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You Can't Avoid Politics: Peters

Speech by Winston Peters at Victoria University: You Can't Avoid Politics


Rt Hon Winston Peters
New Zealand First Leader
Member of Parliament for Northland
4 MAY 2016

EMBARGOED TILL DELIVERY


Speech by New Zealand First Leader and MP for Northland

Rt Hon Winston Peters

POLS 111

HMLT205, Hugh McKenzie Building,
Kelburn Parade, Victoria University, Wellington
9.15am, 4th May, 2016

You Can’t Avoid Politics

Thank you for the opportunity to speak to you today.

Next year you will find yourselves in a polling booth, supporting the candidate and party you think best represents you.

Before then you will be bombarded by people telling how you should vote ranging from your families and friends to those of us who are aligned to particular political parties.

But today we’re here today to talk briefly about your vote and a party called New Zealand First.

In brief, New Zealand First is a patriotic centrist political party.

You may be interested in some of the fundamental principles we operate by – because they have served us well through the past 23 years since our inception.

First and foremost, New Zealand First is a non-ideological party – our policies are reality based.

We are not beholden - constrained or limited by a whole range of pre-existing positions or in serving particular interest groups.

This gives us a unique advantage – we can look at the facts and work for what is in the best interests of ordinary Kiwis and New Zealand as a whole.

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New Zealand First stands absolutely for a society based on merit and equal opportunity for all.

And we do not take our identity or social cohesion as a society for granted. This is particularly important given the large scale demographic changes that have been foisted upon us so carelessly by other political parties.

And the change that they have brought about were never as a result of consultation with the New Zealand people.

There are parties in Parliament today belatedly expressing their concern about the effect of mass immigration numbers on New Zealand’s economic and social health.

Some of these parties were entirely responsible for this trend because not so long ago they all thought this was a thoroughly good idea.

If anyone opposed their view they were immediately accused of being racist and xenophobic.

Your generation right now can see some of the disastrous effects of that sort of thinking all around you.

Artificial competition for rentals, housing, jobs, hospital beds, places in classrooms and lecture halls.

So one of the reasons we favour a cautious, sensible, and prudent immigration policy is to ensure that our social cohesion is not in any way undermined or threatened.

Yesterday the Prime Minister gave a speech to the Institute of International Affairs at Parliament.

He was seeking to defend his open door, open slather policy on immigration and offshore buying of New Zealand land, homes and businesses.

Few speeches have been so simplistic in their lack of grasp of history both here and abroad, or the stark realities staring them in the face in Auckland, and now elsewhere.

He said: “There’s no worldwide conspiracy to take jobs from New Zealanders or suppress wages or buy all of our houses.”

Only someone knowing that that is exactly what has happened would use the occasion of such a speech to defend the economic and social mess developing around them.

He went on to say, “Almost $100 billion of foreign capital was invested last year.”

Despite the fact much of this foreign capital was not investment but speculation - he didn’t mention, of course, the billions vanishing from our country because of invisibles, corporate tax arrangements when they pay a third of one percent in tax, and dividends to overseas shareholders.

Suffice to say, if you can’t sleep at night try reading that speech – it would put Mogadon out of business.

Separatism

New Zealand First is opposed to separatism.

We absolutely oppose the trend supported by National and other parties to create a “parallel state” for Māori through programmes such as Whānau Ora and divisive proposed legislation around the ownership of water or, for that matter, reforms to planning laws which say that Maori are separate from the community, and therefore are entitled to a statutory body with legal powers of sanction over city, town and country planning applications.

We believe in one law for all – irrespective of ethnic background.

We believe that Maori needs are the same as all New Zealanders.

Because all New Zealanders are entitled to good education, housing, health facilities and most of all they need good paying jobs.

But we do acknowledge that lack of full-time employment is a serious issue for many, and more so for Māori and Pasifika young people.

We support a mixed economy.

We do not subscribe to National’s free-market ideology that wants to see private interests dominating the provision of public services.

There have been many examples of failure.

For example, the electricity sector is now a complete shambles.

It can only generate price hikes and now requires a total overhaul.

National’s creeping privatisation poses great risks to our standard of living in areas such as education and health.

Access to education and health services are fundamental to a decent society.

There can be no real equality of opportunity if there is gross inequality and disparity in these two critical areas

So we support a high quality public education system and high quality public health service

We do not believe in selling our land to foreign interests and we believe that state-owned assets should be held in trust for the people.

Parliament and the government’s role is to protect and defend the people - to be guardians of the country’s resources – and to help the people reach their potential through enlightened health, education, housing and employment policies.

Now some others are trying to say it - but New Zealand First is committed to it.

New Zealand First believes that we must train, skill, educate and employ our own people first.

There is no excuse for the hiring of cheap labour from overseas when so many are on the unemployment scrap heap back here.

And on the vexed question of student loans our position is that we want to amend the current scheme in order that in future it will:

· provide incentives to assist student debt repayment

· encourage New Zealand students to stay in this country after they graduate, because they can be confident of a great future in New Zealand.

Brorocracy – diplomatic appointments

Politics in New Zealand should be about a meritocracy where men and women regardless of race, creed or background get there on talent.

As an example of how meritocracy has been abandoned in favour of a mainly white brorocracy look no further than how some of our high commissioners and ambassadors are being appointed.

Year after year, run down politicians have been given reward for in some cases the most dubious of services by sending them offshore – beneficiaries of some undeserved golden handshake.

We have a fully trained professional Ministry of Foreign Affairs. The members of this service should have a right to aspire to diplomatic posts all round the world, not be ankle tapped by all too frequent convenient arrangements to pay someone off, buy someone off, or even worse grass widow them in some of the most critical world leading economies.

This is not to say that some of the people we have sent offshore haven’t been the best choice, or not done excellent service but some have not been the wisest choice.

Many have represented an insult to foreign affairs, leaving their posts with absolutely nothing to show, but deterioration in our international relationship with that country.

New Zealand First’s view is that a political appointee should be the absolute exception and we wish to make it clear today that if any future political appointments are made, which we regard as unsuitable, then upon gaining the political balance of power, we would correct such unwise choices by ordering that appointee to return home; and thereby hand the job to someone capable of doing it properly.

Lack of vision

Over almost 8 years National has had no vision, no strategy, no plan for New Zealand just a huge multi-million dollar PR machine.

All National has had in the current economic vision is the Auckland housing bubble, increased immigration creating a consumer demand, the Christchurch Rebuild, and billions of dollars coming in buying New Zealand assets.

These are not the policies for a great future. But mark these words, “all this will be much clearer to you well before you vote in 2017.”

My final point comes directly to you:

For decades the percentage of the youth non-vote has been alarming.

This is not good for the health of our economy.

We hope you are not among the abstainers come the next election.

There are many young people who say ‘why bother voting, it doesn’t matter’.

Well, respectfully we have to disagree. Each moment of your life, waking or sleeping, the policies of governments are affecting you, and often adversely so.

Everything in the cost structure of your life, whether at work, university or leisure, is affected by government policy.

Right now rentals are becoming more scarce and more pricey in your city and there’s much more competition for work provided by overseas visitors with work visas.

Have a look around you for the next 48 hours and say that it is not so.

So politics does matter and; if that’s the case, would you not be smart to have your say in what those policies are and political environment to improve them.

Your questions are welcome. Thank you.

ENDS

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