The Nation: Patrick Gower interviews Bill English
On The Nation: Patrick Gower interviews Bill English
Headlines:
Prime
Minister Bill English now says there’s no evidence that
his MP Todd Barclay actually did make recordings of his
colleague, Glenys
Dickson.
English says
he’s satisfied that the issue has been handled as well as
it could. He says no one comes out of it looking good, but
he hasn’t let voters
down.
Patrick Gower:
Prime Minister, thank you for joining us. Now, this
interview is all about trust – whether you can be trusted.
It’s about your integrity and your standards. I want to
start by asking you to be clear. When did Todd Barclay tell
you that he made these recordings? When exactly did he tell
you?
Bill English: In a
conversation which was related to the police when I was
asked about it.
Do you remember when it was?
Like how long ago?
It was
after the events that occurred, I think, in early 2016. The
police inquiry began in March or April I
think.
Yeah, but we know from that that you
called Glenys Dickson on 6th of February, on Waitangi Day,
in 2016 and told her Todd Barclay had a recording of her.
That’s correct, isn’t
it?
I can’t comment on
that in detail.
Sure. But we do know that you
did send that text to Stuart Davie on February the 21st
where you said in it, you knew there’d been a recording
and that you knew there’d been a privacy breach and a pay
up. That was on February the 21st 2016. That’s correct,
isn’t it?
I told him what
had been told to me, letting the electorate chairman,
who’s in charge of the local National Party, know what I
knew.
So at that point, which is 16 months
ago, you knew what had gone on. There’d been a recording,
a privacy breach, you’d spoken directly to both sides.
Let’s look at some of your public statements that you made
after that, because less than a month later, on the 1st of
March, asked by media if you’d talked to any of the
parties involved, and I’m going to quote you here, you
said, ‘No. Not directly.’ Was that a lie? Because
you’d spoken directly to both
sides.
Look, no. In the
first place—
Was it a lie or
not?
In the first place,
the fact of a recording has never actually been established.
The police investigated, came to no conclusion, no court
decision.
This is about your question where
you’re asked, ‘Had you talked to any of the parties
involved?’ And you said, ‘No. Not directly.’ But we
know from your own statement that you’d spoken to both
parties directly. Did you
lie?
At the time there was
a confidentiality agreement around the settlement of an
employment dispute and a police investigation. I didn’t
know what I could and couldn’t say. I did not want to
compromise either of those pretty serious
processes.
But you could have said that
instead of saying what you said, which was potentially a
lie, wasn’t it?
I could
have explained it better, but that’s 20/20 hindsight. At
the time, information that I had I’d passed to the
electorate chair and subsequently to the police when they
were asking questions.
Okay. So from that day
that you knew about the recordings until this week, which is
actually 16 months or
more—
Well, again, the
fact of the recordings has never actually been established.
The police investigated it over 10-12
months.
So from the time that you told of the
recordings by Todd Barclay and by the person who believed
she was being recorded, 16 months or more have gone by. Now,
this week, you said that that behaviour was unacceptable. Do
you remember saying that? That that behaviour was
unacceptable?
Well, it’s
referring to what was a whole lot of behaviour going back to
early 2015, so over a couple of years.
Yeah,
but you said that the recording was unacceptable this
way.
The fact of the
recording has never been established. But the behaviour I
was referring to was over a whole period of time. This is a
sad situation — the breakdown of the
relationship—
You said the behaviour was
unacceptable in reference to the
recording.
I said it was
unacceptable. The behaviour—
The question
here is anyway, there’s unacceptable behaviour and for 16
months you sit by and do nothing. Was that the right and
honourable thing to do, Prime
Minister?
I think you need
to understand here that we had two people that I both knew.
Good people who fell out very badly. A difficult employment
dispute grows out of that. I was not a part of that dispute
at all. That had to be resolved between the employer and
employee who both had obligations. Then there was a police
investigation. So the matters involved in this would be
dealt with appropriately by the people who needed to — the
employers. And when the police complaint was made, the
police were dealing with it.
But when it
happened and you found out about it, you obviously knew then
– you surely knew then — that Todd Barclay had
potentially done something illegal when he told you about
that recording that he’d
done.
I wasn’t aware that
the activity, whether it was legal or not. I’m not a
lawyer. I was concerned about the broader picture of an
employment relationship that had gone in a bad
way.
Yeah. But when he said, ‘I’ve
recorded her,’ you must have known that was potentially
illegal. Everybody in New Zealand politics remembers the
Teapot Tapes and what happened there. Everyone knows the
ramifications of secret recording. And, in fact, you
yourself have been recorded secretly before in a National
Party conference. You must have known when he said to you,
that he’d potentially done something illegal there. You
must have known.
When I was
recorded there was no legal or criminal action
arose.
When the Teapot Tapes happened, Police
raided media, you know that. So you must have known there
were some potential
ramifications.
I’m not a
lawyer, and when the matter did arise, it was fairly quickly
in the hands of the police. In New Zealand, the way our
system works, the police investigate, they then lay charges,
then it’s up to a court to actually decide whether the act
was actually criminal. That process has not occurred. In New
Zealand people are presumed to be innocent till proven
guilty. I’m not a lawyer. All that process, the
opportunity for that did unfold. It didn’t come to a
conclusion.
Sure. So let’s look at the
police investigation part of this. On the 27th of April
2016, that was when you gave your police statement, wasn’t
it? So, if we look at your public statements about that, on
the 21st of March this year, you were asked to clarify your
involvement in the police investigation. You replied that
you knew the people and did not want to comment further.
‘All I know is that the matter has been resolved.’ Why
didn’t you say then that you’d been interviewed by
police? Were you trying to hide something? Were you
effectively there lying by
omission?
This was a police
investigation that had gone on for many months through 2016.
It came to a conclusion that they weren’t going to lay
charges, and in that sense, the issues had been
resolved.
Yeah, but you were asked to clarify
your involvement. You had been spoken to and interviewed,
and you chose not to say that? Were you trying to hide
it?
No, I wasn’t trying
to hide anything. I was trying to ensure that the processes
that all these events had been through, a significant
employment dispute, then a eight or nine-month police
investigation were respected. Because until these people
have charges laid against them and it’s a public matter,
or a court decides it’s a criminal matter, they’re
innocent of the allegations.
Sure. Let’s
look at another statement that you’ve made as well.
Because when you were asked, in March again, if Barclay had
acted inappropriately you said, ‘All I know is the police
investigation is come to an end, so the matter is closed.’
But you knew that he’d told that he’d made the secret
recordings, so you much more than the fact that the
investigation had been
closed.
What I knew is that
I had, in response to questions from the police, given them
that information. This idea that somehow giving information
to the police is a cover-up is ridiculous. The police
investigated the whole matter. I don’t know what actions
they took. I don’t know what evidence they saw. I don’t
know who they spoke to. What I do know is there is no more
thorough way for the allegations to be investigated
than—
Than with the New Zealand
police.
…than to have the
New Zealand police.
But what we’re looking
at here are your public statements when you’re asked about
your involvement, and here’s another from this week. You
said you couldn’t remember who told you about the taping
when it was later revealed, as you know, that your police
statement clearly said it was Todd Barclay. Is that really
credible to say that you forgot who told you? Can you
understand how people just don’t believe
you?
Well, I said what I
thought. I went and checked the police
statement.
No, but you forgot. Do you think
people believe that you
forgot?
Paddy, did you want
to hear what I had to say? I said what I thought. I went and
looked at the police statement, and I clarified the matter
as soon as I could.
Here’s another one,
then. On your way to Parliament this week in the press
conference, you said that you reported this to police. You
didn’t. They came to you. Why did you say
that?
Well, that was a
generalised use of the word, but, again, I’m quite happy
with the view. I answered questions from the police and in
the course of that I confirm—
But you
didn’t report it to police. They came to
you.
And I didn’t mean to
give the impression that I had initiated it, but the police
did already have the texts that I sent, quite appropriately,
to the election chairman, letting him know what I knew. Then
the police came and asked me, and, really, the interview
simply confirmed the content of the texts.
The
point that I’m getting at here is these all these public
statements that kind of don’t match up. It’s like
you’re dodging things. It’s like you’re being shifty,
Prime Minister. Were you being shifty all this
time?
No, I wasn’t. As
someone who wasn’t party to this dispute right from the
start, but you all knew the people involved, trying to
ensure that the confidentiality of the agreement was
respected and that the police investigation was accepted and
the result of that was accepted as a thorough investigation
of the circumstances, after which no charges were laid. And
that sense, there wasn’t an issue. If the police
investigate it and no charges are laid, then the assertion
that criminal activity occurred appears to be wrong, because
there was no criminal process that came to any
conclusion.
But with all due respect to all of
that, and, actually, I agree to some of that, this is about
your answers to these questions. And the thing is some of
your answers have just been plain wrong. How can anybody
trust anything you say on
this?
Look, my role in this
is clear. It’s on the record. The material I’ve supplied
has been investigated by the police. The issue has now been
resolved at a political level. Todd Barclay, as a young guy,
has made a brave decision to leave politics because of the
situation as it’s unfolded. Our job is to resolve what is
actually messy personnel issues within our party, do that
effectively so we can get on with governing. I’m not a
lawyer.
But aside from your own failures here,
basically, to own up to your own role, you also sat by and
watched Todd Barclay lie publicly; he lied to senior
National Party figures, he lied at his reselection. Is that
ok with you that you just stand
by?
You’re making that
assertion. It’s never been established that the alleged
incident around the recording actually occurred. In any
case, the discussion around—
He told you it
happened.
His selection was
carried out because of these events, and all the facts were
known to his local electorate. In our system there was no
charges laid. There was a confidential settlement of the
employment dispute in our system. And local electorate is
responsible for the selection of the candidate. They were
aware of the background and went ahead and selected
him.
Do you not feel that you’ve owed voters
more on this now that you look back and we look at all these
statements? Do you not feel that, ‘I let the voters down
here’?
No, I don’t feel
that. I feel that these issues have now been resolved. The
original dispute is just between two good people who fell
out very badly, and it’s actually been an internal
personnel matter. It’s been thoroughly
investigated.
Why did he have to leave
Parliament, then? Why did Todd Barclay have to leave
Parliament? Because nothing had changed in all of this that
whole time, except you got caught out. That’s all that’s
changed.
No, I don’t
agree with that. Todd made his own decision about retiring
at the election. I think he came to the view it would be
difficult to represent his constituents against the
background of all the publicity around this and the
different interpretations of the facts of the matter. That
was his decision.
Do you feel that you’ve
let down your own standards — your own standards of
credibility, your own integrity — through
this?
Well, look, other
people will make a decision about that. I’m
satisfied—
No, but what do you feel? Do you
feel like you’ve let yourself
down?
I’m satisfied that
in a difficult situation, knowing the personalities better
than a lot of people, that this has been handled about as
well as it could. It’s sad. No one comes out of this
better than before the events occurred. It’s a shame, a
real shame. And I feel that more than most people because I
know them, because it was my electorate. The matters have
now come through to this point where Todd Barclay’s
leaving Parliament. My job as the prime minister is to deal
with these issues effectively — everyone knows that
employment disputes are messy — and get on with governing
in the interests of New Zealand. That’s what we’re
doing. That’s why we’ve got a National Party conference
this week about an election in three
months.
You said then no one’s come out of
this, sort of, well, have
they?
No, and that’s just
because of the basic depth and bitterness of the dispute and
the consequences that have flowed from
that.
And do you include yourself in that,
Prime Minister?
Well, look,
it’s much better not to have to deal with these issues. I
don’t see any benefit in it at all. But my responsibility
as a leader is to make sure they are dealt with, whatever
the imperfections of everyone involved, and get on with the
job that the public have for us. Because, actually, the
public aren’t that interested in our internal employment
disputes; what they’re interested in is good government
that provides good jobs, incomes and
opportunities.
But they’re interested in
your integrity, aren’t
they?
Well, yes ,they
are.
All right, that’s a good place to leave
it. Thank you very much, Prime
Minister.
Thank you.