Politics Newsletter: New Zealand Politics Daily – March 05 2018 – Today’s content
Editor’s Note: Here below is a list of the main issues currently under discussion in New Zealand and links to media coverage.
[caption id="attachment_297" align="aligncenter" width="640"]
The Beehive and Parliament Buildings.[/caption]
Below are the links to the items online. The full text of these items are contained in the PDF file (click to download).
Foreign affairs and trade
Tracy Watkins (Stuff): Jacinda Ardern’s Aussie charm offensive a sign of the changing times
Sam Sachdeva (Newsroom): Ardern’s Allbirds diplomacy offsets trans-Tasman discomfort
Barry Soper (Newstalk ZB): Does Malcolm Turnbull really see us as family?
Chris Bramwell (RNZ): Deportation policy ‘fair and just’ – Turnbull
Ben Doherty (Guardian): Deporting offending New Zealanders ‘fair and just’, Turnbull says
Audrey Young (Herald): Aussies help PM reassert her spot in the headlines
Henry Cooke (Stuff): NZ donates almost $10 million to Samoa
Henry Cooke (Stuff): PM Jacinda Ardern’s chance to set the tone in the Pacific
Sam Sachdeva (Newsroom): Arden leads ‘Pacific Reset’ tour
Mei Heron (RNZ): PM’s Pacific tour begins ‘Pacific reset’
Herald: New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern on five-day Pacific Island charm offensive
Newswire: Govt turns attention to new terms of influence in Pacific
Fran O’Sullivan (Herald):China major factor in NZ’s ‘Pacific reset’
1News: Winston Peters questions China’s influence in the Pacific region
Richard Harman (Politik): What is Winston trying to say about China?
Pip McLachlan (Stuff): We need to talk about Asia: The PM’s foreign policy speech
1News: Trade Minister David Parker is set to fly to South America this week to sign the revamped Trans-Pacific Partnership trade pact in Chile
Reesh Lyon (RNZ): NZ to seek exemption from Trump’s steel tariffs
Claire Trevett (Herald): New Zealand Government seeking exemption after Donald Trump imposes stiff tariffs
RNZ: NZ could get caught in international trade crossfire – trade expert
Mike Watson (Taranaki Daily News): Small handful turn out to protest against controversial international trade deal
Steven Cowan (Against the current): The CPTPP: Neoliberalism rules, OK?
Farah Hancock (Newsroom): NZ leads push to end fishing subsidies
Greens on lobbying
Henry Cooke (Stuff): Green Party to open diaries, refuse lobbyist-funded perks
Newswire/Newshub: No more freebies for Green MPs
1News: No more corporate freebies for Green MPs as they announce transparency measures
Mei Heron (RNZ): Green Party bans kickbacks for its MPs
Herald: Greens to decline corporate hospitality in new transparency measures
Newstalk ZB: Greens to release diaries in push for transparency
National Party
Claire Trevett (Herald): Soul lessons for Simon Bridges from Bill English
laire Trevett (Herald): ‘Jokiness and blokiness’: How Bridges is emulating John Key
Steve Braunias (Herald): Secret Diary of Simon Bridges
Talisa Kupenga (Māori TV): Bridges responds to criticism surrounding his Māori heritage
Moana Maniapoto (E-Tangata): Let’s judge Simon Bridges on his politics, not his whakapapa
Oscar Kightley (Stuff): ‘Maori-ness’ about more than flesh and blood
Stacey Kirk (Stuff): Debating Simon Bridges’ ‘Māoriness’ hurts Māori
Lizzie Marvelly (Herald): Race remarks make the blood boil
Donna Miles (Daily Blog): Simon Bridges likely to treat Māori the way John Key treated state house tenants
Government
Liam Dann (Herald): Why National’s new leader is irrelevant
Richard Harman (Politik): Labour’s warning to business – help us deal with inequality or face a Brexit-like revolt
Martin van Beynen (Stuff): Labour’s Achilles heel exposed by pork-barrel regional development programme
Anna Bracewell-Worrall (Newshub): Meet Fletcher Tabuteau, Winston Peters’ new Deputy Leader
1News: Winston Peters says ‘language police’ upset with comments on Jacinda Ardern’s appearance have gone too far
Herald: Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern talks prime ministerial motherhood
Stuff: Nervous sheep, whiskey and New Zealand’s attractive PM: Charles Wooley continues to dig
Herald: TV reporter Charles Wooley uses sheep joke while defending calling Jacinda Ardern ‘attractive’ during interview
Kelly Dennett (Herald): PM Jacinda Ardern and Clarke Gayford buy new Sandringham home
Herald: Jacinda Ardern yet to receive invitation to Prince Harry and Meghan Markle’s royal wedding
Superannuation
Heather du Plessis-Allan (Herald): Why I’ve changed my mind on the retirement age
Rob Stock (Stuff): Private super schemes are MPs’ bridges to wealth
Susan St John (Newsroom): Time for action on overseas pensions
Employment
Emile Donovan (RNZ): Insight: No Job, No Training, No Hope?
Tamsyn Parker (Herald): Government takes bosses to court over holiday pay non-compliance
Madison Reidy (Stuff): Legal loopholes allow for ‘disgraceful’ labour-hire worker exploitation
Stuff: Foreign fishing crews win Supreme Court case over unpaid wages
Herald: Panel recommends changes to rules for pay equity claims; Government says result will be a ‘fairer deal’ for women
Laura Walters (Stuff): Achieving pay equity needs to be easier – government working group
Newshub: Govt to consider making pay equity claims easier to lodge
Thomas Coughlan (Newsroom): Kiwis will work longer for a productivity pay rise
1News: WorkSafe asked to improve safety in Kiwi quarries
Legal profession ethics and sexual harassment
Luke Kirkness (Herald): University of Otago’s law faculty described as ‘smorgasbord of young, impressionable women for the men’
Luke Kirkness (Herald): ‘Jelly wrestling and naked drinking games’ claimed at University of Otago law school camp
Stuff: ‘Concerns’ over behaviour at Otago University law camp held in 2012
RNZ: Behaviour complaints at Otago University’s law camp investigated
Jessie Chiang (RNZ): Blog gives harrassed lawyers chance to speak out
Damien Grant (Stuff): Law school heads suffer moral failure
Jenny Condie (Stuff): Russell McVeagh story shows the problem with ‘naming and shaming’ in New Zealand
Cherie Howie (Herald): Law firm sexual harassment: Lawyer’s criticism of official New Zealand Law Society response
Alison Mau (Stuff): Nobody else launched a rigorous #metoo investigation – so I thought, bugger it, let’s go
Jonathan Milne and Patrick Crewdson (Stuff): Seeking help isn’t easy, speaking out isn’t easy, forcing change will never be easy
Jessica Long (Stuff): Sexual harassment a festering wound within New Zealand’s workplaces
Angela Fitchett (Stuff): There’s more than a few good men out there who will stand up for what’s right
Media
Bryce Edwards (Newsroom): ‘The conflicting interests of commentators’
Pete George (Your NZ): RNZ soft sop on political conflicts of interest
Jane Patterson (RNZ): Commentator welcomes conflict of interest debate
Colin Peacock (RNZ): How far off is the government’s media funding fix?
Scott K MacLeod (Newsroom): Fact or fiction? Behind the rise of fake news
Housing
Rob Stock (Stuff): The future of NZ housing is prefabs, and 180,000 ‘tiny’ homes
Don Rowe (Spinoff): ‘One of the great tasks for our generation’: Phil Twyford talks housing
Mike Treen (Daily Blog): Housing for need not speculation
RNZ: Salvation Army: 150 state homes only a small step
Chris Harrowell (Manakau Courier): Government opens new transitional housing facility in south Auckland
RNZ: Homeless in Hamilton:Shelter reports soaring demand
Herald: Fletcher opens door to rent-to-buy scheme in Overseas Investment Amendment Bill submission
Census
Press Editorial: Census helps government ‘spend billions of taxpayers’ money wisely’
Hannah Martin and Kymberlee Fernandes (Manakau Courier): Digital census feared to worsen under-count of those under pressure and struggling
Jonathan Mosen: Blind people should count. My run-around with Statistics New Zealand, and how they’re making me a criminal
Jonathan Mosen: Statistics New Zealand read me my census code, but let’s not lose sight of the systemic issues
Miri Schroeter (Manawatu Standard):MidCentral District Health Board urges people to do the census
Martyn Bradbury (Daily Blog): Why would you fill in the Census online in a post-Snowden world?
Torika Tokalau (Stuff): Exclusion of ethnicity option Pākehā from census creates a stir
Branko Marcetic (Spinoff): A history of outrage over the word ‘Pākehā’
Julian Lee (Stuff): The (almost) pointless, intrusive and even dangerous exercise we call the Census
Justice
Matt Nippert (Herald): Secret Wellington High Court national security hearing lambasted as ‘Kafkaesque’
Andrew Geddis (Pundit): By their acts ye shall know them
Stuff: Environmental Court approves Waikeria Prison expansion
Education
Shane Cowlishaw (Newsroom): NCEA an ‘alluring facade’
1News: Education experts say New Zealand needs major shake-up to boost the achievement rates of Maori
Parliament and democracy
David Slack (Stuff): Politics is in your tapwater
ODT: NZ’s greatest waka-jumpers of all time
Mike Williams (Herald): Watershed week in politics
Children
RNZ:‘Children’s views add richness, and we need to be listening’
Jane Bowron (Dominion Post): Exercising our political voice
Charlotte Carter (Herald): Tauranga divided over Children’s Commissioner’s idea to lower voting age to 16
Newshub: Charity urges MPs to back child poverty legislation
Jogai Bhatt (Newshub): Jacinda Ardern answers Kiwi kids’ questions for Children’s Day
Greens
Newshub: Davidson vs Genter: Leadership fight expected to stay clean and green
Nicky Harper (Herald): Green co-leader hopefuls pitch to the party
Britt Mann (Stuff): Julie Anne Genter: Minister for Women, mother-to-be, full-time feminist
Martyn Bradbury (Daily Blog): Ummmmm – James Shaw seems confused at the Summer Policy Conference as to why the Greens got smashed so let’s spell it out for him
Steven Cowan (Against the current): The CPTPP: The Greens go missing in action
Health
ODT Editorial: Can there be a more difficult subject?
Cate Broughton (Stuff): ACC claimant ‘devastated’ after signing over her payout to advocate
Amanda Saxon (Stuff): Trans community celebrates as NZ finally gets a new sex-change surgeon
1News: ‘This is a wake-up call’ – farmers warned to wise up to threat from ‘fake’ meat
Dave Macpherson (Daily Blog): At Last – we hear from Mental Health Commissioner on Suicides….
Ngāpuhi settlement
Claire Trevett (Herald): Treaty Minister holds talks with Ngapuhi in bid to break stalemate
Stuff: Ngāpuhi settlement talks move forward
RNZ: Ngāpuhi leaders meet Little over settlement standoff
Stuff: Ngāpuhi settlement step closer as leaders meet with Treaty of Waitangi Negotiations Minister
Poverty Bay
Marty Sharpe (Stuff): Gisborne set to be lifted out of Poverty
RNZ: Gisborne councillor wants ‘Poverty Bay’ name dropped
Environment
RNZ: Defence Force knew about contamination for two years
Kieran Martin (Spinoff): The two things you should know about methane
Andrew McGiven (Stuff): Game fish and fowl, urban discharges and farming part of water quality challenge
Nadine Higgins (Stuff): Philosophy 101 – A treatise on Jamie Whyte and wastefulness
EQC
Press Editorial: EQC culture change is long overdue
Andrew Hooker (RNZ): #EQNZ: How to botch repairs and not pay for it
Other
Kurt Bayer (Herald): NZDF has no plans to ground drones banned by US military allies over cyber-safety fears
RNZ: Farewell for last officer of the 28th Māori Battalion
Lincoln Tan (Herald): Maori independence claim rubbished, but police will not take action against scammer Amato Akarana-Rewi
Simon Draper (Stuff): Asian migration debate deserves more than a Twitter war
Stuff: Obama to be protected from ‘wannabe jihadis’ during New Zealand visit
Andrew Gunn (Stuff): Dancing their way into political relevancy
Sophie Bateman (Newshub): The Labour MP who wants to be on Dancing With The Stars
Christina Persico and Jane Matthews (Taranaki Daily News): Country-wide criticism can’t buck Urenui Rodeo
Deborah Hill Cone (Herald): Four reasons Air New Zealand got this terribly wrong]]>
K150m released to PNG’s earthquake-ravaged districts in more relief efforts
Prime Minister Peter O’Neill visiting disaster-hit areas at the weekend. Video: EMTV News
Pacific Media Centre Newsdesk
Provinces affected by Papua New Guinea’s 7.5 magnitude earthquake a week ago will continue to experience aftershocks.
Prime Minister Peter O’Neill said that while minor tremors would still be felt, the national government was finalising arrangements to airlift relief supplies to affected communities, reports EMTV News.
Close to a million people in over five districts remain affected.
Scott Waide of EMTV News reported on his blog that 66 deaths had been confirmed so far – 37 in the Southern Highlands, 17 in Hela and 13 in Western Province.
Loop PNG’s Imelda Wavik reports that the first K150 million of the K450 million funding for the earthquake stricken areas was to be be released into a trust account yesterday.
This was announced by the Emergency Controller, Dr Bill Hamblin, in a press conference, which was also attended by members of the committee including secretaries for works and finance, national disaster director and representatives from ExxonMobil and Oil Search.
The Emergency Controller said the funds would go towards the aid. However, there would be specific requirements for funds to be used.
Transparency and order
He said there would be transparency and order in using the funds for relief and humanitarian purposes.
Dr Hamblin also reaffirmed that the money will go specifically towards the general aid programmes.
The controller noted that K1 million has already been set aside for food and water, which had already been approved for dispatch any time this week, while K3 million would go towards medical supplies.
Due to lack of road access into the affected areas, air aid was most needed at this time. About five helicopters were being used by the emergency restoration team.
Article by AsiaPacificReport.nz
]]>Undecided ‘up for grabs’ and decisive for Fiji election, says academic
By Nasik Swami in Suva
Fiji’s 2018 General Election is going to be a close contest between the ruling FijiFirst and the opposition parties, according to a leading New Zealand-based Fiji academic.
Professor Steven Ratuva, political sociologist and director of the MacMillan Brown Centre for Pacific Studies at the University of Canterbury, says the election will be “won and lost” over the undecided, currently a third of the eligible voters.
Dr Ratuva made the comment in response to a Tebbutt-Times poll conducted on February 5-8 with 1000 randomly sampled people who were eligible voters.
According to the results of the poll on the public’s voting intention, a staggering 34 percent said they were not sure who to vote for, 8 percent declined to answer the question and half a percent said they did not intend to vote.
Thirty-two percent said they would vote for FijiFirst, 22 percent for Social Democratic Liberal Party (SODELPA), 3 percent for National Federation Party (NFP) and 1 percent for Fiji Labour Party (FLP).
When looking only at the percentages for those who selected a party (removing the undecided voters), 56 percent selected FijiFirst, 38 percent SODELPA, 5 percent NFP, 1 percent FLP, 0.2 per cent Unity Fiji Party, and 0.1 per cent independent.
Slender lead
Dr Ratuva said of those who expressed their party preferences, FijiFirst had a slender lead of 6 percent with a total of 32 percent (or equivalent to 16 seats) compared with 26 percent (or 13 seats) by all the other opposition parties combined.
“The interesting factor here is the large number of undecided voters totalling 34 percent (or 21 seats).
“This is where the election will be won and lost. So very hypothetically, 21 seats are up for grabs,” said Dr Ratuva.
He said FijiFirst would need at least 18 percent and above of these undecided voters to get over the 50 percent barrier and win the election while the opposition parties needed 24 percent.
“These results show that there have been a lot of movement’s since the last election in terms of people’s preferences as a result of changing perceptions of issues, perceptions of parties, experience of changing circumstances and how they respond to these.
“Whichever way the votes shift, we can be certain that the election might be very close. The next three political party-based polls will begin to provide a much clearer picture of where things are moving as campaigns begin in earnest and the elections come closer.”
Analysing the results, University of the South Pacific economist Dr Neelesh Gounder said the support for FijiFirst had reached an all-time low since the 2014 election, when it had received almost 60 percent of all the votes cast.
Bainimarama’s popularity rises
“While Bainimarama’s popularity has increased by 20 percent in February 2018 compared with February 2017, FijiFirst party as the preferred choice has decreased by 5 percent during the same period (from 37 percent in February 2017 to 32 percent in February 2018),” Dr Gounder said.
He said comparing poll results of preferred party with preferred PM, there was now a clear “delink” between the two.
“It seems there is no clear link between Bainimarama’s popularity as the PM and FijiFirst party as the preferred party.
“On the other hand, both opposition parties SODELPA and NFP have gained in terms of the choice for preferred party.
“SODELPA, in particular, has strengthened its position with a 9 percent increase in preferred party choice (from 13 percent in February 2017 to 22 percent in February 2018).
“Support for NFP has increased from 1 percent to 3 percent.”
He said also interesting was the percent of undecided voters.
“Despite the reduction in undecided voters, 34 percent [from 40 percent] is large and can play a significant role in which party or parties form government after the 2018 election. The challenge for SODELPA and NFP is the continuation of the momentum towards attracting undecided voters towards their party and candidates,” Dr Gounder said.
“For FijiFirst, given how this scenario has evolved since 2014, it might be beneficial to have elections sooner than later. This strategy might avoid FijiFirst 2014 voters who are now undecided from moving to the opposition.”
Article by AsiaPacificReport.nz
]]>37 deaths in Southern Highlands, 16 in Hela as PNG relief efforts go on
By Sylvester Gawi in Mendi
Local community leaders have taken charge of care centres in the Southern Highlands province of Papua New Guinea as they await food, clothing and other relief supplies to be delivered.
Acting Southern Highlands Provincial Administrator Thomas Eluh said six care centres had been set up around SHP by locals.
The death toll yesterday stood at 37 while there have been 25 unconfirmed deaths reported. Sixteen deaths have been reported in Hela.
Road links into most of the affected villages have been blocked by debris from landslips piling up. Some sections of the roads were badly damaged by the movement from the earthquake.
Police from the Mobile Squad based in Mendi have been grounded in the last 24hours after their fuel supply tanks were also damaged by the earthquake.
Most shops and fuel stations have been reportedly closed following damages from Monday’s earthquake and the aftershocks that are constant in the province.
The Agiru Centre which houses the provincial administration has also reported damages to its offices and equipment and has been condemned by authorities. The provincial administrator and the disaster team are now operating out of the provincial police command in Mendi.
Nursing school destroyed
The Mendi School of Nursing was one of the institutions I have visited that has most of its buildings destroyed by the earthquake.
There is now a greater need for funding to be made available through the National Disaster Office so that logistical support can be provided to distribute relief supplies.
In Hela, a total of 16 deaths have been confirmed by the Hela Provincial Hospital in Tari. More causalties are expected to be reported in the coming days as volunteers are dispatched to gather reports.
Tari-Pori MP and Finance Minister James Marape said about 40 percent of Papua New Guinea’s revenue would be affected if the Hides operations was shut down.
Minister Marape said the government is confident that this would not really affect the budgetary allocation for 2018.
Hela’s political leaders also joined Minister Marape and Governor Philip Undialu to show solidarity and support towards addressing the plight of their people affected.
The provincial disaster response team in Hela is also working together to address the situation.
Funding allocations
The National Government has committed K450 million towards the disaster. The disaster committee has made allocations for the initial K100:
- K40 million will be spent to fix the road infrastructures damaged by the earthquake so that affected areas are accessible for relief supplies to be delivered.
- K10 million to assist schools and education institutions buildings damaged by the disaster and another K10 million for health services.
- K23 million has been set aside for transport, logistical support and other areas to provide relief assistance.
The remaining K350 million will also be spent on the same purposes once assessment reports of the extent of the damages are confirmed and brought to the disaster team’s attention.
In a statement released yesterday, Oil Search has committed K6 million in donations in cash and kind in disaster relief efforts to both Hela and SHP.
The Australian government has begun to fly its supplies to Moro on its Australian Defence Force Hercules plane loaded with relief supplies.
New Zealand’s donations will arrive today.
Sylvester Gawi is a Papua New Guinea journalist who blogs at Graun Blong Mi- My Land where this article was first published. It has been republished by Asia Pacific Report with permission.
Article by AsiaPacificReport.nz
]]>How Jack Mawe died trying to save his wife and child in PNG earthquake
By Scott Waide of EMTV News
While the multibillion dollar mammoth petroleum company Exxon declared “force majeur” and another counted its financial losses, one family from Magarima in the Southern Highlands was this weekend mourning the devastating loss of their last born son and his young family.
Twenty-one-year-old Jack Wapol Mawe had already run out of the house he and is family had been sleeping in that night.
But then when he went back into the small building to pull out his wife and baby, the landslip buried them in the house.
“We found him frozen in motion… his hands reaching out to his young wife and first born son when they were all buried,” said Fr Pius Hal the Catholic priest at the Mendi Diocese and an uncle to Jack Mawe.
Jack had recently married Regina. They were transiting through Mendi with their son when the earthquake struck and killed all three of them.
Yesterday, doctors at the Mendi Hospital completed the post mortem and today, the family was taken by road to Magarima where they are from.
“I had not seen him for a long while. I think he was feeling a bit shy of talking to me because he had married quite early. He would have been about 20 or 21. His wife would have been about the same age.
“They had come from Hagen. It was the first time I had seen him in many years. That night he was gone.”
Circle of rocks memorial
At the site of the landslip in the centre of Mendi town behind the local CLC church, a small circle of rocks with a short wooden stake in the middle marks the place of death.
“They’re gone,” says a relative. “We’re looking after the place.”
Much of the house is still buried. The hauskrai is deserted. Three young lives were cut short just as they begun their journey together as a family.
In distant Komo, several hours from Mendi town, the roads are cut off. From the air, it looks like it’s been cut to shreds by giant claws that ripped the ground open.
An Indian priest who travelled in from Tari today, said his parishioners told him at least 14 people have died. Some of the areas are too far to reach and too difficult without road access.
Help is coming, the government says. A state of emergency has been declared and K450 million allocated.
The Australian government, MAF and Oil Search are on the ground in the three provinces of hela, Southern Highlands and Western Highlands but it will take weeks before everyone who needs it receives it.
Scott Waide, a Lae-based senior journalist for EMTV News, blogs at My Land, My Country, where this article was first published. He also posted a short update on The Pacific Newsroom today saying the Acting Administrator for Southern Highlands, Thomas Eluh, had confirmed that 37 deaths had been reported with 25 more unaccounted for so far. He appealed for more aid.
Article by AsiaPacificReport.nz
]]>












