Release: Government should be transparent on live exports

Source: New Zealand Labour Party

Targeted consultation on reinstating live cattle exports by sea won’t allow the New Zealand public to have their say.

“The majority of New Zealanders want to protect the ban Labour put in place. The Government knows that and is avoiding public consultation,” Labour animal welfare spokesperson Rachel Boyack said.

“Targeted consultation with those who are involved in the live export of cattle by sea will not reflect the viewpoints of the more than 57,000 people who signed a petition against the reinstatement of live exports.

“The world is changing. Other countries like the UK and Australia have followed New Zealand’s lead and moved to ban live exports. Reinstating this practice will take New Zealand backwards.

“The Government should be taking this seriously, listening to the overwhelming public feedback and not wasting taxpayer money on a regime that might not even go ahead.

“Before Labour banned the practice, live exports by sea represented just 0.32 percent of primary sector export revenue. We must protect New Zealand livestock and the international reputation of our annual $55 billion primary export industry.

“Labour will reinstate a ban on live exports of cattle by sea when re-elected. National should do the right thing now and rule it out,” Rachel Boyack said.


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Wrong kind of viral

Source: ACT Party

The Haps

ACT’s Dr Parmjeet Parmar made an excellent point about the spate of attacks on bus drivers. It doesn’t help when bus operators like Auckland Transport don’t enforce fares. Instead of someone else’s property that you should respect, the message is ‘you’re entitled, this bus is yours, do what you like.’ Her point was covered widely over the weekend in articles such as this. It’s a very good example of ACT taking a values-based approach to New Zealand’s problems.

Wrong kind of viral

Te Pāti Māori MPs have, in the words of one widely viewed American commentator, made New Zealand a laughing stock. The problem is not the haka, it’s the fact that Te Pāti Māori, and others who should know better, believe reasoned debate and war dances are equal ways to do politics.

Of course we’d rather not be writing about Te Pāti Māori’s antics, so we won’t. Some of the commentary around the antics, though, is so unhinged it requires a response.

At the heart of the problem is the post-modern disease that Free Press rails against. Doing war dances, getting in people’s faces, well that’s just a form of self expression no different from reasoned debate. Worse, it’s Māori expressing themselves, is about what some commentators have said in the last few days.

Free Press is a liberal publication, we believe in universal human rights, free speech, and free markets. So perhaps we’re biased, but we believe there are certain things that are true no matter who you are.

We believe that there are universal truths, some ways of living are just better than others. They lead to longer life expectancies, less violence, better health.

No culture owns these better ways of living, and no culture is immune to barbarism either. It’s only 400 years ago that witches were burned at the stake in England. You can still go to the waterfront in Lisbon and see where the inquisition tortured people, or Paris where the French beheaded each other in fits of madness. Only a few hundred years ago, everywhere was barbarous.

You can study what kinds of rules help people overcome suffering to do better. Europe, North America, Asia, and India, and now green shoots in Africa, show the way.

A system of personal freedom under the law is what works. Governments should be subject to regular free and fair elections by secret ballot. Citizens and their representatives should enjoy freedom of speech. As people in each place have adopted these values, they’ve doubled their life expectancy, from 40 not that long ago, to 80 now.

We acknowledge many Māori have specific problems to overcome. Actually, most people do. But the fact individuals have problems doesn’t change the best framework for overcoming them.

The idea that Māori are completely different people, and that the system that’s doubled life expectancy around the world doesn’t work for us, is absurd. For one thing there’s just no reason to think that Māori would be the only people on the planet for whom liberal democracy doesn’t work.

For another, most Māori, like the seven in the current Cabinet, actually do believe in liberal democracy. We shouldn’t need to say it but the idea that all Māori think the same is not only incorrect but also, well, racist.

That all brings us back to the Haka. Te Pāti Māori don’t represent a Māori way of doing things. They represent a minority within Māoridom who believe they are truly different from everyone else on the planet without any evidence.

These are the basic facts that should form New Zealand’s public narrative, and our job is to keep articulating them until they do.

NZ’s global climate rankings plummet as Govt removes agriculture from ETS

Source: Green Party

The Government has passed legislation to remove agriculture from the Emissions Trading Scheme (ETS) while Aotearoa’s reputation on climate action plummets. 

“While our Climate Minister is on the other side of the world telling the UN climate conference about the need to act, at home, his Government is ramming through law to delay and deny that very action,” says Green Party Co-Leader and spokesperson for Climate Change, Chlöe Swarbrick, who is currently attending COP29. 

“The world isn’t stupid – and that’s why this Government’s choices are seeing us slip down the ranks. 

“The Climate Change Performance Index points out the 2023 change of government and its policy decisions are why New Zealand is tumbling down the global climate rankings. Whether it’s the repeal of the oil and gas ban or kicking the can down the road on agricultural emissions, Luxon’s Government is denying science and leadership. 

“This is a national embarrassment, global disgrace and existential threat. 

“The Government can’t farm its responsibility out to unproven technology – unicorn kisses, as one of their own Ministers likes to talk about – and ‘the market’, which their own advice says will cost lowest income New Zealanders four times as much as the wealthiest.

“This fight is no longer about a faraway future, but our world today. The good news is New Zealanders are refusing to have the wool pulled over their eyes on this Government’s regressive agenda and are connecting the dots.

“Climate justice is Te Tiriti justice is economic justice.

“We can have meaningful action that reduces emissions and the cost of living while improving all of our lives.

“Christopher Luxon’s Government is relying on people’s exhaustion and disenfranchisement – and as the mobilising in the last week is proving, New Zealanders are starting to roundly reject that strategy,” says Chlöe Swarbrick. 

Failed boot camp experiment must end

Source: Green Party

As legislation to set up boot camps passed its first reading, the Green Party urged the Government to abandon this failed policy experiment for the good of our rangatahi.

“We risk repeating a shameful part of our history and ruining the lives of our rangatahi by bringing back boot camps,” says the Green Party’s spokesperson for Justice, Tamatha Paul.

“Our rangatahi need and deserve opportunities and support through their formative years so they can realise their full potential. 

“Boot camps are simply another shallow attempt by this Government to win votes by appearing tough on crime at the expense of our communities. We know from past iterations of boot camps that they fail to help rangatahi turn their lives around and instead make things worse. Yet this Government is ploughing on anyway. 

“The red flags around the boot camp policy are alarming, including a lack of safeguards around its military-style settings and the fact this legislation is being introduced before the pilot has even been evaluated. Just today we learnt that one young person in the pilot may have reoffended. This shows the shortcomings of this military-style approach. 

“Have we not learnt anything from the Royal Inquiry into Abuse in State Care? There was a whole chapter on boot camps. Children endured horrendous abuse at the hands of people who were supposed to be protecting them.

“The Government apologised this month for abuse in state care but has ignored the resounding call from survivors to close the bootcamps. This makes that apology empty. 

“The vast majority of young people who end up in the youth justice system have faced abuse or serious neglect, with backgrounds of trauma, poverty, mental health problems, learning disabilities and lack of support. 

“We know what works for youth crime because we’ve done it before. Community wrap-around support services for at-risk youth were working well to reduce repeat offending before the Government cut their contracts,” says Tamatha Paul.

Statement on stabbing at Westfield Newmarket

Source: ACT Party

Responding to the news of a stabbing at Westfield Newmarket, MP for Epsom David Seymour says:

“This behaviour is unacceptable. My thoughts go out to the victim of this senseless act and his family.

“Newmarket’s security guards are local heroes. They calmly and professionally put themselves in danger every day to protect Newmarket’s businesses and visitors. I urge people to support the police by responding to their call for information.”

Police ask that any witnesses who can assist with enquiries to update them online or contact 105. Please use the reference number P060688447.

Gender-affirming care must centre evidence and health needs, not political posturing

Source: Green Party

The Ministry of Health has today released an evidence brief regarding the use of puberty blockers in gender-affirming healthcare, amid moves by the government to limit access. 

“Trans rights are human rights and our trans whānau deserve access to critical healthcare,” says Green Party spokesperson for Rainbow Communities, Kahurangi Carter.

“Today, ACT have espoused some incredibly transphobic rhetoric that aims to cause harm and division. We need to do better for our young people than spread misinformation and resort to scare tactics.

“At the end of the day, the Ministry’s position statement reaffirms what should be expected of all medical treatments and outlines how gender-affirming care is already delivered –‘an interprofessional team offering a full range of supports to young people presenting with gender identity issues.’

“This position statement highlights the importance of comprehensive care for those navigating these complex and personal decisions.

“However, meaningful action must go beyond statements. New Zealand urgently needs to resource and promote clear pathways for timely, free, and non-discriminatory access to all forms of gender-affirming healthcare. 

“That care must centre informed consent and self-determination, ensuring that every young person has the support they need to thrive.

“Attempts to limit access to gender-affirming care risk undermining the well-being of trans and non-binary youth, whose voices and experiences have been clear: affirming care saves lives.

“New Zealand has an opportunity to lead with compassion and evidence. What’s needed now is a commitment to support our rainbow communities by delivering equitable, accessible healthcare based on science and empathy—not political posturing,” says Kahurangi Carter.

Regulatory relief welcomed for earthquake-prone buildings, but real change needed

Source: ACT Party

ACT’s Building and Construction spokesperson Cameron Luxton is welcoming the passage of legislation to extend to remediation timeframes for earthquake-prone buildings, but says the 2016 legislation needs to be revisited in its entirety and scrapped.

“The looming remediation deadlines have created enormous uncertainty and costs,” says Mr Luxton, who is also Parliament’s only licenced builder.

“ACT was the only party to vote against the earthquake regulations back in 2016. The rules were developed in response to the tragic loss of life in the Christchurch earthquakes, but in policymaking real respect for life means making the rules work for the people who have to live with them.

“Good law making should be risk-proportionate, but an arbitrary, inconsistently interpreted standard of 34 percent NBS has been applied across the country, creating tremendous cost, stress, and uncertainty, not just for building owners but for ordinary people needing space to live, work, or gather.

“The Government was warned at the time that the rules would cost New Zealanders billions of dollars, including compliance costs of tens of thousands per building in parts of the country with low earthquake risks. The standards don’t even reflect building occupancy, meaning a historic church used a handful of times a year can face the same standard as an apartment block occupied day and night.

“The coming review of this legislation is welcome, but it needs to go further than tinker. We should scrap 2016’s legislation entirely and develop workable, risk-proportionate regulation. This debacle is a lesson in just how badly ACT’s Regulatory Standards Bill is needed.”

Release: National doesn’t care about manufacturing

Source: New Zealand Labour Party

The National Government is walking away from our manufacturing sector with constant reports of closures and job losses.

“It’s unbelievable that a Government that claims to care about the economy and rural communities is turning a blind eye to our struggling manufacturing sector,” Labour’s small business and manufacturing spokesperson Helen White said.

“Yet again we are hearing of further closures and job losses, this time it’s 230 well-paid jobs on the line at Kinleith Mill in Tokoroa.

“These proposed jobs cuts follow closures in Timaru, Ruapehu District and OJI’s Penrose factory. Jobs that support local economies and keep other people employed in small communities that rely on the workers’ wages and business.

“It is shameful that the Government’s wasting time and millions of dollars on the Treaty Principles Bill when there is a crisis in manufacturing of our primary products.

“National scrapped Labour’s Advanced Manufacturing Industry Transformation plan. Where’s Andrew Bayly’s plan?

“I am disappointed the Government isn’t working harder to support workers,” Helen White said.


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Release: Youth mental wellbeing no longer a priority for Child Poverty Minister

Source: New Zealand Labour Party

Louise Upston has revealed her diminished vision for vulnerable youth against a backdrop of snubbed advice, scrapped priorities, shifted goal posts and thousands more children projected to fall into poverty.

“Unbelievably, mental wellbeing has been deprioritised from the latest child poverty report,” Labour’s child poverty reduction spokesperson, Carmel Sepuloni said.

“Labour prioritised mental wellbeing after children and young people said it was the single biggest issue facing their generation. But today we’ve found out Louise Upston has ignored official advice and scrapped mental wellbeing as priority area.

“How the Minister can reconcile wanting to improve the lives of children without prioritising their mental health is beyond me. It is a devasting loss of data which would’ve helped us understand how young people are faring.

“She’s also scrapped food insecurity as a measure – which comes at a time when she’s going against advice to restrict food grants to beneficiaries. It’s a sad reality when her Government doesn’t seem to care that there are struggling families that may go without food because of the Government’s choices.

“This comes after the Minister previously changed Labour’s child poverty reduction targets to make them easier for her Government to achieve.

“It’s important the Minister still has material hardship is a priority; however the fact remains there are more kids living in benefit-dependent households under this Government’s watch and the Minister has made deliberate decisions that see beneficiaries with less support.  

“It is often overlooked that 55% of kids experiencing material hardship are in working households. The Government has stilted minimum wage growth and scrapped universal free prescriptions, all the while rates, rents, power prices are up. Their tax cuts don’t even touch the sides for most Kiwis.

“Preventing child harm while cutting funding to services for vulnerable children and family and sexual violence prevention programmes, also doesn’t add up.

“So far under Louise Upston’s watch, unemployment has risen and beneficiary numbers are soaring – all consequences of her Government’s choices,” said Carmel Sepuloni.


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