https://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/PA2411/S00196/a-year-into-government-act-celebrates-change-in-direction.htm
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A Year Into Government, ACT Celebrates Change In Direction
Monday, 25 November 2024, 5:31 pm
Press Release: ACT New Zealand
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Celebrating one year of ACT in Government this week, ACT
Leader David Seymour says:
“Last year, ACT
campaigned to rein in the cost of living, deliver real
consequences for crime, and end divisive policies. Kiwis who
voted ACT didn’t just vote for a change of government,
they voted for a change of direction.
“After just
one year in Government, we can report that Kiwis who trusted
ACT with their vote have had an outsized impact in changing
the direction of our country. We’ve put values of freedom,
personal responsibility, and equal rights into
action.
"We've seen price inflation brought under
control and mortgage rates cut. We've seen more police on
the streets and fewer ram raids. And New Zealanders can now
have their say in an overdue debate on whether equal rights
are protected by the Treaty of Waitangi.
“Every day
we’re working to empower New Zealanders to peacefully make
a difference in their own lives and the lives of those they
care about, no matter their background.”
Below is a
non-exhaustive list of 70 actions ACT has taken in the first
year of Government:
THE ECONOMY:
- Cut
wasteful Government spending to get inflation under
control.
- Delivered tax cuts to ease the cost of
living.
- Restored the Reserve Bank's focus on
tackling inflation.
- Restored the option of 90-day
trials for all businesses.
- Established the Ministry
for Regulation to cut red tape to make doing business
simpler.
- Opened a Red Tape
Tipline.
- Commenced two regulatory reviews for early
childhood education and agricultural
products.
- Repealed the Auckland Fuel
Tax.
- Repealed the Ute Tax.
- Repealed “Fair
Pay” Agreements
- Repealed Labour's resource
management regime.
- Agreed on core features for a
replacement of the Resource Management Act centred on
property rights.
- Sped up timeframes for overseas
investment applications.
- Reduced hikes to the Fire
and Emergency levy.
- Increased the use of sanctions
for beneficiaries who can work but refuse to take steps to
find a job.
- Eased restrictions to accessing credit
under the Credit Contracts and Consumer Finance
Act.
- Scrapped EECA's "decarbonising industry" (GIDI)
fund.
- Scrapped Auckland Light Rail, the Lake Onslow
hydro scheme, and funding for Let's Get Wellington
Moving.
- Started phasing back in interest
deductibility.
- Suspended the requirement for new
Significant Natural Areas.
- Unveiled a new
contracting gateway test to provide certainty to workers and
businesses.
- Began delivering regulatory relief for
businesses dealing with anti-money laundering
rules.
- Delivered regulatory relief for
earthquake-prone buildings.
- Kept agriculture out of
the Emissions Trading Scheme.
- Launched consultation
to improve the Holidays Act.
- Launched a nationwide
roadshow to inform improvements to health and safety
law.
- Launched a framework for Regional Deals between
central and local government to deliver
infrastructure.
- Launched a refreshed framework for
Public Private Partnerships.
- Stopped blanket speed
limit reductions and enabled faster speed limits on our
safest roads.
- Introduced legislation to reverse the
oil and gas ban and promote the use of Crown
minerals.
- Introduced tenancy legislation to enable
Pet Bonds, restore 90-day 'no cause' terminations, and
restore tenants’ and landlords’ notice periods to 21 and
42 days.
- Introduced legislation to improve access to
building products available overseas.
- Introduced a
member's bill to liberalise Easter Trading.
LAW
AND ORDER:
- Increased funding for Corrections to
lift prison capacity.
- Abolished Labour's prisoner
reduction target.
- Defunded Section 27 “cultural
reports”.
- Commenced a review of the Firearms
Registry.
- Strengthened consequences for Kāinga Ora
tenants who engage in repeated antisocial
behaviour.
- Strengthened Firearms Prohibition
Orders.
- Made gang membership an aggravating factor
at sentencing.
- Enabled greater use of remote
participation by victims in court
proceedings.
- Piloted military-style academies for
young offenders.
- Introduced legislation to reinstate
Three Strikes.
- Introduced a member's bill to make
rehabilitation or education a condition of
parole.
- Introduced legislation to toughen sentences
for attacks on workers and give weight to the victim's
circumstances at sentencing.
- Introduced legislation
to unlock tougher measures for young serious
offenders.
- Introduced legislation to amend Part 6 of
the Arms Act affecting clubs and
ranges.
- Successfully campaigned to overturned
race-based prosecution
guidelines.
DEMOCRACY:
- Directed the
public service to deliver services based on need, not race,
and end "progressive procurement" quotas.
- Abolished
the Māori Health Authority.
- Advanced the Treaty
Principles Bill to select committee.
- Restored local
referendums on Māori Wards.
- Scrapped Labour's law
to give 16-year-olds votes in local
elections.
- Broadened the scope of the Covid inquiry
with a second phase.
- Defunded the Christchurch
Call.
- Halted work on hate speech
laws.
- Introduced legislation to remove Section 7AA
of the Oranga Tamariki Act.
- Seen Otago University
adopt a free speech policy in response to ACT's coalition
agreement.
- Allowed charity-run lotteries to operate
online permanently.
- Achieved a select committee
recommendation to end taxpayer-funded election
broadcasts.
EDUCATION:
- Restored
charter schools, now with the option of state school
conversion, with the first schools to open next
year.
- Streamlined early childhood education
regulations.
- Delivered an action plan to improve
school attendance and started publishing attendance data
weekly.
- Improved the school lunch programme to feed
more kids for less money.
- Switched fees-free
university from first year to
third.
HEALTH:
- Delivered Pharmac its
largest-ever budget, which has now funded life-saving
medicines.
- Restored the sale of medicine containing
pseudoephedrine.
- Streamlined medicine approval and
funding processes.
- Introduced legislation to repeal
the Therapeutic Products Act.
- Successfully
campaigned to end discriminatory access to GP services in
Hawke’s
Bay.
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