ACT is calling for an independent Royal Commission to investigate the response to Covid-19 before next year’s flu
season.
“Covid-19 may return next year and we can’t afford to shut the economy down again. Being unprepared for the first major
pandemic in 100 years may be understandable, but repeating our mistakes if it comes back next year is totally
unacceptable,” says ACT Leader David Seymour.
“Crisis thinking is very different from honest reflection on how we could have done better.
“New Zealanders responded to blunt imperatives to get through the crisis. ‘Stay home, save lives.’ ‘Unite against
Covid-19’ as a ‘team of five million.’
“The approach needed in a crisis, though, is not the approach needed for avoiding the next one.
“We need open, honest debate. New Zealanders have accepted unprecedented restrictions on their lives with little
scrutiny.
“A Royal Commission would need international guidance. New Zealand is too small and too many of the players are too
invested in the Government’s response. Ayesha Verrall, an expert advisor to the Government, is rumoured to be standing
for Labour at the election. Certain other prominent ‘experts’ might as well be.
“The country needs to put politics aside and ask objectively how we could have done better, because we might have to
sooner than we think.
“There are many questions to be answered. A Royal Commission could consider whether:
• our borders should have been closed earlier;
• our pandemic plan was world class, like Taiwan’s, or an outdated response informed by the 1918 Spanish flu;
• the national PPE stockpile was adequate and distribution was sufficiently organised;
• contact tracing capabilities were adequate;
• the Government had adequate testing, including planned epidemiological studies to provide data for decision-making;
• the rules set by the Government appropriately balanced Covid-19 elimination with other goals;
• the Government acted in accordance with the rule of law.
“There is recent precedent. The Royal Commission into the Canterbury earthquakes was established in April 2011, two
months after the February earthquake. The Royal Commission into the Christchurch terrorist attacks was set up the month
after the attacks.
“A Royal Commission into the Covid-19 response should report back prior to April 2021 so that any recommendations can be
implemented before the next flu season.”