
thus far suggests that.
I think it’s
important that people understand how you would do this in
practical terms, because you’ve obviously thought about
it. So you’d get rid of the board. How do you change the
law?
I said to the new head
of the board, ‘If we were to change the law to enable a
re-entry to take place, what would you do?’ He said,
‘I’d resign.’ I said, ‘Really? What if the
government was to agree to change the law?’ You know what
he said? ‘I’d have to rethink that.’ Now, straight
away, I’m talking to a politician and not someone
concerned about the history and getting to the facts behind
that mine catastrophe.
So would you just pass
an exemption that allowed a recovery operation for Pike that
took away responsibility for any potential health and safety
consequence?
That is not an
impediment, but, worse than that, this is a coward’s way
of behaving. What you’re saying to those families is,
‘The possibility that someone might get hurt and we’ll
have to pay compensation during this recovery is so
concerning to us, we don’t give a darn whether you get to
the facts or the truth or not.’ Now, that’s an appalling
way to behave, and I’m looking at institutions, including
some of your colleagues in the media who, frankly, on this
matter, have been a damn disgrace.
But it’s
more than that, though, isn’t it? Because under the new
laws, if it’s found to be reckless conduct, you could go
to jail for five years. So would you pass an exemption that
took away that
responsibility?
I’ve
already said that. I’ve said that we can take away any
possibility that by making the decision to give the
miners’ families justice, anyone else would be, for that
event, capable of some sort of penalty. We can remove all
that. But what we won’t do is remove from that
circumstance the culpability of people who were guilty in
the first
place.
Okay.
29
people lost their lives. No one in this country, that’s
meant to be a first-world democracy, has been held
accountable. That’s repugnant. It is disgraceful. And
we’re all— Many of us in this country are guilty of
allowing it to happen.
So you changed the
health and safety rules. Do you reckon that Labour and the
Greens would come on board with that to perhaps water down
— some people would see that as watering down — health
and safety rules? Do you reckon the Greens would come on
board and vote for that if it came to
it?
Look, all these other
parties were talking about—weren’t doing anything about
it at all. They were talking about, “Oh, maybe I’ll have
a review.” We went to Pike River—
So you
don’t think they would support
that?
No, no. They will now
because they have been embarrassed into taking action. But
when it happened, they weren’t. When the families asked
us, I took one of my colleagues down and a senior guy in the
South Island to go and see them, and I heard, with time and
further investigations, I heard enough to know there’s
something seriously wrong here.
Okay, well,
Bill English has suggested that if you want to change the
law and you want to do this, you might want to make yourself
responsible under that law. Would you be prepared to do
that? If you’re so certain about it, would you be prepared
to say, “I will take responsibility. I would be the one it
fell back on.”
Look,
I’m not going to have a duel of wits with an unarmed
opponent on this matter, like Bill English. His behaviour
has been repugnant and extreme. So has John Key’s. John
Key said that they’d go to the ends of the earth to help
these families, and all we’ve seen at a certain time is an
utter switch from willing to go in to “This is a massive
danger to any recovery or retrieval group of
men.”
So—
No,
no, let me tell you this.
I just want to be
clear.
But I want to give
you a piece of evidence here. Nick Smith and the government
and the system have been saying it’s far too dangerous to
go in. So the next question is, “But you allowed men to go
in to as far as 400m. How do those two statements—? How
does the statement now balance the statement when you let
them go in? And is it not the case that you, if you were
right now, sent those first mining people into that
situation knowing that they could be immolated in a second?
Now, those two statements— The behaviour and the statement
don’t stack up; they rebut each other. They give the lie
to what’s going on here.
Let’s move on to
another topic that’s turning out to be a central issue in
an election year — immigration. You want to drop the
numbers to around 10,000 immigrants a year. About 70,000
now. How would you do it? What categories would you target?
And over what period of time would you make those kinds of
cuts?
We’d bring people
here that we need, not who need us. We’ll bring people
here like Switzerland, Ireland; every other country in the
world does. People of top quality experience, skills, the
type which we have got gaps in our economy. But we will not
bring here a mass number of unskilled people that’s been
going on. And if the British target right now — UK target,
65 million people — their target is 100,000. And we’re
at 4.7 million, and we’ve got 72,000
already.
So, what? Would you target student
visas?
No, no. We’ll
return the integrity of export education. When the student
comes in here from there economy to pay our economy to
educate them—
Yeah, but if you want to go
from 70,000 to 10,000, you’re going to make some cuts
somewhere, clearly.
No,
you’ve got it all wrong. No, straight there, you mentioned
student visas. The students are going to come here to be
educated, not to work.
But they have work
rights. At the moment, they can work 20 hours a
week.
No, no, I know
that.
So would you get rid of
that?
No. That’s my
complaint. They’ve got work rights in their tens of
thousands against New Zealand students who can’t get jobs,
and yet the export education policy, of which I know
something because I was there at the start of it, was your
economy pays our economy to educate your
students.
Should we get rid of the 20 hours
that they’re allowed to work? And then after they
graduate, they’re allowed to work for a
year.
Do you know why the
20 hours is allowed?
So would you get rid of
those?
Do you know why the
20 hours is allowed? And this is what stinks about New
Zealand’s political system sometimes. Our export education
wasn’t working, so instead of improving our export
education quality product, we decided to have inducements on
the side, not to do with education, but to do with competing
with other economies that provide better export education
than us.
So if you’re going from 70,000 down
to 10, we’re going to make some trims. We’re going to
have to make some
trims.
That goes without
saying.
Yes, but would you allow students to
continue while they study here? Would you allow them to work
after graduation, which is the current situation? Would you
change all of that?
No, no,
once again, let me tell you, our policy is profoundly clear.
Either you’re coming here to get educated and to go home,
as the Chinese asked me to promise that I’d do way back in
1997, or you’re coming here with an immigration
programme.
So no rights to work. Come get your
education, go home.
If you
were to come in here and you were to have a unique skill
that we didn’t have, then you’d have a chance of getting
into this country, yes, in the 10,000 bracket, but not
72.
But you would still need to cut other
areas, so who would you target? What areas? Permanent
residents? Work
visas?
Look, it’s not
complicated. I’ve given you the
criteria.
Yes, but I’m wanting
detail.
Bring people who
our economy needs desperately because of high skills and not
low-skilled, unskilled people who are driving down wages and
conditions in this country.
So specifically
who don’t we need? Because let’s say we go
down—
The second category
we don’t need.
But specifically. If we go
down to 10,000 immigrants, who’s going to run our dairy
farms? Who’s going to look after our old people? Who’s
going to make coffee?
Oh,
look—
Who’s going to build houses, all
that kind of stuff that these people are currently employed
in?
We can fix up the dairy
farms by having an export dollar under the Reserve Bank Act
that reflects what our economy is, not the highly inflated
dollar we’ve got now, and farmers would be able to pay
First World wages. I’m off a dairy farm. I know that Mum,
Dad, the corporate family in New Zealand in my time could
out-compete an earner in four adults in any part of Europe.
Don’t tell me that the New Zealand working families on
farms aren’t up to it.
But can we--? I’m
not telling you that, but I’m saying
that,…
Yes, you
are.
…for example, in the service
work—
You’re saying we
can’t do the job on the farm any more.
In
the service workers area, predictions of how many people
we’re going to need, Careerforce predications say that we
need 200,000
people—
Lisa, you sound
like the problem.
…200,000 people more by
2020. Where are those people going to come
from?
Lisa, you seem to be
more interested in your questions, and you sound like the
problem.
Where are they going to come from, Mr
Peters?
We’ve got 92,000
young people who are not in education, training or
employment. 92,000. That’s where they’re going to come
from.
But that’s 200,000 people. Yeah,
90,000 when we need at least
200,000.
That’s right
now. Who said that?
Careerforce
predictions.
Why would I
believe them?
So do you think—? Mr
Peters.
Excuse me. Out of
left field, they just put up a figure of 200,000, and you
believe it.
For service workers, so, do you
think that we can fill all the job vacancies are run the
country without having any immigrant
workers?
I didn’t say
that, did I? I’m not going to get done over by you people
with misinformation and alternative facts in this campaign.
Let me tell you this. 10,000 is a very high figure against
what every other First World economy is doing. It’s not
low; it’s high. We’re going to bring in people in a
high-skilled area, like Norway, Switzerland, all those
countries do. But we’re going to look to train, educate
and employ our own people first and not use immigration as
an excuse for our failing to do so in the first
place.
But I suppose, Mr
Peters—
We are putting
commitment behind our policies.
Even if you do
that, 91,000 young people who aren’t employed or
in…
92.
…education
– about, what, 130,000 unemployed – that still doesn’t
bring us up to the numbers of people we need to fill these
positions.
But I say again
– you’re talking bunkum. There’s 140,000 unemployed in
this country, and that’s because employment in this
country is— one hour’s work a week makes you employed.
Now, that’s the great lie for a start. Then we’ve got
about 150,000 who can’t get the adequate work that they
need or hours to do these jobs, so now we’re looking at
about 250,000. And of that number, you’ve got 92,000 young
people who you’ve consigned to the scrapheap of history. I
have not, and we’re going to look to all those people
first. Then, after all that, if we can’t place them,
we’ll look to your cheap shot alternative – we’ll get
people in from overseas.
Thanks for joining us
this morning, Mr
Peters.
You’re
welcome.
Much
appreciated.
Transcript
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