The Nation: Minor parties Election Debate
On The Nation: Election
Debate ACT leader David Seymour has
categorically ruled out working with or supporting any
Government that includes New Zealand First. Seymour says
more than 60,000 beneficiaries would go onto ‘income
management’ if he had his way, because they have been on
the jobseeker benefit for more than three years, or a solo
parent benefit for more than five years. Mana Party leader
Hone Harawira has come out in support of boot camps. But he
says his would be very different from what National is
proposing.
Headlines:
James Shaw
announced that in its first 100 days in Government the Green
Party would pass the Zero Carbon Act, which will mean a
legally binding target of being a net zero carbon economy by
the year 2050, and a detailed plan from the Government about
how it will meet that target.
Lisa
Owen: All these leaders want to influence the next
government, but first they have to survive this election. So
let’s meet the leaders. David Seymour from the ACT
Party.
David Seymour: Good
morning.
Marama Fox from the Maori
Party.
Marama Fox: Hello to
my babies watching at home.
Gareth Morgan from
the Opportunities
Party.
Morgan:
Morning.
Hone Harawira from
Mana.
Hone Harawira: Kia
ora koutou katoa.
And James Shaw from the
Green Party.
James Shaw:
Kia ora. Good morning.
Good morning to you
all. Let’s get started. Mr Shaw, a couple of recent polls
put your party at under the 5% mark. Tell me, if you could
have a do-over, would you ditch Metiria Turei’s benefit
speech?
Shaw: No,
absolutely not. We opened up a conversation around poverty
that New Zealand politicians have been afraid to get into,
and now that is one of the key issues of this election. I
think that people are really waking up to the fact that we
do have severe poverty in New Zealand, and it is time to do
something about it.
All right. Mr Seymour, you
want to get five ACT MPs, but you’re polling, what, 0.6%
in a recent Reid Research poll. So do you think dropping the
F-bomb this week got you any more
MPs?
Seymour: Well, it
certainly captured the mood in that room, and you heard it
from the laughter and the applause from the audience who
don’t want New Zealand First holding the balance of power
and raiding people’s KiwiSaver schemes by billions of
dollars. But that’s actually on offer in this election,
and you wouldn’t have me here debating if you didn’t
think voters wouldn’t shift their vote to ACT in response
to those sorts of threats from the
left.
You’re all about personal
responsibility. So if you don’t get five MPs, are you
going to resign?
Seymour:
Oh, we’ll just see what we come in at. And the fact of the
matter is I’m the only person on this stage who represents
an electorate, who’s well ahead in that electorate and
will be back in parliament after this election. You can’t
say that for the Greens.
All right. Mr
Harawira. Mr Harawira, your chances rest on taking out
Kelvin Davis in Te Tai Tokerau. Now, you’re selling a
two-for-one deal. That’s a bit desperate, isn’t
it?
Harawira: Actually,
I’m not selling a two-for-one deal. Rawiri Paratene from
the Green Party is selling a two-for-one deal. Lance
O’Sullivan, New Zealander of the Year, is selling a
two-for-one deal. Tame Iti, nationally known activist, is
promoting the two-for-one deal.
Mr Davis says
it’s quality over
quantity.
The people of Tai
Tokerau want to have two MPs for the price of one, so it’s
an intelligent choice. The only problem is the other person
isn’t intelligent enough to see the
deal.
All right. Mr Morgan, your party is on
2% now. It’s been that way for a couple of months. Pretty
impressive for a first-timer. But have you made a rookie
mistake not standing a high-profile candidate in a winnable
electorate?
Morgan: No, I
don’t think so.
Seymour: There weren’t any winnable
electorates for you, mate. That’s the problem.
Morgan:
You want to continue, David? And I’ll come in behind
you.
Seymour: No, you go.
You’ve had your
chance, Mr Seymour.
Fox:
All right, boys. Calm down.
Morgan: We’re selling
policy here — just best practice, consensus of the policy
research and advisory community in New Zealand. That’s
what we’re doing. So we stand or fall on policy, and New
Zealanders will either say, “Yes, the quality is fine.
Let’s get them in there, and let’s keep the other guys,
you know, going forward,” or they won’t. All I can do is
just sell the message. That’s what I’m
doing.
All right. Marama Fox, your party’s
hopes are riding on Te Ururoa Flavell keeping his
seat.
Fox: That’s not
true.
The only available poll has a very tight
race there. And in your electorate, the electorate you’re
standing in, Labour has a significant majority. Is this the
death knell for the Maori
Party?
Fox: Absolutely not.
We’re the party of the future. This country’s had enough
of a red and blue bus that has been here for 100 years.
Under their policies and the system of government that have
controlled this country for all of that time, Maori are at
the bottom of every disparaging statistic — so are
Pacifica — and we are over that. We’re saying, “Come
on our bus because, actually, celebrating New Zealand’s
diversity and our uniqueness is a good thing, and that’s
unifying for our nation. So I don’t want to jump on their
bus. I’m telling them to come jump on our bus because
we’re the party for the future.
All right.
Let’s talk about some of your policies. Mr Morgan, you
want to tax assets, including the family home. I’m just
wondering how a working-class person or a pensioner who’s
worked their whole life for that asset who may be cash
poor— How are they going to pay that
tax?
Morgan: Well,
pensioners are easy. They’re excused from cash flow impact
till they die. It’s called an estate
duty.
So what that means, Mr Morgan, just to
be clear because this is really important, you’re
expecting pensioners to take a reverse mortgage with the
IRD, aren’t you, for that
money?
Morgan: Well, it’s
an estate duty the same as most conventional western
economies. So you know. We used to have one, actually,
before the flat earth boys arrived in 1984. So it’s New
Zealand that’s actually out of step here. 80% of people in
New Zealand will be better off. 100% will be better off
eventually as the money, instead of going into property,
goes into businesses, mainly people’s own businesses.
It’s a no-brainer. It is the advice given by the last two
tax working groups, which politicians from both sides have
refused to ignore, and the consequences being house prices
have gone from three times the average wage to 10. So I’m
just trying to get them back on track. And I noticed that
Labour is saying they’re going to have a third tax working
group.
Fox: They’re taxing everything, aren’t
they?
Morgan: The problem is the politicians here, not
the tax advice. The tax advice has been around for
years.
All right. Well, let’s bring Mr
Seymour in on this conversation, because that policy
probably makes your blood run cold, does it, Mr Seymour? You
want 25% top tax
rate…
Shaw: Blood’s
pretty cold to start with.
…and a 25% rate
for companies. That’s going to carve out $5 billion out of
revenue. So how are we going to pay for the stuff that we
need?
Seymour: Well, first
of all, James Shaw, you’re talking about my blood running
cold, mate. You’re not the Green Party leader anymore;
you’re the Green Party’s undertaker, and there’s a
good chance you’ll be gone after the election. And as for
Gareth Morgan saying that this is all evidence-based and
clever, there’s nothing evidence-based and clever about
taxing one group of people and giving money to another group
that you think might vote for you. That’s not original.
That’s what everyone else does.
How are you
going to pay for everything, Mr
Seymour?
Seymour: Come back
to ACT’s tax policy. The current government is running $20
billion of surplus in the coming four years. Now, the ACT
Party says if you take something off somebody that’s not
yours, you should give it back. And we could give that money
back without cutting any spending and have a top tax rate of
25 cents in the dollar, and that would make our economy go,
“That’s fair.” But not only would we not cut any
spending, that allows for $14 billion more spending in the
next four years. That means that we give people back the
money that they have earned.
Morgan: My tax—
Fox:
No, no, no, you had your turn.
Morgan: My tax rate’s
10—
Fox: No, you had your turn. Lisa.
Morgan: His is
25, and he says that’s fair.
Don’t talk
over each other, please. One at a
time.
Fox: So, by his
logic, if you take something off somebody, you have to give
it back. We should give all of Aotearoa back to Maori,
including the waters, foreshore and seabed, and then see
where we get.
I’m coming to Mr Shaw. Mr
Shaw, you want a top personal tax rate 40% over 150 grand.
Labour has ruled out raising taxes. The books were opened
this week. Money is really tight. So if Labour could only
afford to pick one of your policies, what’s your favourite
child?
Shaw: What we’ve
said is that our three priorities at this election are
ensuring—
I’m asking you for your top
priority, your number one policy. You only get one
choice.
Shaw: Okay, if I
had one choice, in the first 100 days, the first thing that
I would do would be to pass the Zero Carbon Act, so that
would make it legally binding that New Zealand would be a
net zero carbon economy by the year 2050. That would
reorganise all of our efforts around the economy into a
high-value, clean-tech, high-wage economy, and it would
ensure New Zealand is a leader in the fight against climate
change worldwide.
So a carbon tax. Are you
still going to charge, as it was, 25 bucks a ton for
everybody, except for farmers, who get a half-price
deal?
Shaw: No. We’re
actually going to release that closer to the
election.
No, I’m asking you
now.
Shaw: But what we are
saying is that our overriding priority is to ensure that New
Zealand is a zero-carbon economy by the year
2050.
Are farmers going to get cut-price deal,
Mr Shaw?
Shaw: We do have
to have a proper price on emissions. We’ve had an
emissions trading scheme that’s completely busted.
Emissions have risen 21% under this Government. It actually
rose 17.5% under the last Labour
Government.
Last chance – are farmers going
to get a cut-price deal, Mr Shaw, and if so, how long
for?
Shaw: So what we’re
going to do is we’re going to have clean energy by 2030,
100% renewable energy by 2030.
That’s not my
question, Mr Shaw. Are farmers going to get a cut-price
deal, and how long
for?
Shaw: Farmers are
going to be brought into a proper price on
emissions.
Same price as everybody else from
the get-go?
Shaw:
Otherwise, emissions will continue to rise, as they have
done under the last National Government and the last Labour
Government.
Okay, so you don’t want to
answer that one. All right. Mr Harawira, you’ve said that
you’ve got no problem taxing the hell out of rich people
to pay for social
services.
Harawira: The
funny thing is neither does Gareth, neither does Marama,
neither does James. It’s a good idea.
So you
want 10,000 new social houses a year, 10,000 new state
houses a year?
Harawira:
Yeah.
How much do you think that’s going to
cost? What’s your budget for that? And what will your top
personal tax rate
be?
Harawira: You know
what, first of all, I think we have to stop thinking of
things in terms of the cost.
You’ve got to
pay for them somehow, though, don’t
you?
Harawira: Seriously,
feed the kids. Are you asking me to put a value on that, a
price on that? Is that what this society wants – to say,
‘Let’s keep our troops in Afghanistan, and never mind
the kids’? Seriously, we’ve got to think about the
basics in life, eh. Feeding the kids is not about ‘how
much does it cost?’ It’s about recognising that it’s
our responsibility as a society to ensure that those most
vulnerable are well looked after. That applies to you. That
applies to our children. That applies also to housing.
That’s why our focus is on housing those in low-income
families.
Okay, so, Mr Harawira, you don’t
know—?
Harawira: No, hang
on, hang on. I have to separate it out.
No,
no. You’ve had a fair amount of
time.
Harawira: National
and Labour are talking about 10,000 affordable houses. But
those affordable— Nobody that I know of in my electorate
can afford those houses.
So you don’t know
how much your policy would cost? Is that what you’re
telling me?
Harawira: I can
tell you this –
Okay, so you don’t
know.
Harawira: …it’s
cheaper right now, Lisa, to do it now than the cost of all
the—
Seymour: His answer, Lisa,
is—
Marama. Marama Fox. No, no. It’s
Marama Fox’s turn. The Maori Party wants to take GST off
all food. Have you done costings on
that?
Fox: Sorry, Lisa,
let’s just correct you there. It’s GST off primary
produce food. So it’s healthy food. It’s fruit,
vegetables, that type of thing.
So how much is
that going to cost, and what are you prepared to cut in
order to afford that?
Fox:
It is going to cost us the benefit of having healthy
families who can afford to have vegetables in their home
instead of fish and chips and fizzy.
So you
don’t know how much your policy’s going to cost
either?
Fox: Lisa, you
asked James a question about what his number one priority
would be. I’ve had that opportunity in the Maori Party,
when I got to put up my very first budget bid, when I could
only have one. It is about saving the lives of our children.
I don’t care how much it costs, just quietly. Take GST off
healthy produce food.
So, you still have to
make priorities.
Fox: That
is a priority. The other priority is suicide prevention in
this country.
So are you prepared to go into
debt in order to fund your
priorities?
Fox: Wait,
Lisa, they just announced a $4 billion surplus in this
country, and they say, ‘Where should we put it?’ Put it
with the children. Save their lives. We need to make sure
that the money goes into suicide prevention, into
counselling, into mental health, and into healthy food for
our families. There’s enough money there. They opened the
books. Do it. Make it happen. Make it Maori.
Seymour:
This just shows what’s at stake this election. None of
these guys know what any of their policies cost. And
that’s the problem that all socialists have, is that they
eventually run out of other people’s money. These guys
want sugar taxes, petrol taxes, income taxes, capital taxes,
tax on your house.
Harawira: I don’t.
Seymour:
These, if you try to sit, they’ll tax the seat. If you try
to walk, then they’re going to tax your feet.
Shaw:
Lisa, I’ve got to call him out.
Right of
reply to Mr Shaw.
Fox: Why
don’t we talk to the people in your electorate who are
struggling on the breadline?
One at a time.
One at a time,
please.
Seymour: There
actually are a few.
Fox: I know.
Shaw: When he says
that none of us know what our policies cost, that is
completely incorrect. We’ve costed all of our policies,
and we get them externally verified by economic agencies
like NZIER and BERL and Economic Research Ltd and so
on.
And I think Mr Morgan’s got something to
say about that too.
Morgan:
I actually know a little bit about economics and tax, right.
The problem with Seymour, right, is that all tax is theft.
This is a neo-lib in raw form, here. He’s pulling up the
ladder, Jack. The rest of you can get stuffed. That is David
Seymour. That’s what you’re dealing with. That’s why
he’s 0.6 going to zero.
Seymour: And that’s why
we’re arguing for the government to spend $80 billion a
year under ACT’s budget.
Fox: David, the only way
you’re in your seat is because National sat their man
down.
Seymour: The fact of the matter is that the
Government— That’s right. And, Marama, that’s why
every single vote for ACT counts towards getting extra MPs
in Parliament. Unlike you, who may lose Waiariki and end up
out of Parliament.
Fox: Neo-libs.
Seymour: Now, can I
go back to what Mr Morgan’s saying—?
No,
you can’t. You’ve had your say, Mr
Seymour.
Seymour: Now, hang
on a second. The Government spends $17,000 on every single
New Zealander.
Okay, we’re heading into a
break shortly, Mr Seymour. So just a quick round of
questions before we go to the break. Mr Morgan, are you a
feminist?
Morgan: Yeah,
definitely.
Do you believe that,
Marama?
Morgan: Absolutely.
But hang on. Let me explain last week. Let me explain
this.
No, no time for
explaining.
Morgan: Hang on
a minute. So on your network, right, on
RadioLIVE—
You’ve got five seconds, Mr
Morgan.
Morgan: Yeah. We
had a woman and a guy five days before me talking about this
known problem. I say it, and all the, what do you call them,
femo-fascists come out and say—
All
right.
Morgan: Hang
on.
Okay. No, no. Mr Harawira? No, no,
you’ve had an
opportunity.
Morgan: ‘No,
you can’t say it, Gareth, because you’re a guy.’ No,
no, you asked the question.
I want to ask Mr
Harawira before the break. Are you a
feminist?
Morgan:
That’s crap,
man.
Are you a
feminist, Mr
Harawira?
Harawira: Look,
I’m the son of Titewhai Harawira. I’m the husband of
Hilda Harawira. I’m the father of Te Whenua Harawira. And
I’m the grandfather of Maioha Harawira.
I
take that as a
yes.
Harawira: With all of
that power around me, I’m a positive and upstanding Maori
gentleman.
Fox: Am I a feminist?
All right.
What about Mr Seymour? Are you a
feminist?
Seymour: Oh,
absolutely. But I’m the sort of feminist that says that we
should be making everyone equal, not dragging people down,
and sometimes too much of feminism is about dragging men
down. It should be about everybody being
equal.
All
right.
Fox: Says a man.
Wait, wait, Lisa, Lisa.
No, no, sorry. Mrs
Fox, I’ll come back to you. We’ve got to go to a break.
We’ll be back shortly with
more.
Welcome back. You’re with The Nation and
our multi-party debate. Before we went to the break, Marama
Fox, you’ve got five seconds on feminism.
Go.
Fox: I’m a feminist,
and the ultimate form of feminism is that you can stay home
and be a stay-home mum if you want, and that’s okay. Women
can rule the world, top or bottom. Thank you very
much.
All right. Mr Morgan. I want to read you
a quote, Mr Morgan. It’s about global warming. ‘A part
of it is probably man-made, but I am sceptical about the
degree to which it is dangerous. New Zealand is very much a
passenger. We can’t have any influence on outcomes.
We’ll know over time whether we need to act with
urgency.’ Are those the words of a climate change denier,
and what would you say to that
person?
Morgan: I would
that times— That’s probably old, I’m not sure, but
time’s moved on and the balance evidence — that’s why
I wrote a book on this, but the balance of evidence is that
it is anthropogenic, actually. So if you’re trying to
minimise risk, you deal with emissions. I think, on climate
for New Zealand, actually, the big issue, because we are
small — doesn’t mean to say that we shouldn’t be
responsible — but by far the biggest issue here is that we
are doing nothing about adaptation. You know, you go to
south Dunedin, and you talk to those people about their
houses, and the mayor, David Cull, and those people say to
you, ‘There’s no direction coming from the government as
to who should be paying what to save this part of
Dunedin.’ You know, how much should the local authority
pay, how much should the government pay, how much should the
people self-insure? That’s the problem, is a lack of
strategy.
You made the comment that you
thought that might be an old quote. Well, actually, it’s
Mr Seymour’s quote, and it’s from his book that’s only
just been
published.
Morgan: Well, as
I said, time has moved on.
Fox: I’ll have that same
copy now, thank you, David. ‘Time’s moved
on.’
So, Mr Seymour, are you a climate
change denier, and do you seriously think that there is no
danger in climate change to
us?
Seymour: Well, you’ve
just read my quote, and clearly, I accept that there is
danger. I think we need to get away from, you know, denial
or believer. This is not Christianity or Islam or Buddhism
— it’s not a religion, it’s science. And what the Act
Party says is that climate change is happening, and it is to
a large extent man-made, and we have a responsibility to do
something about it. And just once, I’m going to agree with
James Shaw that the emissions trading scheme has been a
bureaucratic rort, and what would be better is to have a
simple, flat carbon tax that spreads the load evenly. Where,
exactly, we put the level of that tax is a debate that New
Zealanders have to have about how much are you prepared to
give up to fight this global problem? And I think that if we
got to a carbon tax and an agreement that it would be flat
and fair, we’d be in a much better space than we are now
where it’s always an argument about who’s in, who’s
out, what’s in, what’s out.
Let’s bring
Mr Shaw in. An endorsement from
Act.
Shaw: Well, it’s
going to make it pretty easy for us to pass that zero-carbon
act in our first 100 days, then, if we’ve got that level
of credit with the house.
Seymour: If you’re in
parliament.
All right. Jacinda Ardern has said
that climate change is her generation’s nuclear-free
moment, and she is committing to clean rivers and to
charging for water to pay for that. So why do Green voters
need you when they can get all of that from
Labour?
Shaw: The emissions
rose 17.5% under the last Labour government. They rose 21%
under the last National government. If you want to do
something about climate change, you have to look at the
Green Party, who for the last 28 years and the last 18 years
that we’ve been in parliament, have consistently lead on
this, year in, year out.
Fox: Except you’ve never been
in government.
Shaw: Governments come, governments go.
Leaders come, leaders go.
Fox: They never get a chance to
do anything.
Shaw: We have always consistently lead of
this, and our track record, I think, would indicate why
people see that we need to be at the heart of the next
Labour-led government in order to make that happen.
Fox:
They threw you under the bus, though.
Well,
Mrs Fox, you’ve said that Maori have water rights that
amount to ownership.
Fox:
No, the Waitangi Tribunal said that.
As one of
those owners, should commercial users, including farmers,
pay for water? And how much should they
pay?
Fox: Anybody that
makes profit off the free water that they get in this
country is benefitting from corporate welfare. And then when
they pollute the rivers, and we spend the tax dollar to
clean it up, they are now committing benefit fraud. This
country’s corporations need to pay for the resource that
they use, like every other resource, and then they’d look
after it, because then it would have value to
them.
Okay, so you’ve said anyone profiting
from the use of water should
pay.
Fox:
Yes.
So farmers profit from their product,
which uses water, so farmers should
pay.
Fox: Absolutely. And
so do wine makers and so do dairyers. The thing is it’s a
community conversation that communities need to have,
because the first thing we need to do is make sure that
there is clean drinking water coming out of the taps in our
homes.
So how much should they pay? Labour
says 1 to 2 cents a thousand litres. What do you
say?
Fox: It’ll be
somewhere in there. It’s definitely not 10 cents, that’s
ridiculous. You’d drive everybody into bankruptcy, and it
would be negative fiscal motivation. No, I get
it.
You agree with Labour — 1 to 2
cents?
Fox: I get it, but
if they pay for the resource, then they will look after the
resource and value it. At the moment, they throw it away.
Look, just let me give you an example. In Bridge Pa, five
minutes down the road from Hastings, you have no fresh,
clean water.
No, Mrs Fox. Excuse me, I’m
sorry to interrupt you, but this is really important. 1 to 2
cents is what you’re saying. So you agree with Labour? 1
to 2 cents?
Fox: No, no,
no. About 0.001 cent.
Okay, so less than a
cent, you’re saying.
Fox:
But something because it takes 900 litres to make wine and
400 litres to make milk, and then we dehydrate it and chuck
it in a can and throw it overseas.
It’s Mr
Harawira’s turn, now. Mr Harawira, you would like farming
cleaned up, so do you think that we’ve come to the point
where we should cap the number of dairy cows in this
country? Have we reached peak cow? Do we need to reduce the
national herd?
Harawira:
Look, just getting back to the water and the way in which
farming uses water. I think— I operate off the basis
similar to the Maori Party from the line that Moana Jackson
gave us, which is that every tribe has a river. That’s a
polite way of saying that all Maori are connected to the
water in their communities.
Fox: Kia ora.
Harawira:
For us, in Mana, and for the Maori Party, that equates to
Maori ownership of water. That doesn’t meant to say that
we have it and therefore everybody else must pay. The first
thing we must do is then work with our communities to ensure
that the quality of that resource is going to be there
forever. That’s the first thing.
Fox: Kia
ora.
Harawira: Second thing is — and Marama picked up
on this — we have to make sure that the second priority is
that everybody in the country has access to clean drinking
water, all day, every day. And the third thing is we make
all of those rich pricks who have been ripping it off for so
long start paying for it.
How much? What would
you set the price
at?
Harawira: Well, I mean,
it’s not a—
No, no. How much would you set
the price at?
Harawira:
Look, I live in Kaitaia right now, actually, Lisa. I don’t
have the capacity to do all this kind of
analysis.
All
right.
Harawira: But I do
know that overseas companies that are taking our water
offshore and paying piss-all here and making bucket-loads
over there should be stopped tomorrow.
Fox: And the
people in your area have to buy their water. The people in
his area have to buy their water to drink when the wells run
dry. That’s the point.
I want to move on now
to welfare. Mr Seymour, let’s talk about this because
I’m wondering — do you think there should be a limit on
the number of children that you can have while you’re on a
benefit?
Seymour: No, of
course there shouldn’t be a limit. We don’t want the
state controlling people’s reproduction — that’s
disgusting. But what we do need to say—
You
want to take control away from
them.
Seymour: What we do
need to say is that we have a crisis in this country where
one in five children are born into a family dependent on a
benefit. And for all those people who wait, save and
sacrifice before they have kids, that is an outrage and the
biggest driver of child poverty in this
country.
Okay.
Seymour:
What the Act Party says is that there should always be a
safety net for people whose partner’s abusive or runs out
on them or any number of circumstances that can leave you
without income and with children. But if you keep having
children while you’re on a benefit, then we’re going to
give income management, we’re going to pay your rent, pay
your power, pay your groceries so that the kids get the
benefit of those resources and we break the cycle of child
poverty in this country.
Before I move on from
you, you want to have a maximum of three years on the
benefit – a lifetime maximum – three years on the
benefit for jobseekers, five years for a single parent
allowance. So do you know how many people that will involve
kicking off the
benefit?
Seymour: At any
given time, it varies. I don’t know the exact number
today, Lisa, but let me just clarify that we are not
kicking—
I’ll tell you how many, Mr
Seymour – 60,000 people. That’s 60,000 people who’ve
had consecutive number of years, so it’s more than 60,000.
What are you going to do with
them?
Seymour: I think the
fact we’ve had 60,000 people on a benefit for more than
three years in their life is a scandal in itself, but what
I’d say is you’ve actually—
All
right.
Seymour: No, Lisa,
you’ve misunderstood my policy. Our policy is not to kick
people off the benefit. We put people on income management
– means that we pay your rent, we pay your power, we pay
your groceries,...
Fox: Sounds like a benefit to
me.
Seymour: …so the resources are not served up in
cash forever. It’s not a hammock; it’s a safety net that
means people get the resources they need to avoid poverty,
but you don’t get payment for being on a benefit.
Fox:
David, it’s a benefit.
Mr Harawira, what do you think
about what Mr Seymour is saying? There are 10,000 people on
a jobseeker’s benefit at the moment who have been looking
for a job for 10 consecutive years and receiving that
payment. So do you think that’s right?
Harawira: No, I
don’t. But Mana’s solution is a simple one. 20, 30 years
ago, we had community employment projects so that nobody was
doing nothing, everybody was working, even those who were
receiving the benefit from the government. And we would
support going back to those kind of projects where you’ve
got people fixing maraes, doing up old-people’s homes,
helping at schools to do up fences, cover books, all of that
kind of stuff so that people are actively engaged in
rebuilding their community.
Seymour: But, Hone, they’re
getting money now. Why can’t they do that now? If
they’re getting the money, why don’t they fix the marae
now?
Fox: They do, actually.
Seymour: Well, then his
policy’s not needed.
Harawira: …rebuilding the
community in formal community employment programmes if at
such time that the private sector’s ready to offer those
jobs. Right now, they don’t have those jobs, so the
government has a responsibility to make sure that people get
the benefit they need but they also contribute back to
society through community action.
Let’s
bring Mr Morgan in. You want a universal
allowance—
Harawira: You
can talk if you want to, man.
You want a
universal allowance. So you’re going to pay a certain
amount of people money to do
nothing?
Morgan: Yeah, like
we do pensioners at the moment, you mean? Is that what
you’re saying?
Seymour: That’s because older people
can’t work. It’s called ageing.
Morgan: Hang on,
Seymour. Oh God.
Let Mr Morgan have his
opportunity. Mr
Morgan?
Morgan: The whole
issue is we’re trying to run a taxed and targeted welfare
system that was designed in the ‘50s and ‘60s…
Fox:
Kia ora.
Morgan: …for a world of full employment and
high and rising wages. The world has changed.
Fox:
Yes.
Morgan: You know, this is why people like Zuckerberg
and Musk and that are screaming at these governments to move
to a UBI as fast as possible, because they are going to
destroy jobs on a scale that you can’t even imagine – no
bus drivers, no taxi drivers, no couriers, no shop
assistants needed. So, I mean, from an economist point of
view, this is nirvana. One machine does all the work. It’s
incredible. The issue is how do you get the income from the
owner of the machine to everybody who’s surfing,
apparently? The answer is a UBI. So we have to step towards
a UBI and design a tax and welfare system to actually
support it.
Seymour: Yes, but we don’t live in that
world right now.
Morgan: And we’re not paying
another— We do work in that world. You go and tell all the
people who are on Working For Families at bugger-all bloody
wages that it’s just an unfortunate cycle,
Seymour.
Seymour: We have record employment in New
Zealand.
All right. I want to talk about a
different kind of welfare – what some people would call
corporate welfare. Listen carefully. I want you to raise
your hands if you think it is wrong that $300 million was
put aside in the budget to give tax breaks to foreign film
producers. Is that corporate
welfare?
Morgan:
Yeah.
Okay. Who with their hands up would commit to
canning it, then?
Harawira: Yeah, I
would.
You would can
it?
Harawira: Tomorrow.
Tomorrow.
Mr Shaw wouldn’t.
Harawira: I mean,
seriously, the theory of corporate welfare, in an
environment, in a world where 1% of this country owns 50% of
the wealth, sucks. We need to be putting the money that
these people are generating on the financial markets and
putting them back to where the people most need it to lift
them out of poverty so everybody’s contributing to a
positive society.
We’re running out of time,
but I want to ask Mr Shaw – you didn’t put your hand up
to can it.
Shaw: It’s a
busted system, a lot like the way that the international tax
system works so that companies don’t have to pay tax in
different countries. So you’ve got a race to the bottom.
So New Zealand is caught in this global marketplace where
everybody else is also providing tax breaks to get films
made in their countries, right? So one of the things that we
need to do is to go to all of those other countries and say,
‘Look, we are all on a race to the bottom. We are all
putting taxpayer money into getting these companies here.
Why don’t we all stop it?’ And the vehicle for that is
the OECD, just like we did around foreign trusts and around
insurance.
Fox: But, Lisa, we’ve got—
Mr Fox, this
is—We’re going—
Fox: You’ve not asked me
anything.
I’m coming to ask you something
now. We’re going into a break, and I’m going to give you
each five seconds to give a message, deliver a message to an
absent friend—
Fox:
I’ll take my five seconds.
…a message to
an absent friend – either Peter Dunne or Mr Peters. Take
your choice. Marama Fox, your message to an absent
friend.
E koro
Winitana—Where’s the camera? This one? E koro Winitana,
please don’t leave your values under the mat when you walk
into the house with your friends. The Maori seats are here
to stay. The Maori language is here to stay. The Treaty of
Waitangi is here to stay; it is the foundation of our
nation. I’m sorry you’re not here, but if those are your
views, then I’m happy that you may not be in Parliament
when we come back.
Mr
Morgan.
Morgan: I
think…
Quickly. You’ve only got a few
seconds.
Morgan: I think
this is the year that both Peters should lose—should leave
Parliament.
All right. Mr
Seymour?
Seymour: Winston
Peters, you’ve had your time, mate. You’re this
country’s best Opposition politician and the worst
governing politician, sacked three times from three
different cabinets by three different prime ministers, under
investigation from the Serious Fraud Office. You’re a
crook – a charismatic crook, perhaps, but a crook all the
same.
Your five seconds is up. Mr Shaw, your
message. Your message, Mr
Shaw.
Shaw: I tell you, I
am actually more interested in debating Bill English, to
tell you the truth. I would like the opportunity to talk to
the Prime Minister about the country that he has run over
the course of the last nine years – first as Finance
Minister and now as Prime Minister…
So
head-to-head Maori
Party—
Shaw: …and about
having the 14% of people who were below the poverty line
when they came to office and the 14% of people below the
line today. That’s who I want to
debate.
Your time’s up, Mr Shaw. Mr
Harawira, you’re taking us to the break. Make it brief.
Your message to an absent
friend.
Harawira: Tuatahi,
tautoko enei korero a Marama. Tuarua, mi mihi atu ki taku
tuahine, kore tae te haere mai tenei ra he tautoko i a James
ko Metiria, aroha mau ki i ia, kore tae te haere mai. Nga
takahi to nga mana, nga mea tuaki tona whanau. Mihi atu ki a
koe, Metiria, ha koa ki a koe, ki mohio a koe, he konei ki a
Maori hei tatuoko ra.
All right. We’ve got
to go. We’ve got to go to a break. We’ll be back. Do
stay with us.
Mrs Fox, the
Maori Party wants a living wage for all workers. So that
means going up from $15.75 an hour to $19.80. How many jobs
are going to go as a result of that, and how much is it
going to cost?
Fox: Look, I sat down with a very generous
grower from the Hawkes Bay for lunch yesterday — John
Bostock. He already pays a living wage because he knows that
this is what people need in order to feed their families. He
also provides lunch for all of his staff. He takes in people
who’ve come out of prison. He makes sure that they get
support. That’s good social entrepreneurship. And if there
were more people like him around this nation, we wouldn’t
even be having this debate. We have to carefully let it rise
and get it to a living wage, and once we’re there, index
it to the median wage, just like the pension, and let it
continue to meet the cost of living.
OK. Some
New Zealand research indicates— Some local research
indicates that you could potentially lose 26,500 jobs and it
will cost the government $500 million to pay that extra wage
to state workers.
Fox:
That’s less than 20% of their current surplus, isn’t it?
The thing is, Lisa, we don’t want to be stupid about it.
We’re not just going to go, “Here we are today. Let’s
bang it up here tomorrow.” We need to get it up there
quickly and carefully so that we don’t lose those jobs —
and invest in our young people, more Pacific and Maori trade
training positions, invest in the community work
programmes, as Hone has pointed out, so that we have
trained, skilled people ready for the jobs that are in this
country now.
All right. Mr Harawira, I want to
talk a bit about justice and rehabilitation. National wants
boot camps.
Harawira: You
told me immigration.
We’ll get to
immigration. We will get to immigration. So, National wants
boot camps, right? The Maori Party has said that they’re
an attack on Maori and Pacifica youth. You used to be keen
on boot camps. Are you still keen on boot
camps?
Harawira: Sure. Not
the boot camps that the National Party’s talking about.
That’s the kind of Nazi-style stuff where it’s like
prison; you put them in at level 1, and they come out level
5 criminals. That’s what National’s proposing. That’s
dumb.
So what would yours look
like?
Harawira: But the
opportunity for young Maori and young Pacifica to come into
a positive and disciplined environment gives them a chance
to snap a connection with a bad life. The problem comes when
they come out — what happens? Now, I’ve been working on
a project up north, exactly one of these sorts of projects,
with the mayor of the Far North District Council, with some
forestry crews, with some carbon farming crews, the
orchardist out on the eastern side with some Maori
construction crews here, and I said, “Look, if we get
these guys away on a LSV course for six weeks, are you
prepared to come and see them all when they come back to
offer them jobs?” They were as happy as.
So
limited service course — a
military-style—
Harawira:
No, all it is is the opportunity to take them out of an
environment where they are not growing, give them a chance
to clean themselves up, come back home, see what’s
possible and step up to that. They can’t. They’re living
always in poverty.
Shaw: Lisa.
All right.
OK. Mr Shaw?
Shaw: Hone
mentioned tree planting. So Denmark has actually discovered
that planting trees is the most therapeutic activity that
you can give to prisoners. So we have a tremendous
opportunity, given that we need to plant about 1.8 million
hectares of trees over the course of the next 30 years in
order to meet our carbon obligations, that, actually, we
could get young people involved in that activity as well as
the current prison population.
Harawira: Good deal. Good
deal.
I saw an eyebrow go up on this side of
the room. Mr Seymour, TOP wants to get rid of ACT’s three
strikes legislation.
Fox:
Yes, please.
And they want to loosen bail
conditions, the Bail Act, and review the Parole
Act.
Fox: Yes, thank
you.
They also want to lower the prison
population by about 40%. Now, that sounds like
cost-effective governance, putting money into
rehabilitation, cutting red tape. Those are all the things
that you like, isn’t
it?
Seymour: Oh yeah. Look,
we could save $1 billion a year just by letting all the
prisoners out straight away, but we’re not going to do
that because that would be stupid.
That’s
not what they’re
suggesting.
Seymour: The
ACT Party has put three strikes into law, and it’s taken
the worst offenders off the street, and that’s what New
Zealanders wanted, and we’ve delivered. But it’s not
good enough just to be tough on crime. We need to be smart
on crime.
Fox: No it hasn’t. It’s filled our prisons
to overflowing, and it’s turning our young people into
hardened criminals.
Seymour: And the ACT Party’s
policy…
Fox: Is not smart.
Seymour: …is that if
you learn to read in prison, we take six weeks a year off
your sentence. Now, that is smart. The Howard League
agree.
Fox: They should have learned to read at
school.
Seymour: The Sensible Sentencing Trust agree. The
Labour Party and the National Party agree with our policy of
rewarding self-improvement in prisons — tough on crime and
smart on crime.
OK. And Mr Seymour would also
like to bring in three strikes for burglary. Mr Morgan,
what’s your
response?
Morgan: There’s
no link between the rate of crime and the rate of
imprisonment. It’s completely driven, the rate of
imprisonment. We are now second in the western rich
countries in terms of rate of incarceration — 210 people
per 100,000 as opposed to the OECD.
Fox: 72% Maori
youth.
Morgan: Average of 114. The main drive of the
incarceration rates is the legislation that has basically
arisen from political pressure from the ‘Senseless’
Sentencing Trust.
Fox: Thank you.
Morgan: And the best
example of that is the Bail Amendment Act of 2013 that we
have to appeal. So, you know, to make the link between crime
and imprisonment, you have to be very careful. What we do
know with imprisonment is that once you age adjustment, the
recidivation rate is about 100%. So it has no corrections at
all at the corrections department, all right?
Seymour:
And that’s why we have Learn to Read in Prison. But I can
tell Mr Morgan there is a connection between imprisonment
and crime. It’s hard to commit a crime in
prison.
One at a time. Mr Seymour, you
had—
Fox: When the
justice system is racist, David, you’re just penalising
Maori and Pacifica over and over again. When Maori are
incarcerated — 27 times more likely for the same crime
than non-Maori — then we are putting and locking away our
people in a racist system, and you say, “Bang. Sorry about
it.”
Seymour: And I address that in chapter 11 in my
book.
Morgan: It’s completely
racist.
Someone just brought up racism then,
Mr Shaw. You ditched your immigration policy because you
felt that it was…
Fox:
Bigoted.
Bigoted and racist. So do you have
one now? Do you have an immigration policy now? Can you
share it with us?
Shaw:
Yes. I want to live in a country that welcomes people here
not because they’re economic units to be exploited and not
because we want to close the doors because we see them as
economic threats to us, but because they’re people who
want to come here for a better opportunity and a better
start in life, just like all of our ancestors did. And
pretty much every single other party treats immigrants like
some kind of economic unit, either there to be exploited or
as a threat. And my point in this whole debate around
immigration is that we’re getting very concerned that the
whole immigration policy debate’s being captured by the
xenophobes and the racists.
Seymour: Including your
party.
Shaw: And immigrants are being used as scapegoats
for all of our—
Seymour: The ACT Party’s the only
party on the stage that hasn’t practiced xenophobia in the
last three years.
Fox: No, it’s not.
Mr
Seymour. I’m talking now, Mr
Seymour.
Seymour: It’s
true.
Can you tell me what level of
immigration do you think your policy would need? Because
about 73,000 net immigration at the moment, and Labour’s
aiming for around 50,000. Where would you
be?
Shaw: Well, this is my
problem — is that the moment you put an arbitrary number
on it, you immediately devolve into this xenophobic debate
that’s been dominated by the New Zealand First Party for
the last 30 years— the last 25 years.
So
you’re not prepared to put a number on it?
OK.
Shaw: And what we need
is to actually elevate it out of that and say, “Well,
before we start talking about that, why don’t we have a
conversation around the values and principles that underlie
our immigration policy, because in the absence of that,
everything comes down to the same old
debate.”
OK. I want to move on to Mr
Harawira. Mr Harawira, you have high unemployment rates in
Northland; a high percentage of people on benefits compared
to other parts of the country. Are your supporters concerned
about immigration level? What do they say to you about that,
and job
opportunities?
Harawira:
First of all, the unemployment in the north has nothing to
do with immigration. It has to do with a system of
government that has stripped our territory of its assets —
the forestry, the freezing works, the rail, New Zealand
Post, the power board. They’ve gutted all of those.
That’s where the unemployment has come from. It’s got
nothing to do with immigration. Mana’s immigration policy
is separate to that completely, and it’s based on the
philosophy that, first of all, hello? We are in the Pacific.
We are a Pacific nation.
Fox: Kia ora.
Harawira:
That’s the first thing we are.
You actually
want immigrants to come to the regions, don’t you, for 10
years? For 10 years, you’d like them to be
directed—
Harawira: Where
did you see that one?
On your website, Mr
Harawira.
Harawira: Oh no.
Sorry, that’s not our policy. You haven’t actually read
our policy.
I
have.
Harawira: Our
policy’s not based on that. Our policy is based on the
fact that, first of all, we are a Pacific nation. Secondly,
if white Australian’s can have free entry and free exit,
how come our Pacific Island relations can’t?
Fox: Kia
ora.
I wasn’t talking about white
Australians when I said that, Mr
Harawira.
Harawira:
Thirdly, if white Australians can come here and work, take
their pensions home, why can’t our Pacific Island
relations?
Seymour: Can we talk about housing, a wide
issue of the election?
Fox: Can you stop trying to
hijack?
Harawira: And fourthly, if we’re going to have
refugees, let’s start with the refugees from climate
change right here in the Pacific.
Fox: That’s
right.
We need to move on. All right, Mr
Seymour, you’ve ruled out Winston Peters as a— well,
you’ve described him as ‘New Zealand’s longest-serving
beneficiary. Our most expensive politician’, you say, and
you have said no way will you work with him. So I want a
brief answer here — be clear about this — are you ruling
yourself out of supporting any coalition or any confidence
in supply arrangements that will include New Zealand First
in any way? Is that no on the cards for
you.
Seymour: That’s a
no.
No Winston Peters — no how, no
way.
Seymour:
No.
All right. You say no Winston Peters
either, don’t you, Mr
Morgan?
Fox: You’re
skipping me.
Morgan: I mean, we’ve only got the one
bottom line and that is that, you know, anybody who’s
trying to get rid of these Maori seats, we will not work
with. So that rules out Winston, but it doesn’t actually
rule out Shane. Go figure that.
Okay. All
right. Mrs Fox, you say that you know that your supporters
skew left and that they might be happier if you went with
Labour rather than National. Is that more likely to happen
this time around, do you
think?
Fox: Oh, we need to
see where the numbers fall at the end of the day. And while
the Jacinda Effect may be having a bit of a rise in the
polls, I think sometimes if you scratch the surface,
there’s not a lot of depth, at the moment. We’re waiting
to see the figures on those policies, and we want to know
what’s coming. We’re very wary of either of these two
governments because they both mucked us around for 150
years.
But is there an equal chance that you
could go with Labour and an equal chance that you could go
with National?
Fox: Yes,
there is. Here’s what you do — join the Maori Party
because our membership decide. We go back to them; we ask
them. If you want to help choose who’s going to run this
country, come join the Maori Party and put your vote
there.
All right, because your co-leader, Te
Ururoa Flavell, repeatedly says Labour throws Maori under
the bus.
Fox: That’s
right.
And he seems to have a harder line than
you on Labour. Are you at odds with him about who you could
work with?
Fox: We’re
never at odds. Whether it be by my mouth or his, it is the
same, Lisa.
All right. Mr
Harawira—
Seymour: Lisa,
can we talk about housing? It’s the number one issue in
this election and we still haven’t dealt with
it.
Mr Harawira, you have a deal with the
Maori Party, but it doesn’t last after the
election.
Fox: Stop yelling
at the presenter.
Seymour: No. It’s an important
issue.
Your deal with the Maori Party
doesn’t last after the election, Mr Harawira. So, if you
get in, you’re a free agent. Could you team up with the
foreshore and seabed team, aka
Labour?
Hawawira: Or aka
National.
Yep. Could you?
Harawira: They’ve both
done the same damage. Look—
Well, could
you?
Harawira: I don’t
even have to look at—
It’s a genuine
question.
Harawira: I
don’t even have to look to Marama to say that our kaupapa
is based on that relationship building Mana Maori
Motuhake.
Fox: Kia ora.
Harawira: Now, if we go in as
a strong bloc, there’s odds-on that we are going to have a
say in who’s going to be the next government. That’s
where I want to be. That’s where the Maori Party wants to
be,…
Preference for the blue team or the red
team?
…and that’s where
Mana Maori Motuhake deserves to be in this country.
Fox:
Our membership choose.
Do you have a
preference for the blue team or the red
team?
Shaw: he has a
preference for the green team.
Harawira: (LAUGHS)
You’re not supposed to tell people that,
James.
Well, seeing as you worked your way
into that conversation, Mr Shaw, have the Greens made a
mistake ruling out working with
National?
Fox:
Yeah.
Wasn’t your party supposed to
transcend left and right when it was first set
up?
Shaw: The vast majority
of voters want to know – are they voting for the status
quo, or are they voting for change? And we felt it was only
fair to voters who want to know which way their vote is
going to count that we would say we’re with the parties of
change. And we are one of only two parties who have said
that we’re committed to changing the
government.
You don’t think it’s a
mistake, even though Labour is now cannibalising your
vote?
Fox: That’s
right.
Shaw: Look, if you want a progressive, Labour-led
government, the Green Party has to be at the heart of that
government because they won’t be able to govern without
us. And if it’s a Labour-New Zealand First government,
that is not a progressive government, so if you want a
progressive government, you’ve got to give your party vote
to the Green Party.
Are you in a quiet war
with your MoU partners at the
moment?
Shaw: No.
No.
It’s all
good?
Shaw: Yeah, it’s
all good.
All
right.
Shaw: See, here’s
the thing.
Okay, we’ve got to wrap it
up.
Shaw: Lisa, no other
political party has committed to changing the
government.
All right, I’m going to give you
a quick whip-around here. I want you to name the one person
on this stage that you’re prepared to work with – the
person that you would choose first to work with. Mr
Seymour.
Seymour: Marama
Fox.
Mrs
Fox.
Fox: Hone
Harawira.
Mr
Morgan.
Morgan: I’m
having two – these two.
Mr
Harawira.
Harawira: I’m
having everybody but the guy over there.
All
right.
Seymour: My best
endorsement yet.
Mr Shaw. Last word to Mr
Shaw.
Shaw: Marama and the
Maori Party.
All right. Thank you all for
joining us this morning. Stay with us. We will be back after
the break.
Transcript provided by Able. www.able.co.nz