The Nation: Patrick Gower interviews Andrew Little
On The Nation: Patrick Gower interviews Andrew
Little After previously saying Labour would scrap
negative gearing, Little told The Nation he’ll make
an announcement about it tomorrow. He says all Labour’s
housing initiatives will be implemented in the first
term. Little says he is “personally in favour” of a
tourist levy and the party is looking at it. Little says
Te Reo would not be compulsory in schools under Labour’s
first term, but denies that’s a snub to the Labour Maori
caucus.
Headlines:
Labour leader
Andrew Little confirms Labour would cut immigration by tens
of thousands, and says those numbers would come from cutting
thousands of student visas and works visas. He singles our
work visas for labourers and “low quality
courses.”
Patrick
Gower: Andrew Little, thank you so much for joining us. Now,
I want to start with immigration. You’ve said you want to
cut immigration by up to 50,000. Now, everybody is wondering
how you’re going to do
that.
Andrew Little: So
what I’ve said is we do need to reduce immigration.
We’re a country built on immigration. We’re always going
to need talents and skills from other parts of the world, so
that’s the starting point. But right now we’ve got
numbers coming in to New Zealand that is putting real
pressure on our cities, particularly our biggest city,
Auckland. And we see it with the lack of housing, we see it
with the pressure on transport and traffic, we see it with
overcrowded schools and hospitals, so we have to cut
immigration. I’ve said we have to cut in the order of tens
of thousands, and, well, that’s a policy in a few weeks’
time—
Yes, but what I asked is you have said
you want to cut it by up to 50,000. How are you going to do
that?
So, what I’ve said
is we need to cut in the order of tens of thousands, and we
will be working out the work visas and the student
visas.
Let’s get back to that pool of up to
50,000, where you said—and I’ll use your words, you said
you wanted to get to a target of 20,000 to 25,000 net
immigration. It’s 71,000 at the moment; that means by up
to 50,000. Do you stand by that target of 20,000 to
25,000?
What I stand by is
we have to reduce it in the order of the tens of thousands.
Look, we can quibble—
So you’re backing
off that target, aren’t
you?
No. No, I’m
not.
You’re backing off the target of
50,000.
I’ve been very
clear about we have to reduce in the order of tens of
thousands, because the problem with what is happening at the
moment is the numbers are putting pressure on our biggest
cities.
Let’s take ‘tens of thousands’.
That means reduce it by
20,000.
Yeah.
How?
Who? How? How are you going to do
it?
So, when we announce of
policy in a few weeks’ time, you will see we have a
target. It is in the area of work visas. We’re issuing
42,000 work visas a year. Some of those are for roles and
occupations that I know we can actually staff from inside
New Zealand.
Okay, which one? Name one. Name
one role or occupation in those 43,000 work visas, actually,
that you will cut.
So,
we’ve seen work visas issued, for example, for labouring
work, and we have, you know, 6000, I think, categorised as
labouring work.
That’s 6000. You need to get
to 20,000.
And we have
15,000 unemployed labourers in New Zealand. So there’s the
work visas. There’s also the student visas. So we know
that some of the visas being issued to students to study
here are for what I would describe as low-quality courses.
They’re less about education and more about the right to
work that goes with it. So—
So how many
would you look to cut out of the student visas? Thousands,
obviously.
Yeah, and I
think when we announce our policy, you’ll see the numbers
are in the—
You’ll cut thousands of
student visas?
When we
announce the policy, you’ll see where the numbers are
coming out of. But we can achieve that requirement that I
think we do have right now if we’re going to do a good job
– not just for New Zealanders who are here already but for
those who are coming here – in the order of tens of
thousands.
So over 20,000 – you will confirm
that in this policy and that will include thousands of
students?
Yes on both
counts, yeah.
Yeah. Thousands of student visas
will be cut? Because that’s a $4 billion industry, Mr
Little.
Very important.
Very important to a lot of tertiary institutions, but we
know that some of the courses that students are getting
student visas for and the right to work that goes with it
are pretty poor quality, to be honest. And that’s what
NZQA and TEC are now finding is that some of the courses
that students are now studying are actually not that good
courses, so we think there is scope to make a change
there.
Sure. But getting back to the work
visas, and even if we’re looking at this number of 20,000,
being generous, employers, be it a truck operator in
Northland, a hotel operator in Queenstown, a farmer in
Southland, they all say you can’t do this – that they
need the people. What’s your message to these guys? Are
they making it up?
No. Of
course they are concerned. They’ve got their businesses to
run; they want people there to work for them. We will work
with business and business organisations as we work through
our particular plan on cutting those immigration
numbers.
The service industry’s saying it
needs 200,000 workers by 2020, and you’re talking about
cutting tens of thousands out of the work visas. Where are
they going to come from, Mr Little? Who’s going to do the
jobs?
So, and in addition
to cutting those immigration numbers, we’ve got to look at
the 90,000 young people who are not in work, education or
employment in New Zealand. So there’s real scope there.
I’m not prepared to write them off and think that they
haven’t got a future and we haven’t got a future for
them in New Zealand.
And nobody’s writing
off the NEETs. Nobody’s writing off the NEETs, but you
know you can’t turn a NEET into a nurse overnight, or you
can’t take someone from Northland and slap them in
Queenstown overnight. You know
that.
That’s right. So,
that’s right. So managing immigration—This is all about
managing immigration better. It’s about accepting that the
numbers that are coming in at the moment, regardless of
where they come from, just the sheer numbers are putting
huge pressure particularly on Auckland, and Auckland cannot
cope any more. So we need a breather. We’ve just got to
take a bit of stock, and we have to phase that down, and
we’ve got to work on those who don’t have work here at
the moment or skills – a bit of time to ramp all that up.
But I’m confident, if we look closely at the
numbers—
These employers are
just—
…if we look
closely at the numbers, we can do a better job at managing
what we’ve got at the moment.
These
employers are just going to say, ‘We don’t have the
time. We’re running a business here. We don’t have time
to convert a NEET into whatever is needed. We’ve got to
get going.’ So if you’re going to do this cut, do they
have to accept there’s going to be some
pain?
We’ve got to reduce
the numbers because the pressure, particularly on Auckland,
is just too bad.
So the employers have to
accept that they’re going to have a bit of pain while they
find workers here. Is that what you’re
saying?
And so we manage
it. It’s not about day one, you shut the doors and
that’s it; nobody else comes in. It is about managing it
sensibly and carefully and properly, and we’ll work with
business and business organisations and put the rules
together so that we can manage immigration better, take the
pressure off, take a bit of a breather, build the houses,
fix the traffic congestion—
Okay. I want to
turn now to housing – the Housing Affordability Measure
that was out this week that shows government’s own
official stats. It’s worse than ever. KiwiBuild, your
solution to this, does it need to get
bigger?
Well, we are
strongly committed to the 100,000 over 10
years—
Do we need more now? Do we need more
now?
We still
have—KiwiBuild still assumes that house building that’s
going on at the moment is going to go on. There’s a lot of
commercial building going on at the moment too. But we’re
committed to that 50,000. We know that the shortage of
housing at the moment is about—
It’s not
keeping up. I mean, do you need to lift that
policy?
So, I think that a
combination of measures that we do – immigration measures,
the house-building measures – a bit of a ramp-up process
there as well – that we can fill the gap that is there at
the moment. It will take us 10 years to do that. And, look,
if we can do more, if we can do it faster, yeah, we will.
But we can build more houses, and we can ramp up so that we
are building a lot of houses in a single year – affordable
homes that we can get young couples to get their first
home.
Sure. Let’s look at those measures.
Negative gearing — that’s where a landlord effectively
makes a loss on their property, writes it off and avoids
some tax. Is Labour going to get rid of
that?
We’d have a policy
on that. And I’ll be announcing some measures around that
tomorrow.
First term — is it gone? Is
negative gearing gone? Is this a first-term
thing?
All of our housing
initiatives are first-term initiatives. They’ll be stuff
we can do as early as possible, as quickly as possible,
because the housing situation now is in
crisis.
So no more tax write-offs for
landlords in the first
term?
Well, I’ll talk
about what we’re doing with negative gearing tomorrow; I
have a specific policy announcement to make about that. But
we are going to level the playing field and make it easier
for first home buyers to get their first
home.
I want to look now at the Department of
Conservation. Lots of talk about it being underfunded, and
we’ve seen some moves by the government this week to up
infrastructure. The government doesn’t want a tourism levy
— a levy on tourists to help pay for this. Would a Labour
government look at that?
We
are looking at that. I’m personally in favour of that. I
think it’s the most efficient and effective way of raising
the revenue we need to do to support the regional councils
and those other local communities to build facilities to
accommodate the tourists who are coming
here.
So we’re talking, like, 50 bucks at
the border. Is this the sort of thing that you’re looking
at?
I don’t have a figure
in mind. There’s the concept of having a levy that you
collect when you buy your airline ticket or pay over the
border. There’s about setting the amount.
Is
this a first-term thing as well, Andrew
Little?
Yeah, because
again, the amount of tourists coming here — three million
in a year — is putting huge pressure on cities and towns
and villages all around New Zealand, as well as our
conservation state, and we need investment quickly into
getting those facilities up to speed.
So a
tourism levy in the first term under a Labour government. I
want to turn to something else now — social investment.
National’s big idea, the prime minister’s big idea,
it’s all about social justice. It’s Labour territory.
They’ve got into your space. They’ve got into your face,
effectively, and taken your
ground.
Except we still
have 90,000 young people not in work, education or training,
60,000 people who can’t get hospital treatment at their
local hospital because the hospital says they can’t afford
it. There’s a whole heap of things. Schools are
overcrowded.
We all know the problems. But the
question is they’ve got in, they’ve got the language,
they’ve got the ideas that are meant to be yours;
they’re owning your
territory.
The reason I
don’t agree with that is they talk about social
investment. They talk about a lot of numbers. They talk
about a lot of data, and they’re very data-driven. But
what they’re not connected to is the lived experiences of
a lot of New Zealanders. That’s what they’re missing.
That’s why they’ve missed the housing
crisis.
But let’s look at the politics of
this. It’s like you’re getting boxed out, you know. They
are going to build houses as well. They have social
investment. They’re leaving you very, very, very little
space.
You look at the
issue of mental health, and it’s just come up this week.
And I’ve picked up that mental health issue as I’ve gone
around the country over the last few months. I’ve picked
that up solely just by talking to so many people, thousands
of New Zealanders and their families. And yet, when the
government is presented with a petition or stories of 500
people about their mental health issues, we have a minister
of health who dismisses it, says they’re all sort of
anti-government protestors.
How big do you
think this mental health is as an election issue? How big do
you think this is?
Every
public meeting I’ve gone to, and it’s come up. And if I
haven’t initiated it, somebody has raised it. And it’s
amazing, the response that I’ve got. Everybody is saying
if it’s not them or their family, they know a family who
is affected by it who just can’t get a lot of those
front-line sorts of services that they need. And you’ve
got a government with all its data-driven analytics and its
social investment approach that has completely missed the
boat on it. That’s the problem with the social investment
approach — it’s not connected to the real lives on New
Zealanders.
I want to turn now to some of your
own problems in the last couple of weeks — the list issue,
the Maori prison policy on the hoof, the charter schools
debate. It’s been a debacle. It has been a debacle. I
mean, where’s the
discipline?
We’ve got an
amazing list.
I know all this. You know, we
know all this. But it’s been a debacle. It looks like a
debacle. It feels like a debacle. Where’s the
discipline?
There is a huge
amount of discipline. It’s that discipline that has
allowed us—
It’s not discipline when a
senior MP announces policy on the hoof. It’s not
discipline when a low-rank list MP diverts the conversation
to about seven or eight charter schools around the country.
That’s not
discipline.
Well, you’ve
got a bunch of MPs who are very passionate about the ideas
that they’ve got, but we’re very
clear—
No one’s hearing them. No one’s
hearing them. It must be frustrating for you, mustn’t it?
It must be frustrating for
you.
Well, you know, you
can say that, but what I see is—
But is it
frustrating for you for this to
happen?
No. The reason why
is—
Because it should be frustrating. You
should be saying to me, ‘Yes, it is frustrating.’
You’re trying to be prime minister. You’ve got four
months to go. Of course it’s
frustrating.
I know what
you’re saying, Paddy, and look, at one level, you could
say that, but what I also look at is the state the party is
in to fight this election campaign. I look at the spirit
that the party delegates around to fight this campaign. I
look at the level of organisation that we’re
in.
And that’s great. And that’s great.
But people aren’t seeing that. People are seeing you talk
about Willie Jackson and charter schools all the
time.
So, we’ve got a
campaign. We’ve got four and a half months before the
general election.
Te Reo Maori, the language,
you’ve been in favour of that as compulsory. Do you still
want that?
I have a
personal view about it, but the party’s policy is to
accept that there is a huge capacity shortfall at the
moment. That’s what we’re going to focus on building,
you know — the number of teachers we
need—
So will it be compulsory in the first
term?
No. No, no. I’m not
saying it—
So this is another thing for the
Maori MPs, isn’t it? You know, it’s not really
mana-enhancing, is it, to have the list issue, the Maori
prisons thing dismissed out of hand and then the charter
schools, which they like as well. It’s not exactly
mana-enhancing for the Maori in the party, is it? Now Te Reo
Maori, that’s in the ‘never, never’ as
well.
So, what’s
mana-enhancing is that we will have, after the 23rd of
September, the single largest representation of Maori MPs in
a single party in the history of New Zealand politics.
That’s New Zealand Labour.
But they keep
sort of getting slammed down right now. That’s what people
are seeing.
On Te Reo
Maori, we have a commitment on building capacity. We will
get underway with that straight away. But even our Maori MPs
know you can’t say, ‘Right, that’s it. We’re going
to make Te Reo compulsory,’ knowing that, you know, it’s
going to take a few years to get the people, train them up,
get them ready to teach Te Reo Maori. They know
that.
Do you feel as if time is running out?
Do you ever, sort of, look at everything that’s happened
over the last couple of weeks and feel that, ‘Time is
running out for
me.’?
What I do look at,
Paddy, is the preparation and the level of organisation the
party now has, the state that the caucus is in — focused,
determined, getting ready.
How can you say
that, though? In all honesty, how can you say that? Because
that’s not what it looks like. That’s not what people
see. How can you say
that?
I can say that with
great confidence because that’s what I see. As the leader
of the party, I’m engaged with every part of the party. I
get around the country. I see what the local party
organisations are able to do. I look at the number of people
and, actually, the sort of people who are turning up to our
public meetings — people who are saying, ‘We’ve had
enough of what is happening now. We’re looking around for
something different.’
Here’s my last
question. We’ve only got a few seconds left. What’s your
one big idea for New Zealand? What’s Andrew Little’s
one—? What’s the one big idea, the big new idea, that
you’ve got for New
Zealand?
The one issue we
have to get right because it’s important for families and
communities—
An idea. Not an issue. An
idea.
Well, the idea is
we’ve got to actually get people owning their own home, in
their own place, in their own space, so that they
can…
But that’s not new, is
it?
…have their families,
build strong communities. Well, Labour is about that. Labour
is about…
Yeah, but I asked for something
new.
…people having the
chance to stand on their own two feet, having those things
that enable them to do that. We are the party of those basic
social foundations, and that’s
what’s—
Do you want this job? Do you want
to be prime minister of New
Zealand?
Too darn right, I
do, because too many people are missing out, too many people
are struggling and doing it too hard at the moment, and it
doesn’t have to be that way. You know, we’re not a poor
country. We’re an affluent country with great people, with
great ideas, but too many people are finding it too tough
because you’ve got a government now asleep at the wheel.
You’ve got to change that if we want to make a difference
for New Zealanders.
Andrew Little, thank you
very much.
Thank
you.
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