The Nation: Lisa Owen interviews Paula Bennett
On The Nation: Lisa Owen interviews Paula
Bennett Bennett
says the government has plans for a new drug strategy, which
will be released before the election. Bennett says she
doesn’t believe recent deaths linked to synthetic cannabis
can be traced back to one batch, because of the geographic
spread of cases. She says toxicology reports are still being
done.
Headlines:
In response to
criticisms about the online sale of guns, following the
recent shooting in Whangarei, police minister Paula Bennett
says the current process is about right, and the
government’s not planning at reviewing them.
Lisa
Owen: The Police Association has called for a complete ban
on the online sales of firearms, following the double fatal
shooting in Whangarei. But restrictions to online sales
recently recommended by a select committee have been
rejected by the government, and a proposal for a firearms
database has been turned down because the government says
the $30 million it will cost is too much. I asked the police
minister and deputy prime minister, Paula Bennett, why
it’s not worth
doing.
Paula Bennett: So
what we looked at for that, and I’m not sure that
registering all the guns… a) we couldn’t go backwards
and get all of those guns that are already in the system,
particularly with those that are illegal.
You
do have to start somewhere, though, don’t
you?
Yeah, but that’s not
going to save a life. I mean, that’s just taking it a
whole step further than where it is.
In the
future, it arguably could, though, because if you look at
Australia since they reformed their gun law, 72% drop in gun
crime since their 1996 reforms which included
registration.
Well, though,
to be fair, for all violent crime in New Zealand, the use of
firearms in that violent crime is 1.4%, so it is incredibly
low in New Zealand. Look, if I was choosing how to spend 30
million within Police right now, I felt that there are other
priorities, like more police on the street, more police in
our organised crime unit, and that would make a bigger
difference. We do need to actually look at the whole process
for firearms and everything else and getting technology and
the right databases with that. So that will happen in the
future. But I just felt the registration wasn’t the
priority.
But the front-line officers, the
Police Association, they think that’s a good idea, and
it’s their people that are confronted with this on a
day-to-day basis, isn’t
it?
Yeah. And as I say, I
suppose we’re putting 500 million more into Police that
went through in this Budget, and when I was weighing up the
spend for registration — that you couldn’t go backwards;
it’s already, they estimated, about 1.2 million guns that
are in the system; then you’ve got grey firearms and
illegal ones, so grey being predominantly people that have
died and their firearms are still kind of going round. There
is a kind of amnesty, so people can go in and hand those
guns at any time and not, sort of, see penalties for that. I
just at this point don’t think that registration was the
answer for it.
Well, one of the things that
you did accept was that you should ban gang members or
prospects from getting a gun licence. I mean, how are you
going to define that? How is that going to be workable in a
practical way?
Yeah, so it
already is. So we’ve already gone through the process of
defining who is a gang member. We’ve got a gang
intelligence unit, and within that we’ve got just over
5000 patched gang members and prospects in that
database.
Prospects is the kind of grey area,
though, isn’t it? So that sort of seems like, I don’t
know, quite a complex law to administer, versus some of the
other changes which seemed more black and white which you
rejected.
No, I think that
everyone would agree — I can’t find anyone that would
disagree — that gang members should not be getting firearm
licences and guns, because they are predominantly going to
be used for criminal means.
So the Police
Association says that gun sale law should be revisited in
the wake of what happened in Whangarei with the two deaths
there. It wants all online sales banned. Will you look at
that again?
With TradeMe,
you can no longer purchase a gun through TradeMe, so you
have to go into a police station, have your identification
verified and produce your gun licence, and then that
verification is used to purchase that gun.
But
you’re saying that knowing what the rules already are,
Minister. So the Police Association’s very aware of what
the rules are. They say you shouldn’t be selling guns
online full stop. That would be the best case scenario. Will
you revisit it?
I think
that we’ve got the process right at the moment. I don’t
want to rush to media reporting and even with the Police
Association and them hypothesising what may have happened
with the Whangarei shootings. Police are doing an
investigation, taking it very seriously as to how he got
firearms. And certainly some of the early advice I’ve seen
is that it could be a lot more complex than people
think.
So that’s a no for a revisit at the
moment?
I’m not
revisiting at the moment, but if recommendations come out of
the police investigation, I am very willing to look at it. I
do not want guns in the hands of lunatics like we saw in the
last few weeks.
Okay. Let’s move on to
another issue. We’ve seen a spate of deaths that have been
related to synthetic cannabis or what’s been described as
synthetic cannabis. There has been an argument in overseas
jurisdictions that legalising cannabis has led to a
reduction in synthetic use. Has this whole situation made
you rethink legalising cannabis
here?
Yeah, I mean, I
haven’t seen the evidence of that, which it may be there
and it just hasn’t come to my desk yet. So I’m always
willing to look at it. Part of the new role that I’ve
taken on around the meth action plan as well, and I’m
extending it into synthetics and into other drugs, because
you can’t just look at one drug in isolation. I must say,
I do get increasingly concerned, and I hear often enough
anecdotally that cannabis is almost harder to get hold of
than other drugs, and so I can see some kind of link as
you’re describing. That doesn’t mean I advocate, you
know, the legalisation of cannabis, but I do think it’s
something that’s worth us researching and looking further
into.
Well, because your support partner
Associate Minister for Health Peter Dunne says, you know, he
would like cannabis laws to be liberalised, and he says
there’s two problems with that; one’s Labour and one’s
National. So why not?
Because…
Yeah, why not is
because it’s actually not a great drug for teenagers or
young people either, and you can try and put an age on it
and then how would you actually get access to drug, and then
would it become a legalised growing, and then is it just a
commercial business, and it’s actually not good for you,
I’m afraid.
Too hard
basket?
Well, I’m just
saying it’s not as easy as me sitting here now and saying,
‘Let’s legalise cannabis.’ I think that’s a very
big call and not something that I would be supporting at
this time.
Okay. The government’s now
coordinating the response to the synthetic cannabis deaths,
so how much do you know about what’s happening? Is it one
batch? Is it still in production? Do you have the
ingredients yet?
Not
really. Toxicology reports are still being done, and we
haven’t got the consistency for all of those potentially
10 deaths due to it. And we’re even hearing different
reports as to the last two as to whether or not it is due to
the synthetic psychoactive substances. I don’t really like
calling it cannabis, to be honest, because I think that
undermines just how absolutely hideous the synthetics are.
So, look, we’re waiting for that kind of information to
come through, but I don’t think it’s one batch, to be
quite honest with you, because we’re seeing it in
different parts of the country.
Okay. It’s
now generally accepted that the war on drugs hasn’t worked
and isn’t working, and you’re not having a war on meth
any more. So if you don’t want to legalise cannabis, which
you have suggested now, and we don’t have a war, what is
our strategy?
There’s
lots and lots of things. I mean, we are having successes in
a whole lot of areas, and I want to push them further, and
there’s others where we could be doing more at. You
can’t just tackle the drug problem in New Zealand by
hitting supply. You’ve also got to look at the whole
demand and harm reduction there as well. So for me, it’s
going to be looking right across from a treatment and
addiction, through to communities being more involved and
things we can do earlier, education.
So can
you sum up our strategy in a sentence? You know, the
simplicity of, ‘Okay, we’re having a war on drugs.’
Can you simplify it in a
sentence?
We are looking
more at how drugs are getting into New Zealand, how
they’re getting distributed and harm minimisation and
trying to get people not to take them and those that want
help to get it sooner.
Because your critics
would argue you’ve just given up on it because you don’t
have enough
resources.
I’ve not given
up on it at all, and, in fact, I think you’re going to see
whole new policies around it, direction on what we’re
doing. I’m really invigorated, I’ve got to say, in what
I think we can do and what we can achieve.
So
will we hear a bit more about that before the
election?
Yes, you can
expect to hear more.
What might we hear,
Minister?
Well, you’re
going to have to wait and see, because that’s the core
part of an announcement.
But you’re going to
unveil a policy around
it?
Yeah, I’m going to
have some announcements to make around
this.
And we’ll hear that definitely before
the election?
Yes, you
will.
Okay. You mentioned a bit earlier about
finances and police funding. So the end of the financial
year, we know that the police had drained their budget. In
fact, we’ve been given a number of examples of police cars
parked up, waiting for repairs for the new financial year to
take over. One case that was raised in the House about a
prosecution that was withdrawn because there was no money
for ESR to do a crime scene investigation. Hawera Police
Station didn’t replace light bulbs because they had no
money. How worried are you about that kind of
stuff?
Yeah, well, so I
have been told from police that none of those examples are
real or true. So I am absolutely—
So what?
You say they’re
lies?
Well, I’m just
absolutely— I can only take what police tell me, so I
asked the question, as you can imagine, quite directly, and
I expect a direct answer from them, and they absolutely,
categorically tell me that the ESR example is not true. I
haven’t heard about cars being parked up and not being
repaired, so I can’t, sort of, comment to that one. And
the light bulb one just seems absolutely ridiculous. So I
just sort of think—
I suppose the bottom
line is — do you believe that the police have enough money
to do the things that they should be doing? Because we’re
hearing no.
I think that
the extra $500 million that they got in this Budget is going
to make a huge difference for them.
But
that’s for mainly front-line
staff.
Yeah, and all of the
needs that they have to go alongside of it, so that’s for
uniforms, that’s for the technology that they use,
that’s to make sure they’ve got enough cars that they
can drive. It’s not just wages that we’re actually
funding. We’re funding the whole picture, and I do think
that police have enough to do their
job.
Because you’d be aware probably that
New Zealand First has raised a claim that the police are
dipping into the justice ministry’s budget for funding
top-up. Is that true?
In
the past, they’ve certainly made some— they’ve put
forward proposals for different things that they want to
fund at different times, and I think some of them have been
around wage pressures because they’ve had
some—
So it is true? Because that suggests
that their pot of money is not enough if they have
to—
No, no. They’ve
just been wanting to pay their staff a whole lot more and
outside of the projections that they’ve got, and they’ve
seen a fund there and thought that they might try and get
some money from it.
What? So greed is their
only issue?
No. I’m just
saying that they had a justice sector fund, which is quite
exciting. That’s where we’ve made savings in different
areas and different things. And they’ve applied to it for
different things, which is entirely appropriate. They
haven’t actually been successful in
those.
Okay. Well, let’s talk about party
politics. How many points do you reckon Jacinda Ardern is
going to bump Labour’s
polling?
I’m not going to
put a number on it. You know as much as I do what that might
be, but I do expect her to get a wee bump. I mean, it’s
different, and she’s had a whole lot of media this week,
and she’s up there and into it, so, yeah, I would expect
people to…
When she took on the deputy
leadership, Nikki Kaye said that she has struggled to think
of anything that Jacinda Ardern had achieved. She also said
there’d be a lot of photo opportunities and not much
substance. So now that Jacinda has moved from deputy to
leader, are you all going to take her more
seriously?
Oh, we
definitely take leaders of opposition seriously, and I would
take her as seriously as I have any of the previous five
before her that I’ve seen in the last very short years. So
I think that she’s got strengths in some areas and
weaknesses in others that we all do, but we definitely take
anyone that’s leading an opposition party
seriously.
Because I suppose we don’t think
many people would deny the fact that Bill English has
economic chops, but one political commentator has said to be
prime minister, you need to be able to talk, to communicate,
and to think. You need both those qualities. So now that
Bill English is up against someone who is seen as a good
communicator as well as an experienced MP, is he facing a
stronger threat?
I just
think what they’re also looking for is substance and
someone who’s got the kind of brain to pull this country
together and has got a proven record
and—
Doesn’t she have
substance?
I just think
he’s got a bit more is all. I think she does, but I think
that he equally has a proven track record, that he’s got a
strength in other areas, that he is a good communicator,
that he’s passionate about this country, and there’s
some pretty hard calls you have to make as being the prime
minister, and we’ve had some pretty shocking things that
have happened in this country just in the last few years,
and so we want a leader and a prime minister that’s
actually up to that job. You’re not going to have a lot of
time to get to know her under that kind of pressure in just
a few short weeks.
Are you guys backing off
her? Are you going for the relentlessly positive approach
too? You don’t want to
be—?
I already had it. I
feel that’s what I am. There we go. I’m putting that on
the table. I feel like she’s stolen my relentless
positivity, so I’m going to go for eternal optimism, I
have.
Okay. Well, on another issue, 74% of
voters in the Newshub-Reid Research poll say that Metiria
Turei was wrong to lie to get a bigger benefit. Do you agree
with that?
I certainly have
always been strong and particularly when I was the minister
in saying that I didn’t think that benefit fraud was
appropriate. So I have always been pretty strong in that
way. People work really, really hard to pay their taxes, and
we’re kind of proud of our social security system, and if
people are actually ripping that off, then it just doesn’t
work and it’s not fair.
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