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Bryce Edwards’ Political Roundup: Catching up with the Labour Party

Political Roundup by Dr Bryce Edwards.

[caption id="attachment_4808" align="alignleft" width="150"]Dr Bryce Edwards. Dr Bryce Edwards.[/caption]

2016 is a crucial year for the Labour Party and Andrew Little. For a catch-up on what’s been said over summer about Labour – including by Labour itself – see the following 20 stories. 

A number of media reports and blog posts over the last month suggest Labour is about to release some big policies, but also that the party might be having trouble grappling to stay relevant and return to greater popularity. The main question to arise out of these items is how radical or conservative is Labour going to be in 2016?

1) Newstalk ZB reports that Little promising big announcements in 2016. In an interview, he outlined Labour’s plans: “The first year was about sorting out some of the internal things, which we’ve done. The second year is about the year of ideas and we’ve got to get those out because past experience tells us making big announcements in an election year isn’t particularly a good idea. So we’ll have five or six big announcements to make throughout the year. Stand by for the State of the Nation speech at the end of this month, so that’ll be the first big indication of where we are going. So 2017, then, is just focused not so much on getting the big ideas out there but actually campaigning on the ones we’ve announced.” 

2) Much of Labour’s promised radicalism is based around the work of finance spokesperson Grant Robertson, and this is profiled in depth by Richard Harman in his feature, Labour’s radical economic rethink. This focuses mostly on Robertson’s Commission on the Future of Work, which is expected to lead to innovative new employment and education policies, some of which could challenge some leftwing values of the labour movement. 

One of Robertson’s possible new employment policies could involve reduced job security for workers, which Harman says is surprising for a party founded by and for workers 100 years ago: “That a Labour politician is prepared to allow for a system under which workers could be laid off quickly is a major ideas-shift within the party and an indication of just how radical the Commission’s final report is likely to be. Harman also points to Robertson’s willingness to consider using public private partnerships, and adopting National’s capital gains tax by proxy policy (the “bright line test”), and extending it to five years. 

3) Labour’s policy generation focus is also emphasised by Richard Harman in his profile on Andrew Little – see: Labour’s serious year. He says that “This will be the year that makes or breaks Andrew Little.” It also includes further quotes from Little that emphasise radicalism: “I think these are big challenges and they need big responses… We are facing an age when incrementalism simply won’t cut it and we’ve got to be prepared to be bold and we need New Zealanders to understand that it’s going to take some bold responses and they’ve got to be long term responses if we are doing justice to the issue… We have to be thinking in pretty big terms.”

4) For more information on Robertson’s Future of Work Commission, see Isaac Davison’s Expect radical changes to economic policy, says Robertson. And note that Robertson (@grantrobertson1) tweeted yesterday to say “Excited to announce Robert Reich and Guy Standing will be keynote speakers at our #futureofwork conference in March”. 

5) Labour and Robertson are enthusiastic about adopting Denmark’s “flexicurity” employment regime, which Chris Trotter critiques in his column, “Flexicurity” – The Future Of Work? Trotter points out that there’s a profound difference between the labour markets of Denmark and New Zealand, namely that Denmark has a unionisation rate of about 75 per cent compared to New Zealand’s 19 per cent. This could mean that if the flexicurity model was implemented here – with its reduced protections for workers – it could simply turn “into a government-backed scheme for employers to hire and fire at will.”

6) Trotter goes further to paint Robertson’s promised radicalism as potentially akin to that of Roger Douglas’ in 1983, suggesting that there are plenty of parallels between Labour’s position then as a party out of power for eight years, desperate to find ways to usurp National as modernisers of the economy: “Robertson is readying the Labour Party for another bid to win the backing of big business. Like Roger Douglas before him, he is inviting his party to become, once again, New Zealand’s great political facilitator. Last time it was the Free Market Revolution of 1984-93 that Labour facilitated” – see: Third Term Temptations

7) But Labour’s recently released Future of Work policy paper, Economic Development and Sustainability suggests something much less dynamic according to commentator Phil Quin – see: Labour’s Language Problem. He argues that Labour’s document is an “example of the ways bureaucratese has infected political language.  Consider this fact alone: in a short document comprising a touch over eight pages, the word “sustainable” is used a staggering fifteen times.”

Quin explains the heavy use of buzzwords and “inoffensive, uncontroversial statements of the bleeding obvious” as being due to Robertson’s background as a bureaucrat together with his general “risk-averse” nature. But he ponders if Labour has a bigger problem: “More and more, Labour thinks, acts and communicates less like a political party than some hybrid government department/NGO, having lost along the way the knack of talking to voters in language likely to resonate, let alone persuade.”

8) Labour’s self-proclaimed radicalism is also seriously questioned in Chris Trotter’s column Orbiting a Dying Sun? Trotter says that in its centenary year it is natural to compare the Labour parties of 1916 and 2016, but doesn’t mince words when he says “it is not an exercise from which Labour emerges with any credit. In 1916, Labour was led by heroes. One hundred years on, perhaps predictably, it is led by colourless political careerists: men and women lacking the character, courage and creative intelligence to be genuine revolutionaries – or even effective reformers.”

Trotter writes that “Growing evidence of the emergence of a new progressive paradigm” – seen in the rise of Syriza in Greece, Podemos in Spain, Bernie Sanders in the US and Jeremy Corbyn in the UK – seemingly has no resonance for the modern Labour Party: “Mention Jeremy Corbyn, Bernie Sanders, Syriza or Podemos to the New Zealand Labour Party, however, and you will be met with a mixture of impatience and hostility.” In order to illustrate this point, Trotter recounts party founder and prime minister Peter Fraser declaring “If I was in Russia, I’d be a Bolshevik!”, and doubts that Andrew Little would ever proclaim, “If I was in Greece, I’d be a member of Syriza!”

9) Another leftwing blogger, Steven Cowan also questions the moderate direction Andrew Little and Grant Robertson are taking the party in – see: Labour’s brave “new” world. He says “Labour could have gone down a different path – one signposted by the likes of Jeremy Corbyn in Britain and Bernie Sanders in the United States. It could be advocating polices that swing the levers of economic and political power back toward ordinary people, rather than ensuring that they remain in the grip of the business sector. They are the kind of polices that have revived Labour’s fortunes in the UK and have Bernie Sanders threatening to upset Hilary Clinton’s bid to become the Democrat’s presidential candidate.  But we know what Labour thinks. After Jeremy Corbyn was elected leader, Grant Robertson was quick to dispel any notion that New Zealand Labour would be going down Corbyn’s path. According to Robertson, polices that might be ‘suitable’ for the UK may not be ‘appropriate’ for New Zealand’.”

10) Some degree of radicalism is being expressed by the party’s new tertiary education spokesman, Chris Hipkins, who is promising that a Labour Government would “significantly” reduce tertiary education fees – see: Tertiary fees ‘likely to drop under Labour’. But until further indications of how much the reduction would be and how it would be achieved, most will consider this an empty promise. 

11) Changes to Labour’s foreign policy might disappoint for many Labour supporters according to Gordon Campbell, who suggests that “Norman Kirk must be rolling in his grave” due to an apparent major shift on the question of New Zealand’s part in the battle against ISIS – see: On Labour’s endorsement of a combat role

Pointing to various Labour Party statements that flew under the radar during the pre-Christmas period, Campbell suggests that Labour has performed a U-turn on its opposition to sending military trainers to Iraq, and now goes even further in advocating that the SAS be sent. His explanation is that Labour must fear being “caught out on the “peace” side of the debate” and cynically wants to pre-empt the Government’s possible announcement of  involvement in the Middle East.

12) One temptation for Labour could be to change leaders, and Matthew Hooton says in his paywalled NBR column that this will be Labour’s Little dilemma. He states bluntly that the Labour leader’s successes – mostly around achieving at least an appearance of caucus unity and sidelining unpalatable policies – are the “achievements of a loser”: “Mr Little’s personal poll ratings are atrocious. The party finds itself five points below where it was at the same time in the last electoral cycle and the Greens have flatlined.”

Hooton says before the year is out the party will have to decide whether to remain loyal or “knife him”, though he believes “On balance, the odds must be on Mr Little hanging on.” Whatever Labour does, “standing fast” and waiting for a global political sea change to sweep the party to power is not an effective strategy. It’s an approach Hooton terms the “Cuba Mall coffeehouse delusion” and one which he believes Labour activists are in thrall to: “Perhaps they’re right. “Perhaps, in a year’s time, President Sanders will just have taken residence in the White House, union boss Bill Shorten will have turfed out Malcolm Turnbull from The Lodge, Mr Corbyn will be level-pegging with David Cameron, and Mr Little will be ready to mount a serious challenge against Mr Key for 2017 with the “radical” changes to economic policy that Grant Robertson promises. But it all seems unlikely.”  

13) According to Audrey Young, Little is “safe until the election, no question” – see her wide-ranging piece on what 2016 might hold for Labour: Legendary Tizard links Labour past and future. In this, Young begins by regaling readers with a series of anecdotes designed to show what an asset to Labour Bob Tizard once was. She then moves on to outline the kind of progress the party will be looking for in its centenary year. 

14) Usually spin doctors are at pains to remain invisible and scrupulously avoid inserting themselves into the political debate. Labour strategist Rob Salmond recently broke with that practice when he penned the curious On tour with the Boss. It’s a glowing account of his five days accompanying Andrew Little as he attended meetings in Washington and New York. Apparently the trip was “to assist Andrew in his preparation to become Prime Minister” which, in Salmond’s view, his boss absolutely ought to be.  

15) Labour can certainly win the next election according to Rodney Hide: “The polls this far out don’t matter much. They are certainly not a predictor of what will happen over the next two years.” However, Hide’s crucial caveat is that Labour must stop being delusional. He is referring to president Nigel Haworth’s Christmas message to the party which declared: “We’re finishing an excellent year in which the polls and popular feeling on the streets tells us that we are on course to victory in 2017″ – see: Don’t mention the polls!

Hide warns that positivity and having confidence is one thing but completely abandoning reality is another. Perpetrating a false sense of security negates the need to “change the course of events and to make history. That’s what Labour must do.” Hide also points out that, as the polls certainly do not show Labour on track to win the next election, Haworth’s statement has the effect of undermining confidence in a leadership that does not appear to have a grasp on the situation at hand.

16) This is also a view Labour Party supporter Phil Quin shares in his blog post, Go home, Labour, you’re drunk. He says, “Sadly, Haworth’s bullshit is greatly damaging.  Labour would be much better off with a president who is willing to confront party members and activists with the ugly truth of Labour’s predicament.  As with any individual, organisation or company that has endured persistent failure, there can be no hope for Labour until it can reckon with the underlying causes for the existential crisis it faces but refuses to acknowledge”.

17) Quin still describes himself as a Labour “supporter” despite his resignation from the party last year when Labour launched its campaign on “Chinese sounding names”. Now he’s announced that he’ll do his best to make sure the author of that campaign, Phil Twyford, loses his Te Atatu seat – see Nicholas Jones’ Twyford’s seat targeted after Chinese-names furore.

18) Andrew Little has revealed the highlights of his summer break with Jo Moir – see: Labour leader Andrew Little shares his Kiwi summer holiday. He proclaims a liking for trifle, and divulged his choice of John Grisham over the TPP document as holiday reading. Rising Labour star Jacinda Ardern also shares her holiday reading choice – David and Goliath by Malcolm Gladwell: “It was really interesting and changes the way you think about success and failure, which is great for someone in Opposition” – see Moir’s Labour MP Jacinda Ardern has enjoyed spending time in the kitchen this summer.

19) Labour is continuing its party organisation shakeup, with the appointment of a new general secretary to replace Tim Barnett – see Jo Moir’s Andrew Kirton appointed as Labour Party’s new general secretary. This article details Kirton’s background as a “public relations man” in London and former communications advisor to Helen Clark and co-president of the New Zealand University Students’ Association. While overseas the thirtysomething reportedly “remained close to the Labour Party and organised Labour’s London support network, campaigning for the expat vote during the last two elections.”

20) Finally, what’s happened to the working class in what used to be a working class party? The selection of Andrew Kirton as the party’s general secretary is typical of modern Labour, says Phil Duncan in New Labour Party general secretary indicative of party’s managerial capitalism. Duncan writes: “Once upon a time… Kirton’s background would have fitted him for a bright future in the National Party.  That he is a Labourite indicates the interchangeable nature of Labour and National these days.”

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Live Video Stream: New Zealand Bloodstock Premier Thoroughbred Sales

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New Zealand Bloodstock: Potent Buying Bench Fuels Day 1 of Karaka Premier Sale – A diverse buying bench fuelled increases to key figures on the first day of the two-day Karaka Premier Sale. To view the Day One Highlights Video, click here. Lot 200 fetched today’s top price of $775,000. SEE ALSO: NZ Bloodstock.]]>

TPPA National Interest Analysis Criticised As Flimsy and Biased

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Source: Professor Jane Kelsey and Trade Minister Todd McClay.

New Zealand Trade Minister Todd McClay today released the National Interest Analysis (NIA), a document tasked to examine the pros and cons of the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP).  McClay said on releasing the document that it “comprehensively analyses what TPP means for New Zealand, across the entire Agreement”. He added: “It finds that entering TPP would be in New Zealand’s national interest, adding an estimated $2.7 billion to GDP by 2030.”

However, TPPA critics suggest the National Interest Analysis document is far from an independent analysis and is designed to spin the National-led Government’s (and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade’s) view.

[caption id="attachment_6181" align="alignleft" width="150"]Professor Jane Kelsey. Professor Jane Kelsey.[/caption]

University of Auckland law professor Jane Kelsey said the formal National Interest Analysis (NIA) on the Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement (TPPA) released by Trade Minister Todd McClay today is simply an expanded version of the so-called ‘fact sheets’ prepared by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade (MFAT), which seek to justify the deal that officials and the National government have negotiated.

“The NIA is a totally predictable cheerleading exercise that talks up the supposed gains and largely ignores the huge downsides of the TPPA,” Professor Kelsey said.

She added an Australian Senate Inquiry into the treaty making process last year dismissed similar exercises produced by MFAT’s counterparts in Australia as totally inadequate, and called for a genuine independent, in-depth study before as well as after the conclusion of negotiations, including the TPPA.

“The flimsy NIA contrasts to the careful and detailed analysis in five peer reviewed expert papers on the implications of the TPPA that have been produced so far as part of a series supported by funding from the New Zealand Law Foundation,” Professor Kelsey said.  

These expert papers examine the impacts on New Zealand’s regulatory sovereignty, the investment chapter, climate change and the environment, the economics of the TPPA, and the Treaty of Waitangi and are available at tpplegal.wordpress.com. More papers are to come on financial regulation, public services, and IT and innovation.

“If the government wants its assessment of the national interest of the TPPA to be taken seriously it needs to engage with these independent expert papers and attempt to rebut the analyses by which the authors conclude that the deal is not of net benefit to New Zealand, now or in the future,” Professor Kelsey said.

[caption id="attachment_8656" align="alignleft" width="150"]New Zealand Trade Minister Todd McClay. New Zealand Trade Minister Todd McClay.[/caption]

McClay insisted New Zealand has published an “unprecedented amount of information” on TPP.

In a statement today, he said, released information includes 10 fact sheets released following the conclusion of negotiations on 5 October. The TPP text was first made public on 5 November, together with additional information on the estimated economic benefit and details of potential costs. “The Government will also be running roadshows for the public to learn more about TPP, and to help businesses prepare for the economic opportunities will bring,” says Mr McClay. [caption id="attachment_4640" align="alignleft" width="150"]Lori Wallach, Director, Public Citizen’s Global Trade Watch. Lori Wallach, Director, Public Citizen’s Global Trade Watch.[/caption]

Tonight at 7pm, a public meeting will be held at the Auckland Town Hall where Professor Kelsey, international TPPA expert Lori Wallach of the USA’s Public Citizen, and other key public figures will talk about the TPPA, the latest research, politics, analysis and actions.

Other public meetings are planned throughout the country. See ItsOurFuture.org.nz for more details.

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NewsRoom Digest: Top NZ News Items for January 26 Edition, 2016

Newsroom Digest

Today’s edition of NewsRoom_Digest features 3 resourceful links of the day and the politics pulse from Monday 25th January. It is best viewed on a desktop screen.

NEWSROOM_MONITOR

Noteworthy stories in the current news cycle include that Auckland houses have got sharply less affordable in the past year (according to a new survey by Demographia International), and that new rules coming into effect today aim to discourage state housing tenants from turning down homes they are offered.

POLITICS PULSE

Media releases issued from Parliament by political parties today 

included:

Government: Ensuring access to social housing is fair and reasonable

ACT Party: Baby boomer government lets down a generation

Greens: Not one more acre of confiscations; Green Party Pays Respect To Barry Brickell

Labour: Robert Reich and Guy Standing keynote speakers at Future of Work Conference

Māori Party: Supports Call For A Review Of The Justice System; TPP signals perilous times ahead for Treaty rights

New Zealand First: Another Fly In The Biosecurity Ointment

LINKS OF THE DAY

FUTURE OF WORK CONFERENCE: Internationally renowned economists and authors Robert Reich and Guy Standing will be the keynote speakers at Labour’s Future of Work Conference in Auckland in March. You can register here: http://www.futureofwork.nz/conference

GLOBAL INNOVATION: New Zealand ranks 28th in how its domestic policies support worldwide innovation, according to an analysis released by the Information Technology and Innovation Foundation (ITIF), a global technology policy think tank. Click here for the report: http://www2.itif.org/2016-contributors-and-detractors.pdf

HOUSING AFFORDABILITY: Auckland houses have got sharply less affordable in the past year, according to a new survey by Demographia International. The survey of hundreds of metropolitan areas in eight OECD countries, plus Hong Kong, rates Auckland the fourth most expensive city in which to buy a house. Read more:http://www.demographia.com/dhi.pdf

And that’s our sampling of “news you can use” for Monday 25th January.

Brought to EveningReport by Newsroom Digest.

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Lori Wallach & political panel: “TPPA: Don’t sign” – Auckland Town Hall, 7pm Tues 26 Jan

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Source: Professor Jane Kelsey.

tppa-jan-2016-120x600The government has finally announced it intends hosting the signing of the Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement in Auckland on 4 February 2016. 

There is a groundswell of opposition throughout New Zealand and in many other TPPA countries to the secretly negotiated deal. The New Zealand governments offer to host the signing continues the profound disregard for public sentiment is has shown throughout the six years of negotiations. 

A series of public meetings will be held in the main cities in the week leading up to the proposed signing to explain once again why this agreement is not good for New Zealand and should be signed.

The first of the “TPPA: Don’t Sign” public meetings is on Tuesday night at 7pm in Auckland Town Hall.

Washington-based expert analyst Lori Wallach, Director of Public Citizen Global Trade Watch, will explain about the realities of TPPA politics in a US presidential election year, and the likelihood that the agreement will not get to a vote in 2016, after which it becomes hostage to a new administration.

University of Auckland law professor Jane Kelsey will discuss recent assessments of the impacts of the TPPA for New Zealand based on the series of peer reviewed expert papers that have now been released.*

The second half of the meeting will be a political panel of parliamentary representatives:

Grant Robertson, Economic Spokesperson, Labour Party

Metiria Turei, Co-leader, NZ Greens

Marama Fox, Co-leader, Maori Party

Fletcher Tabuteau, Trade Spokesperson, NZ First

Barry Coates from Its Our Future will talk about Auckland based activities in the lead-up to the proposed signing of the agreement on 4 February.

The meeting will be live streamed on The Daily Blog.

The other meetings are at:

Wellington, Wednesday 27 January, 7pm, St Andrews on the Terrace

Christchurch, Thursday 28 January, 7pm, Cardboard Cathedral

Dunedin, Friday 29 January, 7pm, Burns Hall (next to First Church), Moray Place

The “TPPA: Don’t Sign” speaking tour is co-sponsored by ItsOurFuture, ActionStation, New Zealand Council of Trade Unions and First Union.

*The expert papers on the Regulatory Process, Investment, Economics, Environment and Treaty of Waitangi can be accessed on tpplegal.wordpress.com.

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NewsRoom Digest: Top NZ News Items for January 22 Edition, 2016

Newsroom Digest

Today’s edition of NewsRoom_Digest features 3 resourceful links of the day and the politics pulse from Thursday 22nd January. It is best viewed on a desktop screen.

NEWSROOM_MONITOR

Noteworthy stories in the current news cycle include the Minister for Women saying there has only been slow progress in recent times in reducing the pay gap between men and women, new research on the Trans-Pacific Partnership arguing that the benefits do not outweigh the costs, and Housing New Zealand saying there are no state houses available in Ashburton or Oamaru.

POLITICS PULSE

Media releases issued from Parliament by political parties today 

included:

Government: Medical Cannabis in New Zealand; More than 100,000 SmartGate users in one week; Number on social housing register continues to decline; Record numbers of people switching electricity retailers

Greens: Gender pay gap no accident and needs a Government response; NZers need full information about TPPA costs and trade-offs

Labour: Spiralling student debt deterring further education; Employment case makes case for clarification around work definitions; Lives lost as funding indecision continues; From one waiting list to another

New Zealand First: Lawsuit Against Us Worrying For NZ As TPPA Signing Approaches; Wake Up, There’s A Thirst For Free TV Sports; No Sense In Pork Imports; Government needs to do more than mind the pay gap

LINKS OF THE DAY

MEDICAL CANNABIS: In light of recent and increasing commentary on the use, access to and funding of cannabis based medical products, attached is a fact sheet on the definition, current availability, status and authorisation process around the use of these products for therapeutic purposes. Further information can be found on the Ministry of health’s website at: http://www.health.govt.nz/our-work/regulation-health-and-disability-system/medicines-control/medicinal-cannabis

SOCIAL HOUSING: The December 2015 Social Housing Register shows that better understanding applicant’s particular needs is housing more vulnerable people, Social Housing Minister Paula Bennett says. The December 2015 register can be found here: – http://www.housing.msd.govt.nz/information-for-housing-providers/register/index.html

TRANS-PACIFIC PARTNERSHIP: New research on the Trans-Pacific Partnership argues the benefits do not outweigh the costs. Click here for the report: https://tpplegal.files.wordpress.com/2015/12/ep5-economics.pdf

And that’s our sampling of “news you can use” for Wednesday 22nd January.

Brought to EveningReport by Newsroom Digest.

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Bryce Edwards’ Political Roundup: The Perils of user-pays democracy

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Political Roundup by Dr Bryce Edwards.

[caption id="attachment_4808" align="alignleft" width="150"]Dr Bryce Edwards. Dr Bryce Edwards.[/caption]

Information is the lifeblood of democracy. Therefore policy changes by government agencies that will restrict access to OIA requests by charging for information, are leading to concerns about the likely reduction in accountability and transparency in public life.

In the lead up to the release next Wednesday of the annual Transparency International global Corruption Perception Index, there have been some concerning allegations of Official Information Act abuse by government agencies. These were sparked last week when Fairfax business journalist Richard Meadows (‏@MeadowsRichard) tweeted: “The @ReserveBankofNZ has squashed my OIA requests with a $651 fee. Sad to see our powerful, unelected technocrats discouraging transparency.”

Sam Sachdeva’s Official Information Act request charges for media in spotlight details the unfolding of events around the request, including Meadows’ subsequent discovery that the charge was due to a significant policy change quietly enacted by the Reserve Bank late last year.

This change appeared to have been carried out in tandem with a review and report by the outgoing Chief Ombudsman, Beverley Wakem, which said “the Official Information Act’s charging provisions should apply to everyone who made a request.”

Media appalled by changes

The implications of the Reserve Bank’s new policy were not lost on an appalled media.

“Thanks again, Dame Beverley”, sneered The Dominion Post, already no fan of Wakem (see December’s editorial Chief Ombudsman shows how not to be an information watchdog). 

The newspaper delivered a stinging rebuke to the Reserve Bank, likening them to “a hide-bound banker who knows the price of everything and the value of nothing.”  The Reserve Bank had started a “very bad trend” by deciding to charge for OIA responses, and the closeted way they went about it was unacceptable: “This is not the right way to make or reveal such a momentous decision.” 

Crucially, the editorial pointed out that A tax on official information is a tax on democracy itself, arguing it contravenes the intention of the Act which seeks to make “information available as of right to the country’s citizens; it reverses the previous legal assumption that the government’s information is secret.”

The Dominion Post makes the point that while a fee of $600 would be a serious barrier for most individuals, the media submit challenging and time-consuming requests in their role as “the people’s watchdog over the government” meaning even large media organisations will struggle as the fees add up.

Rather than the media being treated differently to other requesters under the OIA, the newspaper says it “would prefer to urge that government-owned agencies, including large and powerful pillars of the state like the Reserve Bank, should treat the provision of information as a democratic duty. It should therefore regard the cost of giving that information as part of its core business. In other words, its default position should be to give the information free. Only in the most exceptional cases should this rule be breached.”

That’s also the view of Joanna Norris, editor of The Press and chairperson of the NZ Media Freedom Committee – quoted in Sam Sachdeva’s report. Like the Dominion Post, Norris feels charging for information is a “dangerous step”, contrary to the purpose of the act. She believes the attitude around releasing documents is wrong: “They need to stop looking at this as their information, it’s not – it’s the information held on behalf of all New Zealanders. It’s not their information, it’s ours.”

Gordon Campbell is similarly appalled, saying “There are so many wrong things about this policy that it’s hard to know where to start.” He argues that the Reserve Bank has made things difficult “at a time when quality journalism is under financial strain and spin merchants paid for by taxpayers outnumber journalists.” – see: On making the media pay for OIA requests.

The NBR’s political editor Rob Hosking has written about the issue today, saying that the Reserve Bank’s new OIA policy “appears to run counter to the purpose of the law”. He writes his column on the OIA reluctantly, “because I do believe that, generally, journalists problems are not of public interest. But this one is. The fuss over recent weeks about the Reserve Bank charging for official information is just the latest signal from – in this case a remarkably unaccountable body – that it is not going to be bothered with all this pesky accountability stuff.  Once you start charging for official information, you are in effect charging for accountability and for democracy.” -see: The ‘observer effect,’ public information and the media

Bloggers and politicians react

One blogger has fought back against the changes. No Right Turn characterises the changes like this: “The expectation is that charging is going to become a lot more common – or, to put it another way, public information is going to become a lot less available, and Ministers and public servants a lot less accountable. Good for them, but bad for our democracy” – see: An attack on our democracy

His response has been to file OIA requests with “every core government department seeking information for the last financial year on their total number of requests, the number of times they have demanded and been paid OIA charges, and the total amount collected. If they’re going to do something like this, then we at least deserve a statistical baseline so we can measure the impact. The responses are due on 15 February, and I’ll be tracking them here. Assuming, of course, that they don’t try and charge me for it…”

An economist who worked for decades at the Reserve Bank, including as the Head of Financial Markets, has penned a lengthy blog post criticising and examining the new policy – see Michael Reddell’s OIA: changes in RB practice and in law needed. In this he recalls: “I discovered the new policy when the Bank sought hundreds of dollars to provide me copies of some easily accessible, non-contentious, very old minutes of meetings of the Reserve Bank Board.” More recently, he says he was informed by the Bank that his request for information relating to the TPP would cost him $560. 

Reddell argues that his ex-employer has made a “serious misjudgement” with the new policy, but that the Bank has a “generally obstructive approach” to providing public information. This is a concern to him, as “The Reserve Bank is a very powerful organisation, with a great deal of discretionary policy choice left (formally) in the hands of one unelected person.”

Opposition politicians have been outspoken on the policy change. Labour’s Jacinda Ardern warns that if the Reserve Bank’s approach is adopted by other agencies then this would present “a real challenge to open, accountable, transparent government” – see Sam Sachdeva’s Official Information Act request charges for media in spotlight.

Similarly, the Greens’ James Shaw says “If you’re charging $600 or $1200 or whatever, that’s going to mean pretty much that all the requests are going to dry up” – see Sam Sachdeva’s Charges for official information ‘step in wrong direction’: James Shaw. Shaw suggests that officials should spend less time on “obfuscating the information”, and that “If you didn’t spend three-quarters of your time blacking out pages and all of that kind of stuff, it would cost you a lot less to give the information.”

Reserve Bank responds

Geoff Bascand, the Deputy Governor of the Reserve Bank, defended the policy change in a newspaper column on Tuesday – see: Reserve Bank: Charging for official information a ‘reasonable’ response. Bascand said the policy was “consistent with the Official Information Act” and was a “common, fair and reasonable response” to an increase in OIA requests of almost 300 per cent in the past five years.

He assured the public that “While the policy applies to all OIA requests, in practice we will seek charges when requests are large, complex, or frequent.” He also emphasised the Reserve Bank’s commitment to working with requesters to refine their requests in order to reduce or eliminate charges.

In the case of Richard Meadows’ $651 invoice, Bascand explained that “providing the information requested would take an estimated 8.5 hours of chargeable time (along with additional non-chargeable time).” He notes that Meadows was given several opportunities to refine his request but finally chose to withdraw it.

In the end Bascand reminds readers that while government agencies “and therefore taxpayers and ratepayers” bear the cost of providing responses to OIA requests, “like other public sector agencies, our budget is tightly constrained.”

A reasonable user-pays regime?

While on the face of it Bascand’s points appear reasonable, the current experiences of those making OIA requests make the changes problematic. A central issue is the huge amount of discretion it gives bureaucrats – discretion which some have demonstrated they are willing to use in politically motivated attempts to slow down and frustrate OIA requests.

Critics may be forgiven for thinking that, as the Manawatu Standard’s Matthew Dallas puts it, “the introduction of hefty charges to do so is just another brick in the stonewall” – see: Price-tag on information requests from media a troubling sign. He states that “The act aids The Fourth Estate in the execution of its duty and contributes to an informed public; without which, democracy withers.”

Abuses of the OIA at the hands of an increasingly politicised public service and failings of the OIA and Ombudsman’s office are topics I’ve covered in two recent Political Roundups. In October I wrote about New Zealand’s closed government and in December I looked at The struggle for integrity.

There has been much complaining from government agencies (as well as government ministers) about the cost of fulfilling OIA requests. Individual request costs are often cherry picked to paint requesters as wasteful of public funds. Apart from a few selective figures released there doesn’t seem to be much hard analysis of the total cost. 

As one example, in July last year it was reported that the Police were struggling with an increased OIA workload – see Samantha Olley’s Police: New OIA request every hour. But as No Right Turn pointed out, it is Not as much as it sounds.

Are requests to government agencies an unreasonable burden on the taxpayer or are they are an increasing unfunded cost for government departments on tight budgets? If we knew the total cost then perhaps taxpayers could themselves weigh up the value for money. Are freely available OIA requests less or more value than, say, a sheep farm in the middle of the Saudi Arabian desert?

A $600 OIA request could be frivolous or it could be the best $600 taxpayers ever spent. Exposing just one botched public project or dodgy “partnership” deal can lead to millions of dollars in savings, stopping good money being thrown after bad. Only a few requests will have that payback. But every OIA request that gets withdrawn because the submitter could not afford the government charge has the potential to expose vital information that we never get to see.

Timeliness in the modern news cycle is almost as important as getting the information in the first place. The Reserve Bank policy gives huge scope for delay as requests to refine, quotes for each refined request and decisions on whether to charge or not are pondered over. Everyone is aware of the increasing pressure on journalists’ time these days. What used to be a simple OIA request could be converted into protracted haggling over scope and cost. In the middle of an election campaign that sort of added delay could be crucial.

As with any user charge the impact will not be the same for all. When even large media organisations are concerned about affordability we can be sure that independent journalists, volunteer protest groups, academics and individual citizens are going to struggle even more. Corporate funded lobby groups on the other hand will gain yet another relative advantage on the non-profit sector.

There is a lack of transparency and consistency across the public sector. If OIA charges are now to be made then there should be clear rules on how much and under what circumstances they will be made. The temptation to “think of a number and double it” when faced with a complex and potentially embarrassing request will be greatly reduced.

Policing and reforming the OIA

Of course the former Chief of the Ombudsman’s Office, Beverley Wakem has now retired, and her replacement is promising a revitalised watchdog. Yet so far his statements on charges for OIA requests will lead many to conclude that he could be in a similar mould to his much-criticised predecessor. In today’s feature on Judge Peter Boshier by Marty Sharpe, the new Chief sides with the Reserve Bank over charging for access to information – see: New chief ombudsman promises to be a fearless operator

Boshier is quoted as saying: “I think the Reserve Bank’s response is actually very fair. When I looked at it I couldn’t fault it. As a statement of principle it was perfectly fair and it’s one to which I subscribe”. You can also listen to Lynn Freeman 25-minute interview with the new Chief on RNZ: New Chief Ombudsman Peter Boshier

But perhaps the problem lies with the Act itself. This week law professor Andrew Geddis called for a review of the legislation: “It could well do with a doctor’s check-up, if you’re talking about health, because I do think it needs a pretty thorough review … a review with the aim of making changes” – see Eileen Goodwin’s OIA request charges worrying sign.

And of course it is not only the Official Information Act that is relevant, but also the Local Government Official Information and Meetings Act, which relates to local government authorities. In this regard, Chris Morris reports that “The Dunedin City Council has no plans to follow the Reserve Bank’s lead and start routinely charging media organisations for official information requests, a senior manager says” – see: Information policy for review.

Finally, inspired by the Reserve Bank’s apparent monetising zeal, The Spinoff have released their Official Information Rate Card 2016, v1.0 – see: Toby Manhire’s The Spinofficial Information Act. At one end of the charging scale, the Spinoff will charge a fee of “1 x packet Squiggle Top biscuits” for the acknowledgement of a pitch from a freelance contributor. The heftiest charges are reserved for “Responding to inquires from public relations practitioners who express an interest in “reaching out”’, topped only by $1200 per quarter hour for “Responding to inquiry from government body for clarification of request under the Official Information Act.”

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Barry Coates: Research paper: The Economics of the TPPA

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Submission: Barry Coates.

The fifth in a series of expert peer reviewed papers on the implications of the Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement (TPPA) for New Zealand was posted on the TPP Legal website today.

The paper examines the key economic issues that likely to be impacted by the TPPA – the predicted economic benefits of the TPPA for the New Zealand economy, the implications for agricultural trade, the impact on value chains for New Zealand exporters, the potential for regulatory ‘chill’ and the degree to which it fulfils the aim of being a ‘21st Century agreement’.

[caption id="attachment_8629" align="alignleft" width="232"]Barry Coates, researcher and former Executive Director of Oxfam New Zealand. Barry Coates, researcher and former Executive Director of Oxfam New Zealand.[/caption]

The paper was co-authored by Tim Hazledine, Professor of Economics at the University of Auckland Business; Rod Oram, business journalist and author; Geoff Bertram, Senior Associate at the Institute for Policy and Governance at Victoria University; and Barry Coates, researcher and former Executive Director of Oxfam New Zealand. The peer reviewer was John Quiggin, an Australian Laureate Fellow in Economics at the University of Queensland.

“It is striking how little the TPPA will deliver. Without the TPPA, our GDP will grow by 47% by 2030 at current growth rates. The TPPA would add only 0.9%”, says Barry Coates, who co-authored the section on modelling with Tim Hazledine.

“Even that small benefit is a gross exaggeration. The modelling makes unfounded assumptions, and the real benefits will be far smaller. If the full costs were included, it is doubtful that there would be any net economic benefit to the New Zealand economy.”

The main beneficiaries of tariff reductions from TPPA will be agricultural exporters, but modest tariff reductions of 1.3% on average by 2030 will be dwarfed by the ongoing volatility in commodity prices and exchange rates. The TPPA is not a gold standard agreement. “There remain extensive trade barriers to New Zealand agricultural exporters into the Japanese, Canadian and US food markets, and these are now locked in under the TPPA” explains Barry Coates who authored the section on agricultural trade.

“‘The TPPA has also failed to tackle agricultural subsidies that are a major trade distortion. The TPPA has undermined negotiations in the World Trade Organisation, the only viable forum for removing these trade distorting subsidies.”

“The investor-state dispute provisions, combined with restrictions on state-owned enterprises, will deter future New Zealand governments from a whole raft of regulatory and industrial policies that would be in the public interest, for fear of litigation by corporate interests whose profits are threatened” says Geoff Bertram, who authored the section on regulatory chill.

“The essence of the chilling process is the threat, not necessarily the actuality, of repercussions.  The TPPA’s last-minute exclusion of big tobacco from the dispute process has only grazed the tip of a very large iceberg.”

“The TPPA will likely reinforce our position as a commodity producer and hinder our progress up the value chain where greater economic prosperity lies,” says Rod Oram, who authored the sections on value chains and the 21st Century agreement.

“Moreover, the TPPA reads very much like a charter for incumbent businesses, with US companies to the fore, that are attempting to hold back the tides of economic change the world needs.”

The series of expert peer-reviewed papers is supported by a grant from the Law Foundation. Previous papers have examined the Implications for Regulatory Sovereignty (Jane Kelsey) and Investment (Amokura Kawharu), te Tiriti (Carwyn Jones et al), and Environment (Simon Terry). Research on the implications of the TPPA for local government will be released shortly.

Notes: The research report is on the TPP Legal website at: https://tpplegal.files.wordpress.com/2015/12/ep5-economics.pdf

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BNZ Economist Tony Alexander’s Weekly Economic Overview January 21 2016

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Economic Analysis by Tony Alexander.

Thursday January 21st 2016

[caption id="attachment_3709" align="alignleft" width="150"]Tony Alexander, BNZ economist. Tony Alexander, BNZ economist.[/caption] Welcome to the first Weekly Overview for 2016. The year has started fairly dismally for sharemarket investors and businesses exposed to minerals commodity prices. There has been record early-year weakness in some share indexes, and oil prices are almost in freefall as supply booms, dragging down other energy-related prices by association. But does this mean we should adopt a weak outlook for the NZ economy this year? Our central message last year was that in spite of offshore worries our economy’s growth rate would be held up by many specific factors and that message remains unchanged. The construction sector is booming along with tourism and education exports. Net migration inflows are at record levels, most non-dairy commodity exports are doing well, and borrowing costs keep falling. In fact although we still think the Reserve Bank wants to and will keep the cash rate at 2.5%, the risk that they cut one more time has increased partly because of weakness offshore, but mainly because NZ inflation yet again has come in below expectations to sit at only 0.1% for calendar 2015. That is too low although many one-off factors such as falling oil prices help explain a lot of the decline. On the housing front Auckland has paused for now though the fundamental shortage of property continues to get worse. Investors are targeting the regions and that process is likely to continue most of this year, bringing a risk that the Reserve Bank imposes new restrictions outside of Auckland such as a 30% deposit requirement for investment purchases – especially if borrowing costs keep falling. Regarding the exchange rate, the NZD has held up very well recently in the face of major worries offshore. Perhaps this backs up our view that with our growth outlook better than many other economies and the long-term food demand story in operation, while the NZD is likely to head to US 60 cents this year it may not stay there long.

(For the full analysis, Download document pdf 268kb or continue reading below.)

A Wobbly Start To The Year – But Not Here Investors in shares and businesses exposed to mineral commodity prices have started the year on a bad note with some major price declines – record New Year falls in share prices in fact. The MSCI measure of global equities is almost officially into a 20% decline bear market from the peak last May and last night the Dow Jones shed another 1.3% to be down 9.5% since December 31 and 14% from the May peak. The rout has been caused partly by worries about the Chinese economy, the lack of success of the authorities there in supporting growth, and recent ham-fisted efforts to stem the correction in Chinese share prices from unrealistically high levels. China’s economy is transitioning away from dependence upon exports, manufacturing, and fixed asset investment toward private consumption. However while the former phase is underway the latter remains elusive and no-one knows when household spending will truly take over as the main growth driver. Before it does there could be long-lived ructions associated with excess capacity, high debt, bloated state-owned enterprises, and financial reregulation. Conditions in the Middle East are also worsening whether measured by the deteriorating relationship between the two major players of Iran (Shite) and Saudi Arabia (Sunni), the war waged by ISIS across much of the region, Libya’s instability, the continuing Israeli occupation and intifada, Turkey’s fight with the Kurds, or plummeting oil receipts. The European Union continues to show more signs of friction and falling apart than smoothing of disputes and cohesiveness against threats from Russia, terrorists, millions of culturally alien refugees and economic migrants etc. Borders are being reinstated, recently agreed fiscal rules are being resented and broken, the UK will vote on discontinuing EU membership, the Euro is still at risk of falling apart if Greece again needs more bailout money, and strongly regulated economies are poorly placed to adapt in a world where adaptability to change is more vital than ever before. The United States’ and Australian economies do however have some good underlying momentum with strong jobs growth in both and the Aussie services sector and tourism helping offset the worsening minerals sector downturn. But the effect and pace of US monetary policy tightening which started last month is a huge source of uncertainty facing the global economy this year, especially with regard to capital flows out of struggling and shrinking emerging economies. Yet here in New Zealand, as we emphasised last year, we have plenty of reasons for not getting pessimistic about the impact of events offshore. House construction continues to grow with annual consent numbers now at a ten year high of 26,800 compared with only 13,500 in the middle of 2011. The value of non-residential building consents now stands at a record $5.8bn compared with $3.8bn three years ago. The tourism sector is booming with visitor numbers ahead by 9% in the past year and spending ahead a massive 38%. Most non-dairy exports are doing well. El Nino is even proving less severe in its impact than feared, though it remains a risk to agricultural production levels. Business confidence has just improved according to the NZIER’s quarterly survey to a net 15% optimistic from -15% in the September quarter and an average of +6%. A net 14% of businesses plan boosting staff numbers versus an average 6%. A net 10% plan boosting investment compared with an average of 2%. There is support for growth from the slowly weakening NZ dollar, and then there are low interest rates acting as a stimulus. In fact yesterday we learnt that inflation for calendar 2015 was not the 0.3% forecast but only 0.1% courtesy of the December quarter average cost of living falling 0.5% rather than the expected 0.3%. The chances of even further monetary policy easing in NZ have risen, the currency edged lower following the data release, and low interest rates look set to be with us for many, many years. Now lets throw booming net immigration into the mix – now at a gain of almost 64,000 in the year to November – and we see good growth ahead this year for the NZ economy. In other words, our central message last year of many factors underpinning NZ growth has not changed even taking into account the sharemarket wobbles, downside risk to dairy prices, and deeper worries about China’s economy. Businesses should continue to seek out good staff. Construction, retailing, tourism and the services sectors are likely to perform well, funding costs will stay low and perhaps decline further, and the NZD will be somewhat suppressed in spite of good NZ growth by China worries and weak global commodity prices. Housing I’ll write more about housing next week. Suffice to say that the central themes discussed last year as relevant for 2016 remain unchanged – investors flocking to the regions and boosting prices there, raising the risk of the RB following behind and imposing Auckland’s 30% investment purchase deposit requirement. Interest rates staying low encouraging more people to buy. Booming net immigration raising demand. Supply everywhere but Auckland particularly constrained by shortages of builders and land, land banking, and red tape. Here is something I penned for someone over the summer break. Why have house price pessimists got it wrong for three decades?

1. Thinking buying a house is solely a financial decision of comparing rent with mortgage servicing and maintenance costs

2. Failing to realise most people are in NZ for the lifestyle not maximising disposable income and part of that is home ownership.

3. Low interest rates boosting what are considered “affordable” prices because people calculate affordability based on debt servicing costs, not debt versus income.

4. Quarter of a century of messages to people that they need to save and boost assets for their retirement.

5. Lengthening lift expectancy and need for income in retirement.

6. High profile sharemarket failures wiping out wealth of people who for one reason or another failed to diversify.

7. Strengthening average net migration inflows.

8. Internationalisation of the Auckland housing market (foreign buyers).

9. Ever rising construction costs and hassles of building.

10. Decreased availability of builders.

NZ Dollar Logic says that the NZD will decline this year and our official view is that come December we will be near US60 cents from close to 65 cents currently. The logical reasons are a narrowing interest rate differential between NZ and the US, falling commodity prices, heightened global risk, and selling of Australasian currencies as proxies for the Chinese currency. Such logic helps explain why the rate is so far down from US88 cents back in 2014. But where do the risks lie? Both ways frankly because one cannot rule out world growth falling away quite a bit this year. But in the absence of a global recession many other fundamentals are actually quite supportive of the NZD. These include the strong housing market and an economy supported by construction, tourism, services sector growth, and non-dairy exports generally. Booming net immigration is a plus as is the good state of government finances, low current account deficit, distance from deepening geo-political problems elsewhere, and low air pollution which is becoming increasingly a source of concern for growing middle classes in the emerging economies. What this adds up to is perhaps a suggestion to exporters that when the NZD does dip to 60 cents it may be a good idea to lock in a good level of cover rather than holding back in anticipation of 55 cents or 50. You will find current spot rates here. http://www.xe.com/currency/nzd-new-zealand-dollar If I Were A Borrower What Would I Do? As noted above, for six years our message on interest rates has been not to base your risk management decisions strongly upon a set of forecasts proving correct. That message then gained the addendum of noone having in fact got their interest rate forecasts correct since 2007 with predictions of rate rises proving wrong over and over again. Two recent examples are US bond yields falling rather than rising after the Fed. ceased printing money in 2014, and the 1% rise in NZ’s official cash rate last year being completely reversed. Now we have the same thing happening again. US monetary policy was tightened 0.25% a month ago and as a result bond yields have not risen but instead gone down courtesy of a long-overdue correction in global sharemarkets bringing downgrades to expectations for world growth, world inflation, and interest rates everywhere. Now lets add in for the NZ case the new falls in petrol prices and only 0.1% inflation last year and we have inflation once again coming in less than the Reserve Bank has been forecasting. What this all adds up to is this. As we noted more and more in the second half of last year and as the Finance Minister also said, the chances are that NZ interest rates are going to stay at very low levels for a number of years. We probably won’t see NZ monetary policy tightening until 2018 – if that. Will the OCR be cut soon? That is possible but we still feel the RB is reluctant to do so. Yet if they cut their inflation forecasts again they may have no choice. In that case raise your expectations of extra restraints on lending for housing purchases because lower interest rates will stimulate even further the regional markets and reignite the Auckland market. I recently was a borrower for the first time since writing this section some years ago and fixed two years at 4.35% if I recall rightly. Now the BNZ have on offer a rate of 4.49% for three years. Given a choice between that and the two year rate at 4.39% I would take the three year rate. It is a very low rate which offers cash outflow certainty for three years. For Noting Every year in the days leading up to Christmas we see the publication of figures from a company called Paymark which processes about 75% of all electronic payment transactions in New Zealand. Here is a New Year example: http://www.stuff.co.nz/business/75605714/card-spending-jumps-on-back-of-economicgrowth-paymark-says The tone of the articles is always one of the numbers being high, people doing lots of spending, craziness potentially prevailing in the malls (same type of coverage on TV), and perhaps a tone of disappointment at the focus on consumerism. The desire to give at Christmas has morphed into the need to buy. Giving seems secondary. But it pays to sit back a tad sometimes and question some of the numbers. For instance, in the Dominion Post of Boxing Day it was reported that in the weekend before Christmas spending was 3.8% higher than a year earlier. That is a nominal figure and we need to adjust it first of all for population growth of almost 2% in the past year. Then there is inflation of 0.4%. That leaves growth on last year’s spending of about 1.4% in volume terms per capita. But there is another adjustment to make. The growing use of contactless cards means we are doing more electronic spending for small items. There is no way of knowing how big this factor is but probably not all that large. Perhaps however this use of contactless cards helps explains why the average size of an electronic purchase was $55 compared with $60 last year. Nevertheless, the pre-Christmas tone of commentary is always that you and I are spending too much, we will rue our spending when the credit card bills come in, and we have lost track of the true meaning of Christmas. And then eventually we get Statistics NZ data on what was really happening and the truth is somewhat different. Spending using debit and credit cards in seasonally adjusted terms fell by 0.4% in December compared with November for core purchases. In fact during the December quarter the annualised pace of card spending slowed to 4.5% from 8% in the September quarter. We did not go ballistic with our money – though come December this year that will once again be the key media theme. You need to apply a filter to take out the media bias when reading a lot of economic commentary. That is especially the case for housing. The bias in media is toward commenting that price rises are unsustainable, and having interviewed the latest show pony for the rent-don’t-buy crowd reporters will try to scare us into holding off buying and perhaps selling to avoid the rush. Actual analysis of fundamentals usually goes out the window, and as pointed out here many times in recent years, if you have bought into the price collapse bias you have missed out on a lot of wealth gain plus perhaps securing a family home at an affordable price. There is bias also in discussions about exchange rates. We are encouraged to believe that a falling NZ dollar is good because some exporters will make more money. Actually a rising exchange rate will make most of us better off as long as the NZ dollar is not being pushed up by hikes in interest rates. Another filter which I have tried strongly to encourage you to apply these past few years is that of reasonable credibility when it comes to forecasting economic and financial variables. Since the global financial crisis our economic models no longer work because of technological changes reducing the costs of searching for alternative prices and supplies of consumer goods and services and business inputs, and because how people react to changes in key things has altered. For example the responsiveness of you and I to interest rate changes has altered. Our ability to forecast things has collapsed. In fact, here is a list of some things which people can’t forecast – meaning not just economists but everyone else.

Oil prices

Exchange rates

Gold prices

Interest rates

Iron ore prices

Share prices

Coal prices

China’s growth rate this year

Dairy product prices

Do not develop a set of business, investment, or personal consumption plans which are highly sensitive to forecasts proving wrong. In fact this is the sixth year in which we have explicitly written here that you would be foolish to develop an interest rate hedging strategy based strongly upon a particular set of interest rate forecasts coming right. Spread your risk with a range of fixed and floating rates. Want a money-making idea? Buy Nespresso capsules in Australia and sell them here. I bought two containers of Roma for AUD13.60 at Robina on the Gold Coast. That equates to NZD 14.55 using a 93.5 cent exchange rate. I then bought the same containers at the bottom of Queen Street in Auckland for $19.40. That is exactly 33% more than the Aussie cost. It would pay one to buy a few thousand containers whilst across the Tasman and flog them off back here for a simple arbitrage gain.
The Weekly Overview is written by Tony Alexander, Chief Economist at the Bank of New Zealand. The views expressed are my own and do not purport to represent the views of the BNZ. To receive the Weekly Overview each Thursday night please sign up at www.tonyalexander.co.nz To change your address or unsubscribe please click the link at the bottom of your email. Tony.alexander@bnz.co.nz
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NewsRoom Digest: Top NZ News Items for January 21 Edition, 2016

Newsroom Digest

Today’s edition of NewsRoom_Digest features 2 resourceful links of the day and the politics pulse from Thursday 21st January. It is best viewed on a desktop screen.

NEWSROOM_MONITOR

Noteworthy stories in the current news cycle include the New Zealand sharemarket falling nearly 1% this morning following the overnight rout on the global markets, the manufacturing sector being at its highest level of expansion for more than a year, and the government confirming the Trans-Pacific Partnership will be signed in Auckland on 4 February.

POLITICS PULSE

Media releases issued from Parliament by political parties today

included:

Government: Trade Minister releases TPP signing date; Benefit numbers continue steady yearly decline; Setting the record straight on TPP and Treaty

ACT Party: TPPA will limit ability to stop climate change

Labour: Aspirational nonsense – they want work; Monetary policy must get into 21st Century

New Zealand First: Opportunity To Watch Aussie Tennis Open Denied; Ramadi Still Not Liberated – US Department Of Defense; PM Gambling At Skycity; Bennett Shifts State House Headache To Struggling Regions

LINKS OF THE DAY

BENEFIT NUMBERS: The Ministry of Social Welfare released the latest benefit data today. More information at:https://www.msd.govt.nz/about-msd-and-our-work/publications-resources/statistics/benefit/index.html

RENTS IN 2015: While property prices rose around the country in 2015, particularly in Auckland, rents did not keep pace according to Trade Me Property’s latest rental figures. Read more: http://www.trademe.co.nz/property/price-index/for-rent/

And that’s our sampling of “news you can use” for Thursday 21st January.

Brought to EveningReport by Newsroom Digest.

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TPPA: US expert Lori Wallach to begin speaking tour on how US politics may kill the deal

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Source: Professor Jane Kelsey + ItsOurFuture.org.nz.

Lori Wallach, Director of US consumer group Public Citizen’s Global Trade Watch and the foremost critical commentator on TPPA in Washington DC, will be in New Zealand for a series of public meetings on the Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement (TPPA) from 26 to 31st January.

‘Lori Wallach knows more about the troubled politics of the TPPA in Washington than probably even the White House’, said Professor Jane Kelsey who will be accompanying Ms Wallach on the speaking tour.

A former trade attorney, Ms Wallach has been at the forefront of U.S. congressional trade debates for two decades as the director of Global Trade Watch, a division of the large U.S. consumer organization Public Citizen founded by Ralph Nader.

“Before the final TPPA text was released, the prospects for congressional approval of the TPPA were at best uncertain, given the extremely narrow passage this summer of Fast Track trade authority for the agreement”, Lori Wallach observed.

‘That vote was based on what was known about the pact’s terms and omissions. Once Congress and the public saw the actual text, in contrast to what the Obama administration had claimed, members of Congress that supported Fast Track have come out against the TPPA. Every US presidential candidate of either political party polling above 10 percent in any U.S. state has also opposed the deal.’

Lori Wallach predicts that the changes to the text being demanded by Republicans who normally vote for trade deals as a condition for earning their TPPA support would cost more Democratic votes, and vice versa.

The speaking tour opens with a public meeting at the Auckland Town Hall on Tuesday 26th January at 7pm, where a leaders or trade spokespersons from Labour, New Zealand First, the Greens, and the Maori Party will also speak. The Town Hall meeting will be broadcast through live feed.

Ms Wallach and Professor Kelsey will then be speaking in Wellington on 27th, Christchurch on 28th and Dunedin on 29th.

A briefing for the media will be held in the Green Party office in Bowen House at 1pm on Wednesday 27th January. Ms Wallach will also be available for media interviews from the morning of Tuesday 26th until Saturday 30th January.

Lori Wallach

Director, Public Citizen’s Global Trade Watch

Lori Wallach has promoted the public interest regarding globalization and international commercial agreements in every forum: Congress and foreign parliaments, the courts, government agencies, the media, and the streets. Described as “Ralph Nader with a sense of humor” in a Wall Street Journal profile and dubbed “the Trade Debate’s Guerrilla Warrior” in a National Journal profile, for 20 years Wallach has played a prominent role in the United States and internationally in the roiling debate over the terms of globalization. With a lawyer’s expertise in the terms and outcomes of trade agreements, she has testified on NAFTA, WTO, and other globalization issues before 30 U.S. congressional committees, been a trade commentator on MSNBC, CNN, ABC, Fox, CNBC, C-SPAN, Bloomberg, PBS, NPR and numerous foreign outlets, and been published and quoted in The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, The Economist, Forbes, The Washington Post, USA Today, the Financial Times, and more. As a relentless campaigner, Wallach has played an important role in creating public debate and supporting public activism about the implications of different models of globalization on jobs, livelihoods, and wages; the environment; public health and safety; and democratically accountable governance. Her most recent book is The Rise and Fall of Fast Track Trade Authority (2013). She also wrote Whose Trade Organization? A Comprehensive Guide to the WTO (2004) and has contributed to numerous anthologies. Wallach’s work in “translating” arcane trade legalese – indeed, entire trade agreements – into relevant, accessible prose and connecting people’s lived experiences with pacts’ legal requirements, has helped empower more diverse participation in trade and globalization discussions. In 1993, Wallach was a founder of the Citizens Trade Campaign, a U.S. national coalition of consumer, labor, environmental, family farm, religious, and civil rights groups representing over 11 million Americans, and serves on its board. Wallach, a graduate of Wellesley College and Harvard Law School, previously worked on Capitol Hill, on electoral campaigns, and in television news.

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Jane Kelsey: Expert paper on TPPA & Treaty of Waitangi: government fails to meet obligations to Maori

Source: Professor Jane Kelsey.

The third in a series of expert peer reviewed papers on the implications of the Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement for Aotearoa New Zealand was posted on the tpplegal website today.[1]

The paper was co-authored by Carwyn Jones, a senior lecturer in law from Victoria University, and Andrew Erueti, Associate Professor Claire Charters and Professor Jane Kelsey from the University of Auckland law faculty. The peer reviewer was lawyer Moana Jackson from Ngati Porou and Ngati Kahungunu.

‘Maori have long-standing concerns about law and policy relating to issues such as traditional knowledge, biodiversity and environmental management’, says Carwyn Jones, who wrote that section of the paper. ‘The TPPA will hamper the ability of future governments to develop Treaty of Waitangi-consistent law and policy in these areas.’

 ‘It is extremely disappointing that the Government would enter into such an agreement without securing effective protection for Maori, which the “Treaty of Waitangi Exception” fails to do.’

‘All New Zealanders ought to be concerned that the TPPA is moving us further and further away from effective recognition of rights guaranteed under the Treaty of Waitangi, putting another obstacle in the way of reconciliation and the resolution of grievances.’

According to University of Auckland law lecturer, Andrew Erueti, recent international human rights developments emphasize the critical importance of states engaging with indigenous communities on any issue that might impact on those communities and resources.

‘The UN Declaration on the Rights of indigenous peoples requires that there be meaningful engagement and where it might be significantly impacted by any proposal, their free, prior and informed agreement.’

‘At the very least, in relation to the TPPA, the government needed to fully engage with Maori and ensure that their views were incorporated into any decision making. That has not happened’, he said.

‘The government appears to believe all it needs to do is insert an inadequate Treaty of Waitangi Exception and that absolves it of having to meet its Treaty obligations. The Crown’s approach is a breach of the Treaty in itself’, according to Professor Jane Kelsey, who is the expert witness for the claimants in the Waitangi Tribunal claim due to be heard under urgency in mid-March, and wrote the legal analysis of the exception for the paper.

The series of expert peer-reviewed papers is supported by a grant from the Law Foundation. Previous papers have examined the Implications for Regulatory Sovereignty (Jane Kelsey) and Investment (Amokura Kawharu), with papers on the Economics of the TPPA and the Environment to be released shortly.

[1] https://tpplegal.files.wordpress.com/2015/12/ep3-tiriti-paper.pdf

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Multimedia: Across The Ditch – UK Immigration Rule Changes + Flag Ref + Glenn Frey

Across the Ditch: Peter Godfrey of Australia’s radio FiveAA.com.au and EveningReport.nz’s Selwyn Manning deliver their weekly Across the Ditch bulletin. This week they discuss how concerns have arisen in New Zealand over the UK changing its immigration rules for non-EU migrants, requiring individuals to now earn more than 35,000 Pounds per annum. There are concerns that nurses and teachers working in the UK will fall below the income cap and may need to return to New Zealand. Also discussed, New Zealand gets to decide on the preferred flag on March 3, the choice is between the current New Zealand Flag and the alternative Blue-White and Black flag that was the popular choice in the preliminary vote in late 2015. The two flags will both fly on the Auckland Harbour Bridge from Friday January 22. And Peter and Selwyn wrap up this week’s bulletin with a tribute to Glenn Frey of the Eagles, who passed away this week aged 67 years. Across the Ditch broadcasts live on Australia’s radio FiveAA.com.au and was recorded live on 21/01/16 and can be accessed on demand on EveningReport.nz, LiveNews.co.nz and Foreign Affairs.co.nz.]]>

NewsRoom Digest: Top NZ News Items for January 20 Edition, 2016

Newsroom Digest

Today’s edition of NewsRoom_Digest features 8 resourceful links of the day and the politics pulse from Wednesday 20th January. It is best viewed on a desktop screen.

NEWSROOM_MONITOR

Noteworthy stories in the current news cycle include inflation falling to its lowest level in nearly 16 years, house prices in the regions picking up pace with record median figures, and Singapore Airlines announcing a new service that will operate between Wellington and Singapore – via Canberra – four times a week.

POLITICS PULSE

Media releases issued from Parliament by political parties today 

included:

Government: New Wellington to Singapore service welcomed; Flag choices to fly on Auckland Harbour Bridge; Low inflation provides opportunity to tackle big economic problems; Drought in South Island enters second year; Prime Minister’s Youth Programme recognises inspirational young people

Greens: Auckland bus and train fares should fall, not rise; South Island drought a sign of the growing challenge for farmers

Labour: Regional neglect sees 60 jobs go in Nelson; Dairy prices fall part of a bad start to the year; Free education a joke as parents prop up schools

New Zealand First: Are Global Dairy Trade Blues Hitting The Cities?; Meat Works Jobs For Foreign Holiday Workers Not On; Key To Fly ‘His’ Flag On Auckland Harbour Bridge?; PM Wages War On Public Opinion Over Flag; Keep Fishing Jobs In New Zealand

NZ National Party:Local MPs Welcome Singapore Airlines To Wellington

LINKS OF THE DAY

APRICOT 2016: Asia Pacific Regional Internet Conference on Operating Technologies (APRICOT)– will take place in Auckland from 15-26 February 2016. More information at: https://2016.apricot.net/

CPI INCREASES: The consumers price index (CPI) increased 0.1 percent in the year to the December 2015 quarter, following a 0.4 percent increase in the year to the September 2015 quarter, according to Statistics New Zealand. More details at: http://bit.ly/1OEwRkS

HOUSE PRICES: Real Estate Institute data shows a national median house price of $465,000 in December, up more than 3% or $15,000 on the year earlier. When compared to November, the price jumped just over 1%. Read more:https://reinz.co.nz/Media/Default/Statistic%20Documents/Press%20Releases/2015%20December/REINZ%20Residential%20Press%20Release%20December%202015.pdf

IMPORTED CAR SALES: New and used imported cars were sold at a record rate of 137 an hour last year according to the Motor Trade Association. Full table available here:http://www.mta.org.nz/f4028,136956/MTA_New_and_Used_Imported_Car_Sales_Jan_2016_TABLE.pdf

OECD ON CLIMATE CHANGE: An Organisation of Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) report released today, ‘ Mitigating Droughts and Floods in Agriculture highlights that climate change will expose farmers to more frequent droughts like the one being experienced in the South Island. Click here for OECD report:http://www.keepeek.com/Digital-Asset-Management/oecd/agriculture-and-food/mitigating-droughts-and-floods-in-agriculture_9789264246744-en#page1

PM’S YOUTH PROGRAMME: Around 100 young people who have overcome significant challenges have been selected for the Prime Minister’s Youth Programme (PMYP) and are participating in the programme this week. More information about the Prime Minister’s Youth Programme is available at http://www.myd.govt.nz/young-people/prime-ministers-youth-programme.html

TERROR ATTACK: The New Zealand Horizon Research poll of 2044 adults, conducted in December after November’s terrorist attacks in Paris, has a maximum margin of error of 2.2%.Click here for more:http://www.horizonpoll.co.nz/page/427/terrorist-at

VACANCIES RISE: The number of job vacancies rose by 1.4 per cent in December, with a 6.8 per cent rise over the year, according to the latest Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment (MBIE) Jobs Online report. The report can be viewed at: http://www.mbie.govt.nz/info-services/employment-skills/labour-market-reports/jobs-online 

And that’s our sampling of “news you can use” for Wednesday 20th January.

Brought to EveningReport by Newsroom Digest.

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Bowie reflections part 2: rocking revolutions?

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Feature by Carolyn Skelton. In retrospect, as I stated in part 1, Bowie both was part of, and was critical of the highly visual, performance-focused video and digital culture, that came with the intensification of consumerism in the 1980s and 1990s. In the late 1950s and 1960s, masculine-dominated rock music promised rebellion, and possibly revolution for ordinary working people. This gave way to the folk influenced, anti-materialistic, no-frills-style counter-cultural music, often highly critical of the social and political status quo. David Bowie provided a further counter-point to this with his androgynous performances, in tune with the rise of the gay and women’s liberation movements. https://youtu.be/4B5zmDz4vR4 But since the 1960s, in spite of all this rebellious pop culture and rock music, income and wealth inequalities have grown and there seems to be a backlash against social and political gains for women (see an Amnesty International NZ report on Evening Report  ) Meanwhile the future looks daunting for large numbers of young people; ideals of collaborative, egalitarian approaches to music seem highly marginalised by the corporate music industry; and popular culture now seems to have a questionable, possibly ineffectual role in any social revolution. A look back at the direction of David Bowie’s career highlights some of the inter-related political, cultural, social, media and technological changes from the 1960s to the present day. The early 1970s, when Bowie was performing the bisexual rockstar Ziggy Stardust (1973), was the time when gay liberation was gaining some traction, albeit from the margins of society. The Kinks released their song Lola about a romance between young guy and a “transgender woman” in 1970; Joan Baez outed herself as bisexual in 1972;and Bowie did so in 1976, only to retract that in 1983 and claim he had always been a closet heterosexual. It was seen as a major breakthrough to the mainstream when the Tom Robinson Band performed “Glad to be Gay” (released on vinyl 1978) on TV. This video of a Tom Robinson Band TV performance in 1977 includes “Glad to Be Gay”. https://youtu.be/kVIcn4BvQ84 In the early 80s, around the time when Bowie was successfully going mainstream, Boy George was out and very popular, while an increasing number of mainstream music artists were known to be gay or bisexual: Holly Johnson of Frankie Goes to Hollywood,  and Marc Almond were known to be gay; Morrissey was ambiguously “asexual” (later he calls himself “humansexual”); and rumours abounded about George Michael’s (then) closeted homosexuality. In the late 70s and early 80s in London, many of us aligned with the Women’s Liberation Movement were very critical of the masculine dominance of the music industry. While we tended to like Bowie’s androgynous style, some of us were also concerned that the music industry, including queer pop/rock, tended to be dominated by men. A vibrant alternative women’s music scene was embedded in the London (and UK) Women’s Liberation Movement, which was in turn, embedded in wider leftwing and alternative networks. This provided entertainment for activists, as well as being performed at or after political events. More importantly this music contributed to the social bonding, nurturing and maintenance of activist communities. Nevertheless, this music was also influenced by developments in the mainstream music industry. Many UK feminists and queer women were into the music of K D Lang, Dusty Springfield, Joan Armatrading, and the Eurythmics. Songs like “Gloria Gaynor’s “I will survive” and Sister Sledge’s “We Are Family” were popular at women’s discos, inspiring a lot of exuberant dancing. With the on-going changes in pop and rock music trends, some Bowie, punk and the new romantics’ songs, were enjoyed by many in the Women’s Liberation Movement, but at times seemed to be part of a parallel universe. Annie Lennox’s androgyny in “Love is a Stranger” had particular resonance with some women I knew. https://youtu.be/vyqww0RScMs In this Lennox looks to be strongly influenced by Bowie style androgyny of the 1970s – a woman performing a male performing in a feminised style. This seems to have been fairly prevalent at the time. However, it looks like it was Tina Turner and an Ikete that taught Jagger some of his strut and vamp moves. https://youtu.be/1eedJBiFyhk Feminist music of the 70s and 80s in the UK was influenced by the masculine and corporate dominated music industry, even while trying to provide a more critical, resistant, collaborative, inclusive and socialist form of creativity. Part 3 will further consider the role of music in political activism and social critique: lessons for today from recent history? Featured image from http://www.iwanttobeanalt.com/]]>

Bowie reflections part 1: riding the tsunami

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Feature by Carolyn Skelton. I was saddened to read of the (to me) unexpected death of David Bowie. A decent, humane man, he was talented and innovative. His songs had been part of the soundtrack to my life for a few decades – taken a little too young. Bowie has a substantial and loyal fan following. And the death of those familiar to us, can remind us of our mortality. Nevertheless, I was surprised by the extent of the reported outpouring of grief by a seemingly large section of the public. Was this partly due to the amplifying effect of social media? Bowie wasn’t the most radical, nor the youngest, to go too soon: Joplin and Hendrix died closer to the height of their most radical and productive years. The fatal shooting of John Lennon was extremely shocking. Immediately after his death, I spent a few days listening in stunned disbelief to Lennon’s song catalogue being played endlessly on the radio. https://youtu.be/njG7p6CSbCU Freddie Mercury’s death was extremely upsetting. He was one of the publicly known casualties in the earlier days of AIDs, when victims were subjected to unbearable prejudices. Mercury also made something of an artwork from his dying with his “These are the Days of our Lives”: https://youtu.be/oB4K0scMysc already wasted and weakened, celebrating life’s good times, wanting to experience it all again one last time, as he gently rails against the dying of the light. Bowie’s long career, and his self-reflections, provide some insights into changes over recent decades. He benefitted from the shift to music videos and digital media, and the related intensification of consumer culture. I am one of those who Gordon Campbell referred to as preferring some kind of “authenticity” in art and popular culture; for me in the form of “social realism” and direct critique of society and politics: for instance as in the content of songs by Dylan, John Lennon, and Billy Bragg; and in the raspy raw, and soulful voices of Janis Joplin, Nina Simone, and Tina Turner. In contrast, Bowie’s Ziggy Stardust (1972) and Aladdin Sane (1973) performances, seemed to me to be a bit of a diversion from more directly political and social “realist” music that had been strong in the late 1960s. Bowie sought after and embraced stardom. He also critiqued some of its downsides, at the same times as maintaining his primary focus was on individual desires and frustrations. Even while recognising its dangers, Bowie still rode the 1980s tsunami of appearance and performance-focused consumerism. This is well explained by, Alex Needham, in his analysis of Bowie’s time in the US in the early 1970s. He was an alien Englishman seeking US-style pop culture fame. At the same time, he recognised his consumer excesses (especially consumption of drugs) was probably killing him. In 1974, looking wasted and painfully thin, he performed “Young Americans” for TV. In this Bowie delivers a direct and angry attack on youth-oriented US consumer culture, while still being caught in its allure. https://youtu.be/ydLcs4VrjZQ After watching the BBC’s documentary, David Bowie: Five years: the making of an icon, which showed on prime last week, I hypothesised that he had been a bit before his time with his very visually-focused performances. Trailer for the programme: https://youtu.be/l6nsMyj8LI4 Such qualities are part of what Gordon Campbell refers to as Bowie being “our first consciously post-modern rock star.” In the 1960s Bowie says he was told he was too avant garde to be successful. But, in the early 80s, with the rise of music videos and MTV, he came into his own. He went mainstream, having forged a style that others, such as Madonna, learned from. They were provided with a media platform where visual and performance qualities were as important, if not more important, than content, sound, lyrics and voice; and which were a major vehicle for selling an increasingly escalating consumerist lifestyle. It also delivered Bowie to a whole new generation of fans, no doubt expanding his age-diverse fan base. Many of those grieving on social media have pointed to Bowie providing support and confidence to alienated and queer people. I can understand how that would be true for a number of people. But, over the decades, Bowie was as much part of a developing trend with his androgyny, as being the only, or most out-there LGBT music star. There were others for people to gain such solace from. More on this in part 2. Feature image from nosetouchpress]]>

Million Dollar Prize For Black Hole Breakthrough

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NewsroomPlus.com The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences has decided to award The Crafoord Prize in Astronomy 2016 to Roy Kerr, University of Canterbury, Christchurch, New Zealand, and Roger Blandford, Stanford University, CA, USA, “for fundamental work concerning rotating black holes and their astrophysical consequences”. Black holes are the origin of the universe’s most powerful light, with rays that can stretch many thousands of light years out into space. Roy Kerr created one of the most important tools in modern astrophysics and cosmology early in his career, when he discovered a mathematical description of rotating black holes before anyone had even seen them. Black holes are the strangest result of the general theory of relativity. When Albert Einstein finally presented his theory in November 1915, he described gravity as a geometric property of space and time, spacetime. All massive space objects bend spacetime; they create a pit into which smaller objects can fall. The greater the mass, the deeper the pit. The mass of a black hole is so great that nothing that ends up in there can escape, not even light. It took until 1963 for someone to solve Einstein’s equations for black holes that could possibly be found in the universe – rotating black holes – and it was mathematician Roy Kerr who succeeded. At about the same time, astronomers discovered galaxies that emitted light that was so strong it outshone several hundred ordinary galaxies. They were named quasars. Nothing other than a black hole could give the quasars their luminosity. So how is the strong light of rotating black holes created? This question was answered by Roger Blandford in 1977. Ever since, he has refined and made more realistic models of how gas surrounding a black hole flows towards it, is heated up and transforms some of its gravitational energy to radiation. FACT FILE

  • Roy Kerr, born 1934 in Kurow, New Zealand. PhD 1959 at University of Cambridge, Great Britain. Emeritus Professor at University of Canterbury.
  • Roger Blandford, born 1949 in Grantham, Great Britain. PhD 1974 at University of Cambridge, Great Brittan. Luke Blossom Professor in the School of Humanities and Sciences, Stanford University, CA, USA.
  • The Crafoord Prize in Astronomy prize amount of 6 million Swedish krona (a little over one million New Zealand dollars )is shared equally between the Laureates. The Crafoord Prize award ceremony is to be held at the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences on 26 May 2016, in the presence of Their Majesties the King and Queen of Sweden.
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NewsRoom_Digest for 14 January 2016

NewsroomPlus.com image Today’s edition of NewsRoom_Digest features 3 resourceful links of the day and the politics pulse from Thursday 14th January. It is best viewed on a desktop screen. NEWSROOM_MONITOR  Noteworthy stories in the current news cycle include an Iwi working group saying Maori are being prevented from accessing waterways on land they own, the New Zealand sharemarket having another bout of weakness, and NZ First saying that a 2025 smoke-free New Zealand is unrealistic unless recommendations by the Maori Affairs select committee are implemented. POLITICS PULSE Media releases issued from Parliament by political parties today  included: Greens: Government must prioritise equal pay for women; Cheap oil gives the opportunity to start exiting from it; OIA charging a worrying step New Zealand First: Obama Gets Lukewarm TPP Response But NZ To Sign Regardless; Failure To Deliver Committee Recommendations Hurting Māori; Crude Oil At 2004 Prices, But Petrol Is 62% More Expensive LINKS OF THE DAY NZ UNIVERSITIES RANK IN TOP 112: The Times Higher Education’s list of the most international universities released today ranks seven New Zealand universities within the top 112 in the world. The “Times Higher Education World University Rankings 2015-16” results and analysis are at https://www.timeshighereducation.com/world-university-rankings/worlds-most-international-universities-2016 PROPERTY SALES BOOM: The New Zealand property for sale market settled in December, ending 2015 with a whimper rather than the roar witnessed throughout the year. Read more: http://www.trademe.co.nz/property/price-index/for-sale/december-2015/ RETAIL CARD SPENDING INCREASES: Retail spending using electronic cards reached $6.0 billion in December 2015, up $304 million (5.3 percent) from December 2014, Statistics New Zealand said today. Click here for more:http://bit.ly/230pRs1 And that’s our sampling of “news you can use” for Thursday 14th January. –]]>

Eating Disorders: Do these jeans make me look P.H.A.T ?

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NewsroomPlus.com – OpEd by Rupeni Vatubuli In the 21st century where “looks” are apparently everything, it’s an everyday trap to feel motivated or intimidated by the appearance of others. Society has always been influenced by media and it is from here, that under-reported issues like ‘eating disorders’ grow. New terms are created to cater for the everyday expression of the human appearance. Terms such as “P.H.A.T” (Pretty Hot And Tempting) are used in music videos to express women’s appearance. Though it would be ignorant to say that media plays a huge influence on lifestyles without substantial proof , mental health has been proven to be one of the contributing factors to eating disorders. I had recently met up with a former work colleague whose health suffered due to her insecurities and later admitted that she willingly starved herself in fear of getting fat. That’s scenario that has been played out in movie scripts, where the popular, yet rather obnoxious villain often suffers a mental breakdown in the end and reveals that the only way to keep “Victoria’s Secret” was to forcefully make yourself vomit the food you had earlier consumed! This probably says two things: I may have horrible taste in movies and most men including myself, lack the knowledge of understanding the importance of appearance to women. In New Zealand 1.7 per cent population suffer from an eating disorder which means approximately 68,000 New Zealanders will develop an eating disorder  sometime in their lifetime. From these statistics, females represent approximately 90 percent and males 10 percent of those who experience eating disorders. With a high mortality rate compared to bulimia, anorexia claims one in a 100 deaths each year regardless of patients seeking treatment. Up to 20 per cent die over a 20 year period as a result of complications brought on by the illness and suicide. There are four types of eating disorders that are most often heard about:

  • Anorexia: is when a person believes they are fat, even when they are not and may have lost a lot of weight
  • Bulimia: Where a person eats very large amounts of food because they are starving.  Then they worry about gaining weight so they make themselves vomit, takes laxatives or exercises to extremes.
  • Binge eating disorder: Where a person eats an excessive amount of food within a short period of time (two hours) and feels a loss of control while eating.
  • Other eating disorders: Where a person has signs of either bulimia or anorexia but not enough signs to definitely state they have these conditions. This category is often called Eating Disorder not Otherwise Specified (EDNOS) by doctors, and usually occurs at an early age. It is very common and doctors treat is as seriously as the other categories of eating disorder.

What causes eating disorders?

There is no clear cause of an eating disorder. This makes it more upsetting for the person, family and friends, as they all try to think about what could have started it and what to do about it, but that is not possible. Nevertheless, the following types of people do tend to have an increased risk of developing an eating disorder:
  • those whose career or sport requires them to be thin – dancers, gymnasts, models, jockeys or body builders
  • those who are overweight
  • those with a number of different problems including childhood sexual abuse or neglect, drug or alcohol problems and unstable relationships
  • people with diabetes
  • those with problems of self-esteem and identity
  • young people living within families that make them feel that they are only worthwhile when they are very good at study or sport, very well behaved, or thin and attractive and who feel worthless if they do not match up to the family expectations.
  • people who are depressed; feeling sad or irritable much of the time, avoiding doing things with friends.
  • people with high personal expectations – always striving to be perfect in everything.
Cultural factors should not be ignored when we think about what can cause eating disorders in vulnerable people. We are constantly bombarded with the message that women need to be thin to be considered beautiful, and men need to muscular and lean. Since a thin shape is normal and healthy for only a very few women, others must either struggle with feelings of not being good, perfect or self-controlled enough or begin to diet. Men tend to over-exercise. For people at risk of an eating disorder a number of things could set them off, such as:
  • a life crisis or the death of a loved  one
  • family changes
  • moving home or school
  • bullying
  • a relationship break-up
  • a change of job
  • school problems
  • a personal failure.

Signs to look for (symptoms)

There are many symptoms of an eating disorder. These may not relate to everybody, and sometimes it can be difficult to notice any signs at all. Signs of an eating disorder could include:
  • extreme concern about being too fat and thinking about food and dieting all the time
  • increasing isolation from others
  • secret eating and purging (vomiting or taking laxatives)
  • food disappearing from the house, especially high calorie foods
  • spending long periods in the toilet especially immediately after meals, sometimes with the tap running for long periods
  • shoplifting food
  • strenuous exercise routine, even exercising when injured or unwell
  • severe weight changes
  • sudden mood changes, irritability, depression, sadness, anger, difficulty in expressing feelings
  • poor concentration and being unusually tired
  • constant pursuit of thinness.
Professor Ted Ruffman, from Otago’s Department of Psychology, says “anti-fat prejudice is associated with social isolation, depression, psychiatric symptoms, low self-esteem and poor body image”. Previous research had indicated anti-fat prejudice could be seen in pre-school children aged slightly more than three-and-a-half years old and was well-established in five- to ten- year-olds. But the research by Professor Ruffman and his team suggests these attitudes have an even earlier genesis. Just when you think you have read all facts of this, new findings from the University of Otago suggest older toddlers—those aged around 32 months old—are picking up on the anti-fat attitudes of their mothers. The study, involving researchers from New Zealand, Australia, and the US, comes on the back of studies showing that obesity prejudice and discrimination are on the rise. The latest survey by Universal McCann showed that New Zealand women are less comfortable with their appearance than those in Malaysia, Thailand and Singapore. Only 48 per cent of the 900 New Zealand women questioned were happy with their appearance ,compared with 60 per cent of Malaysian women and 58 per cent of Thai women. Who else better to explain eating disorders than Emma Wilson who was 16 years old when she suffered anorexia. It was here that researchers  believed anorexia nervosa begins – not as a media-fuelled unquenchable desire to be skinny, but rather a brain or gene abnormality. What ever reason lies behind Eating disorders, a good realisation to hold is this: “It’s Not As Simple As That”. –]]>

Collection Of Poetic Biographies Wins The Biggs Family Prize

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NewsroomPlus.com A collection of five poetic biographies of famous and lesser-known historical New Zealand women has been awarded the 2015 Biggs Family Prize for Poetry. image012 Written by Nina Powles as part of her 2015 Master of Arts (MA) at Victoria University of Wellington’s International Institute of Modern Letters (IIML), the book-length folio, titled Luminescent, has been described by Wellington poet Jenny Bornholdt as “engaging and colourful and alive to all kinds of possibilities”. Although she started writing poems less than two years ago, Nina is already the author of a chapbook, Girls of the Drift, published by Seraph Press in 2014, from which a poem was selected for the 2014 edition of Best New Zealand Poems. Nina, who went straight onto the MA after completing an honours degree in English Literature and Chinese at Victoria, says the opportunity to study at Master’s level has been a significant boost for her writing. “The MA programme gave me the tools and the confidence to call myself a ‘writer’ for the first time. More importantly, it gave me a community. “It’s been an unbelievable privilege to take part in the masterclasses, the readings and above all, the workshops with my generous, talented, fiery co-writers. It’s no exaggeration to say that this year changed my life. “As a young writer just beginning my career, winning the Biggs Prize and receiving this recognition is an incredible honour. It feels surreal, and so wonderful that the prize enables a poet’s work to be recognised alongside that of prose writers. I now have the courage to start thinking about what my next book will be.” Supported by Wellingtonians Peter and Mary Biggs through the Victoria University Foundation, the $3,000 Biggs Prize is awarded annually to an outstanding poetry folio in the Master of Arts in Creative Writing programme at the IIML. Luminescent is a collection that tells the stories—or moments from the lives—of women who made a great impression on the world while they were alive, or left their impress in subtler ways. Among its subjects are Katherine Mansfield, the astronomer Beatrice Tinsley and Betty Guard, whose teenage years were spent as a young wife on a whale station. The collection also imagines the life of the little-known chorus dancer Phyllis Porter, who died in a fire at St. James Theatre in 1923. Cliff Fell, a Teaching Fellow at the IIML and co-convenor of this year’s Master’s programme, says he was impressed by Nina Powles’s engagement with language and her ability to summon up and make real imaginations of the past. “Nina’s clearly a poet who is going places. She’s at an early stage in her career but had already made her mark before starting the MA, during which part of her focus has been on how emotional weather can be conveyed in experimental poetic form.” Anna Jackson, a poet and lecturer at Victoria, has been working with Nina during 2015. “These poems are centred around moments so full, so vivid, as to seem both beyond time, but also to embody time. “Luminescent is a work that already reads like a finished collection, ambitious in scope, and very beautiful. It is the kind of work that gives rise to dreams that its readers will find haunting them, opening spaces inside them, for a long time to come.” Previous Biggs Prize recipients include acclaimed poets Louise Wallace, Amy Brown and Joan Fleming.   –]]>

2015: The year Charlie Hebdo was hailed, blasted and misunderstood

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This article was first published on Café Pacific By Benjamin Dodman in France 24 IN THE 12 months since the gruesome attacks on its Paris office, Charlie Hebdo has been praised, mourned, cursed and debated by a global panel of commentators, politicians and religious zealots – most of whom have never read it it, let alone understood it. By all accounts it has been a tumultuous year for the satirical weekly – one that began with carnage, brought the cash-strapped paper fame and scrutiny, and left its traumatised survivors holed up in a bunker with more subscribers than they ever dreamt of having. Charlie had been a household name in the French media landscape, its notoriety surpassed by that of its most illustrious cartoonists, including Jean Cabut (known as Cabu) and Georges Wolinski, two icons of French popular culture, both of whom were murdered a year ago by jihadist gunmen, along with six other staff members. And yet its actual readership, barely reaching the tens of thousands, was a tiny – and shrinking – minority in a country where few people still read the papers, least of all in print. “Je suis Charlie”, the hugely contagious and effective slogan that spread across the world within hours of the bloodbath, was at best a posthumous tribute. The truth is hardly anyone read Charlie – let alone was Charlie. No wonder some of the survivors were disgusted by the sudden, overwhelming endorsement of Charlie and what it stood for. The very same people who had always abhorred the weekly and its caustic style were suddenly claiming its mantle. Laughing at everything and everyone Throughout its existence, the impertinent weekly had made it a point of “laughing at everything and everyone”, resorting to scatology, soft porn and intentional bad taste in its often obscene drawings. It was the scion of a long and rich tradition of satirical cartoons going back to monarchical times, when grotesque depictions of Louis XVI and his unloved wife Marie-Antoinette helped undermine the prestige and dignity of French royalty. In Charlie’s case, that tradition blended in with a fierce anti-establishment stance born out of May ’68. It was this brazen irreverence that saw its predecessor, Hara-Kiri, banned in 1970 after it published a cartoon mocking France’s late World War II hero and longtime president, Charles de Gaulle. Hara-Kiri’s team soon rallied under the new banner of Charlie Hebdo – reportedly named after de Gaulle – and pursued its struggle to break down the remaining barriers of censorship in France. More recently, the weekly had struggled to stem a steady decline in readers. Perhaps its brand of provocative, no-holds-barred humour had gone out of fashion. Or maybe it was just caught up in the seemingly irreversible decline of France’s print media. Global scrutiny Just weeks before that fateful January 7, 2015, Charlie was on the verge of closing shop. The heinous murders by al Qaeda-linked gunmen were supposed to finish it off. Instead, they brought the struggling weekly unprecedented visibility, readers and cash. But the paper’s rise to global fame also brought it more scrutiny than ever before. Suddenly Charlie was on everybody’s lips. Predictably, most of its new readers recoiled in shock at the very first cartoons. Many rushed to say “je ne suis pas Charlie”. Over the past 12 months, media outlets around the world have rushed to check out Charlie’s latest cartoon at every major event. In some cases the reaction was positive, as in the aftermath of the November 13 attacks, when the front-page cartoon featured a reveller drinking champagne, with the bubbly flowing from holes in his bullet-riddled body. To many in France, the accompanying title – “They have weapons. Screw them, we have champagne!” – was a heartening celebration of the culture and joie de vivre reviled by jihadist murderers. Other drawings proved far more controversial, in one case prompting a furious complaint by Russian diplomats outraged by Charlie’s take on the terrorist attack that destroyed a Russian airliner over Egyptian soil. A spokeswoman for Russia’s foreign ministry used Facebook to ask: “Is anyone still Charlie?” ‘Six pussies in search of character’ While Charlie Hebdo was always bound to be unpalatable to conservatives, much of the recent backlash against the weekly has come from politically correct liberals, particularly in the Anglo-Saxon world. Within days of the attack, denunciations of Charlie’s “Islamophobic provocations” and “bullyingly racist agenda” featured alongside words of mourning in prominent liberal publications. The cartoonists, critics said, had been guilty of mocking Islam with relish and thereby singling out a particularly vulnerable segment of French society. When the weekly was nominated for a freedom of speech award at the PEN Literary Gala, six prominent authors boycotted the event in protest. One of them, Peter Carey, lamented “PEN’s seeming blindness to the cultural arrogance of the French nation, which does not recognise its moral obligation to a large and disempowered segment of their population.” The move prompted an unusually heated row between literati that saw author Salman Rushdie blast the dissidents as “Six pussies. Six Authors in Search of a bit of Character” (a reference to Pirandello’s play “Six Characters in Search of an Author”). “This issue has nothing to do with an oppressed and disadvantaged minority,” said Rushdie, who has spent much of his life being persecuted by religious fundamentalists. “It has everything to do with the battle against fanatical Islam, which is highly organised, well funded, and which seeks to terrify us all, Muslims as well as non Muslims, into a cowed silence,” he argued, adding that the six writers had “made themselves the fellow travellers of that project”. Others gave Charlie Hebdo a reluctant backing for the award, while lamenting that “its courageous actions are not being directed at the vested interests and powers that are the most worthy targets of satire”. It is hard to think of an allegation more grievous to the Charlie staff – and furthest from the truth. A formidable foe of the high and mighty, Charlie has always been scathing in its criticism of police brutality in the immigrant-rich banlieues and of politicians’ disregard for the poor and disenfranchised. Nobody has felt the sting of its pencil more than the far-right, anti-immigrant and frequently anti-Muslim National Front party of Marine Le Pen. ‘Islamophobia frauds’ Liberal thinkers are not entirely wrong when they disparagingly describe the Charlie Hebdo team as “ideologues”. They are indeed militant leftists and atheists. Anti-clericalism has always been at the heart of the magazine, but it has been directed far more often at France’s dominant faith, Catholicism – or, more precisely, at the Catholic clergy. Throughout its history, Charlie has been a merciless critic of bigotry, intolerance, misogyny, homophobia, corruption and sexual abuse by clergymen of all faiths. The cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed, which defied a Muslim ban on depictions of Islam’s holiest figure, account for a fraction of their blasphemous output – and yet they got all the media attention. Two days before he was murdered, Charlie Hebdo’s editor Stéphane Charbonnier, better known as “Charb”, completed a short book titled “Letter to the Islamophobia Frauds who Play into the Hands of Racists”. The text, published posthumously, is a passionate rejection of claims the weekly had become “racist” and “Islamophobic” under his stewardship, and a fierce critique of liberal “multiculturalists” whom he accuses of serving the interests of radical Islam. “The strategy of the multiculturalists disguised as anti-racists is to muddle blasphemy and Islamophobia, Islamophobia and racism,” he wrote, rejecting the notion – which he described as genuinely racist – that a critique of “religious terrorism” was necessarily an attack on a given community. “Religion is not transmitted genetically as the multiculturalists – and the far right – would have us believe,” he said, stressing that “Charlie Hebdo drawings do not have the vast majority of Muslims as their target”. Charb argued that Charlie Hebdo drawings are both “misunderstood by the ignorant” and “re-drawn by very clever people who want to mutilate their meaning”. He added: “We believe that Muslims are capable of recognising a tongue-in-cheek. By what twisted argument should Islam be less compatible with humour than other religions?” Lost in translation Charb blamed the media for purposefully seizing on inflammatory interpretations of cartoons because they made for better business. He pointed to a notorious cartoon of the Prophet Mohammed with a bomb-shaped turban as illustration of his point. “Its critics decided that it was an insult to all Muslims: to put a bomb on the Prophet’s head was to say that all believers were terrorists,” Charb said. “But there was another interpretation that did not interest the mass media (it was not scandalous and it did not sell newspapers). To show Mohammed wearing a bomb on his head could be an attack on terrorists for exploiting religion.” When Charlie Hebdo published the so-called “survivors’ issue” just days after the January 7 attack, cartoonist Renald Luzier (“Luz”) – who had survived the massacre because he was late for work – broke into tears as he sought to explain the front-cover drawing of a tearful Prophet Mohammed holding a “Je suis Charlie” sign under the heading “All is Forgiven”. “I drew my little drawing, and I looked at his face; he was crying,” Luz said. “I saw this character who had been used in spite of himself by nut jobs who set shit on fire, by terrorists. Humorless assholes: That’s what these terrorists are.” The issue reached a print run of 7.95 million copies, setting a new record for the French press. It also sparked violent protests in several Muslim countries. Other controversies soon followed, as when the paper’s new editor Laurent Sourisseau (“Riss”), who was severely wounded in the attack, drew a cartoon of Aylan, the Syrian toddler found dead on a Turkish beach last year, under a McDonald’s billboard. Few people got the acerbic critique of consumerism and of sensationalist mass media; many more saw it as a gratuitous, racist slur aimed at desperate refugees. When they weren’t misunderstanding the cartoons, Charlie’s critics were busy misattributing other people’s allegedly racist drawings – such as one Algerian paper’s depiction of African migrants drowning in the Mediterranean (which, incidentally, is a powerful denunciation of Europe’s indifference to their plight). Overall, evidence suggests Charlie Hebdo is struggling to cope with the challenge of reaching out beyond an audience of faithful readers fine-tuned to its particular brand of humour. In what was probably the most misinterpreted cartoon in the paper’s history, the late Cabu once drew a dejected Prophet with his head in his hands under the headline “Mohammed overwhelmed by fundamentalists”. The speech bubble said: “It’s tough being loved by cretins”. The word “cretins” obviously referred to the fundamentalists, but many accused Charlie Hebdo of describing all Muslims as cretins. The more readers Charlie has, the more its unique brand of humour is likely to be misread. Were he alive today, Cabu might well be joking: “It’s tough to be read by cretins”. Republished from France 24 –]]>

Jane Kelsey: Offshore confirmation: Ministers to sign TPPA in NZ on 4 February 2016

Source: Professor Jane Kelsey. 

The ministers from the twelve countries who negotiated the the Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement (TPPA) will sign it in New Zealand on 4 February, a government spokesperson from Chile has confirmed.[1]

The New Zealand government has made no formal announcement, despite reports that it would host the meeting since the APEC summit last November.

‘Consistent with the government’s obsessively secrecy throughout the TPPA process, we have to get confirmation of what is happening in our own country from offshore’, says Auckland University Professor Jane Kelsey, who has led legal action to challenge the government’s failure to release information on the TPPA.

‘Polls have shown the government doesn’t have popular support for the deal. Presumably it wants to limit the chance for New Zealanders to make their opposition heard’, Kelsey said. ‘We were reliably told by offshore sources some time ago that the meeting is in Auckland, but we expect the government to try to keep the actual venue secret until much closer to the day’.

A series of high profile public meetings has been planned for the main cities at the end of January, starting with Auckland Town Hall on the evening of 26th January, followed by Wellington, Christchurch and Dunedin.

The star attraction will be Lori Wallach, director of Washington based Public Citizen’s Global Trade Watch, the organisation founded by Ralph Nader. She last toured New Zealand when the TPPA ministerial meeting was held here in late 2010.

‘The US holds the key to the fate of the TPPA. Lori Wallach probably knows more than anyone about what is really happening in the US Congress and across the corporate lobbies and civil society groups in America. Her insights will provide a reality check in advance of the pr spin that is bound to surround the signing’, Kelsey said.

[1] http://www.bna.com/tpp-countries-sign-n57982065797/

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Bryce Edwards’ Political Update: The Sound and fury of politics in 2015

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Political Update by Dr Bryce Edwards.

[caption id="attachment_4808" align="alignleft" width="150"]Dr Bryce Edwards. Dr Bryce Edwards.[/caption]

The year in politics has seen plenty of colour and controversy, but very little substance. The verdicts and summaries of the political year suggest little of importance changed in 2015. 

“Full of sound and fury, signifying nothing” could sum up the year in New Zealand politics. Many political commentators have noted what an unusually turbulent year it has been for the politicians. But few can point to much substance in political debate or change in the fortunes of the parties. 

Tracy Watkins’ end-of-year column has a very good overall summation of the year of the majors and minors in politics – see: Politicians in search of goodwill to end the year. Watkins says “2015 has been yet another turbulent political year – think ponytail-gate, resignations, pork barrel politics, the shock Northland by-election loss, another baby formula scare, secret trips to Iraq, yet more spying allegations, the “rapists” backlash, Saudi sheep deals, a polarising flag debate, the bizarre Colin Craig train wreck, leadership surprises and an economy buffeted by plunging dairy prices and a housing crisis.  So what’s the sum of all that?  Maybe that the more things change, the more they stay the same.” 

Watkins also emphasises the sound and fury in her column with Vernon Small, Political week – A year of it:  “2015 was the year no one saw coming. It was supposed to be a breather after a tumultuous election campaign and torrid couple of months. A period of consolidation. Time for National to square aware its legacy with a predictable third term agenda, and a solid majority in the House. A chance for Labour to lick its wounds after – yet another – humiliating election result and to rebuild under – yes, yet another – new leader.  So much for the script.”

See also Stacey Kirk’s Political lessons learnt should benefit us all, right? She says it’s been “a fairly major political year. And there were some bumpy moments – boy, was there some turbulence.”

The lack of change during 2015 is also picked up on by Rodney Hide, who concludes, “Plus ca change, plus c’est la meme chose” in his end-of-year column, Things will change…but stay the same. He says “Throughout the year, we were told it was all about to change for Key and National. I might have been guilty of saying that myself.  But it never did. The great ship of National steamed on, no matter the troubled water. Even losing the true-blue seat of Northland didn’t rattle the cutlery or spill the tea.”

Audrey Young says it’s been a low-key year in politics, and explains why: “The temperature of the political year was also a result of the Opposition not yet being in top gear.  Andrew Little has been settling in his first year as Labour leader, but has had such a stabilising effect on a previously fractured party that he has to be a contender for Politician of the Year.  The Greens were necessarily distracted for much of the year with their own leadership issues. It took the first six months to elect James Shaw as male co-leader for Metiria Turei and the second six months for them to reorganise the Greens’ office to their mutual liking.  Peters’ win in Northland has meant a period of adjustment by him back to the demands of a constituency MP and less focus on point-scoring in Parliament” – see: Politician of the Year: Top performers across the spectrum.

Blogger Danyl Mclauchlan draws attention to the fact that little of substance has occurred, but says this suits a new age of media-savviness amongst politicians. In his blog post, Kathryn Ryan sums up 2015 in NZ politics, he quotes the RNZ broadcaster’s overview of recent political shenanigans: “Politically there’s a complete policy vacuum. Some of the stuff we’re going to talk about today – pony-tail pulling, Colin Craig – frankly it’s just barely worthy of the public’s time. And yet what we’re seeing is a very effective management by the incumbent government of a new media environment”.

Mclauchlan elaborates on similar themes in his post Notes on politics in 2015. He says “It wasn’t a very inspiring year” and gives brickbats to both main party leaders: “Andrew Little appears to be (another) uninspiring Labour leader”; “John Key’s role as Prime Minister seems to be mostly ceremonial.”

But his bigger point is that the decline of the media, combined with the rise of politicians chasing soft news coverage, means we are going to have serious political wrongdoing undetected, while vacuous but polished performers rise to the top. As an example, he argues “The resignation of Murray McCully over the Saudi sheep deal should have been the biggest political story of the year.”

Stable political fortunes and problems

The Government’s buoyant popularity in 2015 was an important end-of-year observation for many, and this reality is in conflict with so many politicians and commentators pronouncing National’s decline and disconnect. This is brilliantly pointed out in Liam Hehir’s column, Polls show Government not as ‘out of touch’ as claimed

Why has National remained so powerful? Duncan Garner explains it by reference to Key’s strong pragmatism: “For now at least John Key clearly wants a fourth term. And he ends this year still firmly in control of the centre and with National still polling in the high 40s. As a National MP told me this week, when others in the caucus are agitating for Key to be tougher on welfare or Maori issues, he reminds them that some of these people voted for National and deserve loyalty in return for their vote.  Key continues to straddle the centre like no other prime minister in this country’s history” – see: Forget Crusher, Paula Bennett is National’s next leader

Similarly, Phil Quin argues to an Australian audience, “voters remain consistently happy with John Key as long as he presides over a resolutely moderate, do-little, basically Labour Party agenda.  They do not think the country is going to hell in a hand-basket, and no amount of Labour insisting otherwise will change that. Such doomsaying makes Labour, not National, look ‘out of touch’.” – see: Malcolm in the middle is a strategy for success

Looking at the state of Labour this year, Vernon Small emphasises a lack of change and dynamism: “Torpor. Stasis. Treading water.  It’s the story of New Zealand politics at the moment and it ought to be keeping Labour’s strategists awake at night.  How on earth do they inject some excitement, let alone disruption, into the political discourse?” – see: NZ politics 2015; wake me up when something changes

In fact Labour, along with the rest of New Zealand’s political parties, seems immune from the rising radicalism occurring in politics around the world this year, which is well expressed this month by Stephen Mills’ in his article, Fringe politics new world order. But he warns that not all New Zealanders have been satisfied with what’s on offer in parliamentary politics in New Zealand. His research shows that 68 per cent are “generally satisfied” with the political party options, while 25 per cent – especially younger New Zealanders – “would like to see a new party or some new parties emerge before the next election”.

On retiring from the parliamentary press gallery this year, the then political editor of RNZ, Brent Edwards, penned a farewell column, What’s wrong with the way politics in practised in NZ? He explained New Zealand politics is all about being hard on people, but soft on issues. Accordingly, “In the atmosphere which exists at 1 Bowen St the political game and how it is played becomes all important.  It is exemplified in how political leaders are judged. Most leaders are not judged on the substance of what they say but how they say it.”

Similarly, see James Ritchie’s Why have politics in NZ become so timid?and Rodney Hide’s It’s polls, not policies, that count in politics. Hide says that political decision-making is guided more than ever by pragmatism rather than principles, and this is “a recipe for the status quo and stagnation.”

Two politicians who seemed to epitomise New Zealand politics in 2015 – with all its variations of pragmatism, principle and media-savviness – were Jacinda Ardern and Judith Collins. For an interesting dialogue between the two stars of 2015 see Simon Wilson’s Metro feature, Jacinda Ardern V Judith Collins

Issues of the year

For a recap of “most of the big political stories for 2015”, see Simon Wong’s 2015’s biggest political stories. These amount to: Hair pulling, the flag referendum, the Judith Collins comeback, the Serco shambles, the Christmas Island detainees, the TPP debate, and Russel Norman’s replacement by James Shaw as Greens co-leader. 

Similarly, watch Andrea Vance’s five minute TV One news item, Take a look back at the emotionally charged year in politics, which emphasises “a year of screaming u-turns”. See also Vance’s Government’s end of term report: Must do better

Patrick Gower provides his list of best and worst political moves in The Beehive’s best, worst and weirdest. This includes his award to the Government for best political move in sending training troops to Iraq – a “First-class foreign policy decision-making by the Prime Minister.” His worst political move award is shared by John Key with his “Rapists and Murderers” argument and the Labour Party with their “Chinese-sounding names” campaign: “Labour used an algorithm to launch a racist attack. This really needs no explaining. The principles were poor but the strategic execution even worse. Laughable if it wasn’t so sad.” Overall, Gower scores John Key’s year as 7.5/10 and Andrew Little’s as 7/10. 

Many commentators assert that housing was the biggest political issue of the year. This is well discussed in Sam Sachdeva’s Rising housing prices in 2015 put pressure on politicians

Politicians of the Year awards

The politician with the most awards for “politician of the year” is Winston Peters. Tracy Watkins and Vernon Small gave him the award, saying “No one is as invigorated as Peters by the prospect of utu. He took a political gamble and backed himself to win. And in the process, the by-election rejuvenated both Peters and NZ First, which has a new purpose as the voice for provincial New Zealand” – see: Political week – A year of it

And Patrick Gower says, “Winston Peters drove a bus into Northland and crashed it into John Key’s political reputation, doing some serious damage” – see: The Beehive’s best, worst and weirdest

Willie Jackson argues “Like wine, he’s getting better with age” – see: Why Winston Peters is MP of the year. See also Liam Hehir’s Winston Peters is the real Politician of the Year

But there are some reasons to doubt Peters’ total dominance of 2015. For example, Danyl Mclauchlan asks: “Can anyone name a single policy achievement of Peters this term? Or the last one? Something put into the mainstream that changed the debate or how things operate? I can’t. His team is an absolute failure, a collection of quiet losers, and he has demoted his strongest player (Martin) to the wilderness” – see his blog post, Kathryn Ryan sums up 2015 in NZ politics.

Similarly, Patrick Gower says “Marks off for Peters because he hasn’t actually done anything with the power he has achieved and probably won’t.”

Bill English was the politician with the second most nominations for politician of the year. Chris Trotter explained his decision: “the politician I have in mind is the one who labours away in the engine-room of Key’s Government. The one who keeps the wheels of the economy turning, and international investors smiling.  Solid achievements, both, but I am more disposed towards him because, unlike his boss, he has been giving long and arduous thought to the plight of the weak and unfortunate among us. More than this, he has been thinking about them in a new and intellectually challenging fashion.  His approach has been called actuarial, because his calculations are all about the risk and the cost – both individually and collectively – of not making the weak stronger and their misfortunes less determinative; of not organising the right sort of state intervention at the right time” – see: My surprise pick for politician of the year

Audrey Young was also very impressed by English and gives three reasons why he should be at the top of the list, concluding that “Bill English’s social investment project is his biggest achievement” – see: Politician of the Year: Top performers across the spectrum

Patrick Gower gives English his “Runner-up” award, saying he is “the Conrad Smith of the Government. Steady, stable, keeping formation and very rarely failing defensively” – see: The Beehive’s best, worst and weirdest

Kelvin Davis also received plaudits for his strong role in dealing with prison and detainee issues.

An interesting, and perhaps surprising, nominee is Act leader David Seymour. Many picked him for politician of the year, including Kiwiblog readers – see David Farrar’s 2015 Kiwiblog Awards Winners

But one commentator took issue with awarding Seymour this prize. According to Liam Hehir, “It’s hard to think of a better example of the disconnect that exists between New Zealand’s political commentators and the voters” – see: Winston Peters is the real Politician of the Year

Hehir’s argument is that while Seymour might have impressed pundits with his genuine achievements, “one thing David Seymour has singularly failed to achieve is improving the standing of his party with the people who really count – ordinary voters.”

There were plenty of poor performances to focus on in 2015. Patrick Gower gave his “Worst politician” award to Michael Woodhouse: “He tried to outlaw worm farming as a health and safety risk; he tried to outlaw mini putt too. This is laughing stock stuff, even the Prime Minister called it ‘worm-gate’.” His runner-up was Sam Lotu-Iiga – see: The Beehive’s best, worst and weirdest

Colin James gave his “Politician of the year” award to Labour’s Phil Twyford, saying, “My pick is an opposition MP who has had his main cabinet opponent on the back foot all year, who generates ideas and is open to ideas from others, including business, and who does his job with a firm thrust but also good humour, too often lacking in politics” – see: The year of a man with firm thrust and good humour

But this doesn’t wash with former Labour Party activist Phil Quin, who blogs about Why Phil Twyford’s Failed Racist Ploy Shouldn’t be Forgotten — or Forgiven. And many NBR readers seem to agree with him – Twyford was voted worst politician by 43% – see Chris Keall’s Your worst-performing politician of 2015

Other dishonourable mentions included David Carter, Sam Lotu-Iiga, Murray McCully, Gerry Brownlee, Colin Craig, Maggie Barry, Clayton Cosgrove and Nanaia Mahuta. See also Keall’s Your best-performing politician of 2015, won by Bill English.

Duncan Garner rated his best MPs like this: Kelvin Davis 9/10 (“He made a noise. Stood for something. Labour take note.”), David Seymour 8.5, Bill English 8, Winston Peters 8, and James Shaw 7 – see: Top 5 politicians of the year. See also Duncan Garner’s top 5 political losers of 2015

If such lists are too male-dominated, Stephanie Rodgers has a counter-list with only female politicians: Metiria Turei, Jacinda Ardern, Judith Collins, and all the women who stood up in Parliament to speak about their experiences of sexual abuse – see: My top 5 politicians of the year

Similarly, see Scott Yorke’s My Politician of the Year for 2015

Mihingarangi Forbes conveys the experts’ views on A year of mixed fortunes for Māori MPs. Plaudits are given to Kelvin Davis, followed by Marama Fox and Marama Davidson. Commentator Annabelle Lee is quoted as saying, “Marama Fox has completely outshone [Māori Party co-leader] Te Ururoa Flavell, who seems to be completely MIA since the election.” But no mention is made of Winston Peters or Paula Bennett.

See also Martyn Bradbury’s TDB top 5 best and worst politicians of 2015. The criteria for these, he says, is “based on what MPs have actually done for those with the least”: Chris Finlayson, Marama Davidson, Kelvin Davis, Metiria Turei, and Sue Moroney. His “Enemies of the People” are: Sam Lotu-liga, Tim Groser, Louise Upston, Anne Tolley and, of course, John Key (but not for “his policies or politics but his personal behaviour”). 

But do any of these rankings really mean much? There was a reasonable amount of publicity for the Trans-Tasman’s rankings for the year – see Tracy Watkins’s Trans-Tasman roll call – the best and worst of the 2015 political year. But this year those verdicts caused a lot of disagreement. For example David Farrar analysed the results and declared: “I have to say that the number of ratings they have given which I think are totally detached from reality is higher than normal” – see: The 2015 Trans-Tasman Ratings. And another blogger argued that “beltway trash lists like this do a disservice to the public” and he called on the media to pay less attention to them – see Joe Nunweek’s The Kill List

Rankings and ratings were crowd sourced in The Spinoff’s features, 2015 in Review – 24 Politics Watchers on Party Fortunes, Economy, Media & More and 2015 in Review – 23 Politics Watchers Name the Year’s Big Losers

Possibly the best single roundup of the year is Tim Watkin’s My year that was, in which he gives awards to Winston Peters, James Shaw and Tim Groser, amongst others. He draws attention to the dodgy Saudi Sheep deal, underfunding of the public service, housing problems, strong foreign policy moves, and general short-term thinking that seems to afflict all political parties at the moment.

Finally, for end-of-year satire, see Steve Braunias’ Secret Diary of 2015 and Secret Diary of Christmas, Toby Manhire’s Presents of mind for country’s A-listers and Top dog in annus hangoveris is … and Scott Yorke’s The 2015 Imperator Fish Awards

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Political Roundup: The 2015 Mediapocalypse

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Political Roundup by Dr Bryce Edwards.

[caption id="attachment_4808" align="alignleft" width="150"]Dr Bryce Edwards. Dr Bryce Edwards.[/caption]

Putting John Key into a caged prison rape joke was one of the low points in the New Zealand media this year. But there were plenty of other low points for an industry that faced huge challenges and change during 2015.

Democracy is the poorer in 2015 due to a decline in the state of New Zealand’s mainstream media. Of course the media has been suffering all sorts of woes in recent years – ranging from falling audiences to newsroom redundancies – but 2015 seemed particularly severe, leading to talk of the death of the mainstream media.

Mediaworks kills off quality TV

The biggest political media story of the year was the demise of Campbell Live, a controversy I covered in columns in April and May, which raised bigger questions about the state of the media – see: The politics of axing Campbell LiveThe Revolution will not be televised and Who killed Campbell Live? 

John Campbell finally talked about his axing in a Metro magazine interview with Simon Wilson, which is now online – see: After the fall

Later in the year, another casualty occurred at Mediaworks, with the killing off of the current affairs show 3D, previously known as 3rd Degree. This was examined by Colin Peacock in TV3 current affairs show facing the axe. Peacock quotes NZ on Air chief executive Jane Wrightson saying: “Investigative journalism is fundamental to a strong democracy and national debate. It is becoming increasingly scarce in New Zealand due to the commercial pressures faced by broadcasters and the news media generally in a small country”.

This month Rachel Smalley reflected on the axing of 3D, and was less pessimistic than some: “I don’t think we’re witnessing the death of current affairs – just the death of current affairs in its current broadcasting model, and at the moment we’re going through a bit of a messy divorce” – see: 3D’s axing not the death of current affairs TV

But others were concerned about the direction the company bosses were taking TV3, and Jane Bowron worried what they might do with the upcoming revamp of their 6pm news. She advises the company to slow down: “TV3 needs to calm down, take stock and stop trying to reach a destination without knowing the name of its goal, like a train pulling into a station so fast it hasn’t got a clue how it got there, where it’s going to next, or if it will ever ride again” – see: The grim fairytale of MediaWorks gains traction

Looking back on the year of Mediaworks changes, the Spinoff’s Duncan Greive assessed the MediaWorks’ strategy, spotting some positives in the company’s performance, but saying ultimately “hard news has been decimated” – see: Swapping news for reality – looking back on a bad year for TV3. He concludes “the company’s owners, Oaktree Capital, now possess a media company which is no longer anything like so valuable as it was.”

Some journalists pointed the blame at the company CEO, and a boycott of Mark Weldon’s wine company was urged – see John Edens’s MediaWorks staff urged to boycott CEO Mark Weldon’s Central Otago wine

More decline and disruption

Every other media organisation faced some sort of significant decline or disruption in 2015. Newspapers continued to suffer print readership decline, with Richard Harman reporting on the latest statistics showing that “The number of copies of New Zealand daily newspapers sold over the past five years has plunged by 23%” – see: The Declining state of New Zealand newspapers

Some of the newspaper audience was shifting online for news, as reported by Joshua Riddiford in Stuff and NZ Herald audiences continue to grow in Nielsen’s latest online rankings

The newspaper companies had to restructure to meet the changing media environment, with major changes at both Fairfax and the Herald. Major operational changes at the Herald and its allied companies were announced in October – see the Herald’s NZME harnesses the power of one newsroom. And at virtually the same time, Mediaworks announced its new “Newshub” to launch in 2016 – see TV3’s MediaWorks reveals new multi-platform news service

Radio New Zealand changed its name to just RNZ. And it undertook major cost-saving cuts of $1m – see Pattrick Smellie’s RNZ stalwart Hewitt Humphrey facing redundancy in broadcaster’s latest restructure

And at RadioLive, the last remaining business radio programme was cancelled – see Nick Grant’s NBR picks up cancelled RadioLive business show (paywalled), However the ten-year old show has shifted to NBR’s own digital audio platform.

And when it comes to the parliamentary press gallery, there was a major loss with the retirement of the person I regarded as the leading columnist – see my Tributes to John Armstrong

Introspection on the media

There was a huge amount of reflection and analysis of the changing media environment during the year. Perhaps the most pessimistic and critical was given last month by veteran current affairs producer Phil Wallington in his keynote speech to an audience of television workers – see: A TV Current Affairs Warhorse Describes The State Of It All

About halfway through Wallington provides two explanations for why the media is no longer able to hold the powerful to account: 1) Shrinking newsroom budgets, and 2) The increasing power of political spin-doctors. 

He also bemoans the career of journalists today who face a precarious existence on (mostly) low pay. 

He explains that the industry is now also very narrow in terms of the backgrounds of the journalists: “Gone are the days when young people of very diverse backgrounds and often humble circumstances could seek a meaningful career in journalism. Now, it is too often a half-way house to a better paid job in PR or communications. This is not good for this country’s democratic system. The main driver of a free society should be the ability for people to speak out. But now only a very few diverse and questioning voices are heard and the orthodox and heterodox views are shunned. They have been supplanted by a bland, mindless and consumer driven consensus.”

More strong opinions about the demise of the media were put in a one-hour discussion ostensibly about Dirty Politics – watch Martyn Bradbury’s 1 Yr on from Dirty Politics hosted by John Campbell with Nicky Hager, Fran O’Sullivan & Dita De Boni

A much more optimistic view was put forward by RNZ CEO Paul Thompson in June – see: Disruption to media becomes the story. He tells the story of the evolution of the media through four eras, based on technological disruption. He suspects “we may be now entering a fourth media age – one characterised by the atomisation of news and its re-distribution by global content ecosystems, such as Apple and Facebook.”

For Thompson “This is exciting as it potentially makes possible a new age of journalism in which the creators and curators of news and current affairs work collaboratively with the smartest and best-resourced companies in the world. The possibility of these new partnerships endorses the on-going vital importance and the appeal of journalism.” See also Duncan Greive’s “Think of Us as Yeast” – An Interview with Paul Thompson, Head of RNZ

A group of organisations established the Civics and Media Project this year, which lead to a number of forums discussing the future of information – see Radio NZ’s Will we have the information we need in 2030? As part of this, you can also watch John Campbell in conversation with five students from intermediate schools in Auckland about their expectations for civil society in 2030 – see: John Campbell with intermediate students.

Similarly, towards the end of the year, Radio New Zealand hosted a panel discussion with journalists and academics about the future of quality media – you can read about this and listen to the 52-minute discussion here: The Shape of the Media

But for the most comprehensive run down of developments in the media sector, especially around media company ownership, see Merja Myllylahti’s annual JMAD New Zealand Media Ownership Report 2015. According to this, New Zealand’s media companies are now concentrated in the hands of financial institutions.

The report is especially interesting in dealing with new corporate partnerships, alliances and new entries to market. For more on such partnerships, see Mediawatch’s Media companies in the shadow of internet giants. It seems that the idea of “cartels” might become a positive term in the media industry.

Media bias and power

Criticisms of the media’s performance and biases loomed large this year. These were reflected in earlier columns I wrote: Is the media turning on John Key?Is the media biased? and White men in charge of the message? 

In terms of media criticisms and evaluations of politicians, David Farrar has published his 2nd biannual media opinion statistics. This exercise examines “the opinion of editorials and columnists at the two major media sites of Stuff and NZ Herald” and categorises to what extent they are favourable or unfavourable about the four biggest parties. 

Farrar’s figures suggest that the media may have turned against Labour in recent months. For example “Up until March, 74% of Herald columns and editorials on Labour were positive, but in the last six months only 25% have been.” 

In terms of the political media, Rodney Hide expressed his dissatisfaction, not with any bias, but that “Political reporting is now like a fixed wrestling match: ritualistic and predictable.  We already know the questions. Worse, we already know the answers” – see his September NBR column, Ask dumb questions, get dumb answers (paywalled).

Hide says “We yearn for something a little richer” about what is going on in politics, and he blames the market for not working rather than the media companies: “It’s the market at work. It’s what the average person wants that counts. And it isn’t politics, policy or economics.  We might yearn for something richer like Mozart but the country wants pop. It won’t be long now and politics will be morphed into pure entertainment, a cross between X-Factor and MasterChef.”

Political interviewing also came in for some criticism earlier this month, following on from a minister having a bad experience – see Sam Sachdeva’s Peter Dunne called ‘moron’ after fiery interview with radio host

This led Laura Walters to say: “It’s important to put the hard questions to those in positions of power but when does a hard-nosed interview cross the line?” – see: There’s a place for hard-nosed interviews but not aggression.

The use of “soft news” by politicians appears to be on the rise, or at least is being discussed more. Jacinda Ardern became renowned for using this vehicle. For example in November Ardern appeared in a multi-page spread in the Women’s Weekly – see Kelly Bertrand’s Jacinda’s island paradise

David Farrar reacted: “It is quite legitimate to do soft pieces as a way of connecting with voters on political issues. Many politicians do it. But if you read the article, there isn’t a single mention of a political issue. It is 100% about holidays in Niue (where her parents live and work). It could almost be a travel advertorial for Niue.  So yes it is legitimate to do interviews and profiles with soft magazines, to connect to voters on issues. But is it legitimate when there is nothing at all about politics in there?” – see: Jacinda in Women’s Weekly

Ardern also took over from Phil Goff as the Sunday Star Times’ Labour Party columnist. But the verdicts didn’t seem too positive. After her first effort, up against Collins, the NBR’s David Cohen panned it, saying “the competition will be stiff to see which of the two political contributors is the more hypnotically dull” – see: Duncan and the dame (paywalled). 

But Cohen also railed against the media publishing the propaganda of politicians: “I don’t mean to be obtuse or a spoilsport but why are politicians on the public payroll using tax dollars to regularly promote their own brand without any kind of editorial intercession? I forget. They need to be given news space to flog airbrushed versions of themselves because – why again?”

Maori TV and the Establishment

Maori TV used to be seen as the saviour of quality political and current affairs programming, but its stocks have fallen significantly this year. Much of this has related to the controversy that arose from the Native Affairs programme carrying out investigative research into the finances of the Kohanga Reo National Trust Board.

A clampdown on Native Affairs appeared to be the outcome and in June the host of the programme, Mihingarangi Forbes, announced her decision to leave Maori TV, subsequently going to RNZ. 

According to David Fisher: “The Native Affairs team’s investigation into management and spending at the Kohanga Reo trust was considered by Maoridom’s old guard as a disrespectful way to probe an establishment organisation led by matriarch Dame Iritana Tawhiwhirangi” – see: Star Maori TV broadcaster Mihingarangi Forbes quits

In September Forbes appeared along with her former producer Annabelle Lee at a Wintec Press Club, and explained her departure – which was covered in a blog post by Stephen Stratford – see: Wintec Press Club: Mihi Forbes and Annabelle Lee

Responding to this, Danyl Mclauchlan wrote: “What happened at Maori TV is one of the most clear-cut cases of establishment censorship imaginable. Journalists started asking uncomfortable questions; the establishment got angry and imposed a new leader on the organisation who shut everything down” – see: Maori TV and the mediapocalypse

For other very good items on the fracas, see Dave Armstrong’s It’s not Maori TV ‘s job to be respectful and John Drinnan’s Radio NZ seeks cure to ratings malaise

There were other controversies at Maori TV this year. In March, the channel initially decided not to broadcast a haka performance which criticised the broadcaster – see Rosemary Rangitauira and Andrew Mcrae’s Maori TV accused of censorship. For an interesting discussion of this, see Morgan Godfery’s On the role of criticism: Te Matatini

Alternative media

With the problems facing the mainstream media, are there alternatives that might arise and fill the growing gaps? Certainly the rise of The Spin-Off website (expanding beyond its initial focus on television, and appointing Toby Manhire as “political editor”), has been a highlight of the year. 

Spin-off editor Duncan Greive has published all sorts of interesting pieces about media figures. See, for example, An Exit Interview with Simon Wilson, Editor of Metro 2010-2015, and “Kind of a Dimwit” – An Interview with Steve Braunias

In the latter, Braunias gives both praise and condemnation to his former teacher Karl du Fresne, who responded with his blog post, Steve Braunias and the Auckland media priesthood

There are plenty of other online resources full of important material about New Zealand society and politics – such as the brilliant Te Ara Encyclopaedia of New Zealand. Dave Armstrong has written a tribute to this, but laments the news that no significant resources are being provided by the Ministry of Culture and Heritage to keep the site updated – see: An online jewel that may become a relic.

The Scoop website has been through some big changes this year too, and in 2016 might be about to crystallise into something more important. According to Martyn Bradbury a new editor is about to take over – see: Max Rashbrooke tipped to take over Scoop. And the website ran one of the more interesting critiques of the mainstream media – see Alison McCulloch’s Stop The Press.

Finally, there are alternatives to be found out in the blogosphere, and Martyn Bradbury has, in his own inimitable style, given his verdicts on how they’ve fared this year – see: The Daily Blog NZ Blogger Alignment Awards 2015

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Top News Stories For 2015

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NewsroomPlus.com – Contributed by UMR The top news story for the year was the All Blacks winning the Rugby World Cup. 80% of people said they followed the story (1 and 2 on a 5-point scale), while 68% said they followed it “very closely” (1 on the 5-point scale). The Rugby World Cup win comes in as the 10th most followed news story since 2003, however it didn’t quite match the attention of the All Black’s last Rugby World Cup win in 2011. That story was followed by 83% of people, with 71% saying they followed it “very closely”. UMRNational’s decision to send troops to Iraq was the most followed political news story. 68% percent of people said they followed that story. The top three were rounded out by the debate around refugee quotas and Mount Eden prison being taken over by the Government after allegations of prisoner injury and mistreatment. UMR 3The top international news story of the year was the terrorist attacks in Paris in November. 77% of people said they followed the story. The January Paris attacks (Charlie Hebdo) also feature in the top five international stories of the year, being followed by 58% of people. UMR 5 The top crime story for 2015 was the threat to poison baby formula if demands to stop using 1080 were not meet. 56% percent of people said they followed that story. UMR 6The most followed natural disaster story for 2015 was the flooding in Dunedin in June, with 62% following the story. UMR 7 Top news stories each month featured the referendum for changing the flag on two separate occasions, in August and in December. Attention in the story did not build significantly. In August 54% were following the story; while in December 55% were following. –]]>

NewsRoom Digest: Top NZ News Items for December 23 Edition, 2015

Newsroom Digest

Today’s end of year edition of NewsRoom_Digest features 4 resourceful links of the day and the politics pulse from Wednesday 23rd December. It is best viewed on a desktop screen.

SPECIAL NOTE: The team at NewsRoom sincerely wishes all of the readers and users of NewsRoom_Digest a happy and safe festive holiday as we all say goodbye to 2015 and hello to 2016. NewsRoom_Digest will be taking a break until 11 January though other NewsRoom routines will continue. Thanks from Rupeni, Shereel and Stephen.

NEWSROOM_MONITOR

Noteworthy stories in the current news cycle include the release of the sixth and final document by the Waitangi Tribunal in its report on the Crown’s dealings with the people of Te Urewera, EMA chief executive Kim Campbell and Economic Development Minister Steven Joyce are at odds over whether there is any chance the Government will achieve its goal of lifting exports from 30 to 40 per cent of GDP by 2025, and a ruling was delivered, subject to appeal, that Kim Dotcom and his three associates Mathias Ortmann, Bram van der Kolk and Finn Batato were eligible for extradition to the US.

POLITICS PULSE

Media releases issued from Parliament by political parties today included:

Government: East Frame development gets final approval; Stay safe on the water these holidays; Keep safe on the roads these holidays

New Zealand First: $3m Commerce Commission Nait Fines Stun Agriculture

LINKS OF THE DAY

IMPORTS RISE: The value of total goods imported was $4.9 billion in November 2015, up $535 million (12 percent) from November 2014 according to Statistics New Zealand. More details at: http://bit.ly/1O87Kdd

SHELLFISH WARNING: A new service to email warnings to shellfish gatherers about toxin levels in shellfish has been introduced for summer by the Ministry for Primary Industries. Read more:http://mpigovtnz.cwp.govt.nz/travel-and-recreation/fishing/shellfish-biotoxin-alerts/

TE UREWERA REPORT: The final part of the Waitangi Tribunal’s Te Urewera Report was released today. The full report can be downloaded here: https://forms.justice.govt.nz/search/WT/reports/reportSummary.html?reportId=wt_DOC_99761543

VISITOR ARRIVALS: The latest edition of International Visitor Arrivals to New Zealand (IVA) is now available on the Statistics New Zealand website. Click here for more:http://bit.ly/1Md0Lke

And that’s our sampling of “news you can use” for Wednesday 23rd December.

Brought to EveningReport by Newsroom Digest.

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NewsRoom Digest: Top NZ News Items for December 22 Edition, 2015

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Newsroom Digest

This edition of NewsRoom_Digest features 7 resourceful links of the day and the politics pulse from Tuesday 22nd December. It is best viewed on a desktop screen.

NEWSROOM_MONITOR

Noteworthy stories in the current news cycle include Shell New Zealand selling a major asset- Maui natural gas pipeline to Australian based First State Investments, the International Energy Agency revising its forecast for the demand for coal down from 2.1 to 0.8 percent annually through to 2020, and two rural services companies PGG Wrightson and Rural Livestock being heavily fined in a price fixing case.

POLITICS PULSE

Media releases issued from Parliament by political parties today included:

Government: City playground a reward for families; Maternity services continuing to improve; Next stage of Campylobacter strategy in place by early 2016

Greens: Greens Call On IPCA To Investigate Unlawful Nicky Hager Search

Labour: Privatisation plans for mediation services rejected

Māori Party: International tobacco case should encourage plain packaging here

New Zealand First: Government Underspends $273 Million In The ‘Justice Sector’ 

LINKS OF THE DAY

CHRISTCHURCH RETAIL SPENDING: Growth in Christchurch city’s retail spending continues to strengthen against the national level according to Statistics New Zealand. For more details: http://bit.ly/1mfgHGQ

ENERGY INFRASTRUCTURE SUMMIT: In a first-of-its-kind summit, top level decision-makers from around Asia Pacific are gathering in Wellington on 16-17 March 2016 to discuss Delivering Resilient Energy Infrastructure. More information at: http://bit.ly/1YsCexj

HEALTH RESEARCH RECIPIENTS: The Health Research Council Māori career development award recipients for 2016 have been announced. Read more: www.hrc.govt.nz/funding-opportunities/recipients

LIST OF 2016 IT PREDICTIONS: Dimension Data, the global solutions and services provider, today released its IT predications for the next 12 months, and digital transformation is high on the corporate agenda because it’s already reshaping the competitive landscape. Read more: ttp://blog.dimensiondata.com/2015/12/top-it-trends-to-watch-in-2016-digital-infrastructure/?utm_source=PR&utm_medium=Press%20release%20&utm_campaign=TopITTrends

MATERNITY REPORT: The National Maternity Monitoring Group (NMMG) 2015 Annual Report shows the quality of maternity services in New Zealand is continuing to improve. A copy of the report is available at:http://www.health.govt.nz/publication/national-maternity-monitoring-group-annual-report-2015

PROTECTING YOUR EYES: Cheap sunglasses might be just as good as expensive ones for protecting your eyes over summer. 48 pairs tested by Consumer NZ met all the standard requirements. For more information:https://www.consumer.org.nz/articles/sunglasses

REGIONAL TOURISM INDICATORS: The Ministry of Business, Innovation & Employment released the Regional Tourism Indicators (RTI) for November 2015. The RTI are based on electronic card transaction data and provide regular updates on both international and domestic tourism expenditure at a regional level. Read more:http://www.mbie.govt.nz/info-services/sectors-industries/tourism/tourism-research-data/regional-tourism-indicators

And that’s our sampling of “news you can use” for Tuesday 22nd December.

Brought to EveningReport by Newsroom Digest.

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NewsRoom Digest: Top NZ News Items for December 21 Edition, 2015

Newsroom Digest

This edition of NewsRoom_Digest features 8 resourceful links of the day and the politics pulse from Monday 21st December. It is best viewed on a desktop screen.

NEWSROOM_MONITOR

Noteworthy stories in the current news cycle include the widespread workplace abuse and worker exploitation uncovered by a Labour Inspectorate taskforce looking into breaches of labour standards, consumer confidence has bounced off a 3-year low after lower interest rates and a better economic outlook, and New Zealand’s attractiveness as a place to visit, or live and work long-term, is continuing to break records.

POLITICS PULSE

Media releases issued from Parliament by political parties today included:

Government: Minister announces new Te Māngai Pāho Board members; McClay says WTO agreement significant for NZ; $1.2m extra to expand Fruit in Schools; NZ-Korea FTA set to benefit NZ exporters; New Trade Minister does well; Improved palliative care guidance; Metro Sports Facility design team appointed

Greens: John Key’s behaviour, “it’s not OK”; New figures show Serco received $8m in bonuses; Today is the day National should back the CRL

New Zealand First: Gallipoli’s “Dunkirk” overlooked in WW100 celebrations; Electoral Commission simply loose on flag referendum results; Soaring Immigration Gives Way To Corrupt Employment

LINKS OF THE DAY

ELDERLY CITIZENS: The specialist doctors providing psychiatric treatment for elderly people are struggling to keep up with demand as the population ages, says Ian Powell, Executive Director of the Association of Salaried Medical Specialists (ASMS). Read more here: http://www.asms.org.nz/wp-content/uploads/2015/12/10921-The-Specialist_Dec15_WEB.pdf

FRUITS IN SCHOOLS: The Fruit in Schools programme will be expanded to include an extra 77 schools, benefiting an additional 13,000 students. The programme dates back to 2006; for information hosted by the Ministry of Health see: http://www.health.govt.nz/publication/fruit-schools-how-guide-and-looseleaf-kit

GOING GREEN: A Victoria University of Wellington researcher has uncovered why environmentally concerned consumers don’t always buy green products. Click here for more: http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007%2Fs10551-014-2316-3

HEALTH CARE: There is a new guidance on providing the best possible care for people during the last days of their lives. The guidance can be found at: http://www.health.govt.nz/publication/te-ara-whakapiri-principles-and-guidance-last-days-life

IMPROVED RULES FOR BANKS: The Reserve Bank today published the conclusions of its stocktake of the prudential regulations that apply to banks and non-bank deposit takers (NBDTs). Click here for more:http://rbnz.govt.nz/regulation_and_supervision/stocktake/feedback-statement.pdf

INCREASE IN VISITOR ARRIVALS : Visitor arrivals to New Zealand numbered 300,500 in November 2015, up 11 percent from November 2014, Statistics New Zealand said today. The biggest increase was in visitors from China, up 9,600 (35 percent) from November last year.Click here for more:http://www.stats.govt.nz/browse_for_stats/population/Migration/IntTravelAndMigration_HOTPNov15.aspx

LAST DAYS OF LIFE: The Ministry of Health has published Te Ara Whakapiri: Principles and guidance for the last days of life, which outlines the essential components and considerations required to promote quality care at the end of life for all adults in New Zealand. ITe Ara Whakapiri replaces the Liverpool Care Pathway of the Dying Patient, and has been endorsed by the key organisations relevant to palliative care, including the Australia and New Zealand Society of Palliative Medicine, Palliative Care Nurses New Zealand and Hospice New Zealand. See:http://www.health.govt.nz/publication/te-ara-whakapiri-principles-and-guidance-last-days-life

UN REPORT: With identity a key priority on the United Nations’ 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, the Secure Identity Alliance (SIA) today publishes a report outlining a best practice approach for consolidating civil registries through national electronic identity (ID) schemes. Full report entitled “Civil Registry Consolidation through Digital Identity Management” can be downloaded at: https://www.secureidentityalliance.org/index.php/resources

And that’s our sampling of “news you can use” for Monday 21st December.

Brought to EveningReport by Newsroom Digest.

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NewsRoom Digest: Top NZ News Items for December 18 Edition, 2015

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Newsroom Digest

This edition of NewsRoom_Digest features 5 resourceful links of the day and the politics pulse from Friday 18th December. It is best viewed on a desktop screen.

NEWSROOM_MONITOR

Noteworthy stories in the current news cycle include news that Ngai Tahu Property has joined forces with the NZ Super Fund and New Ground Capital to invest in a $130 million housing project in Auckland, the animal welfare lobby group SAFE is calling for a new separate organisation to take overall responsibility for animal welfare and a study published by The New Zealand Medical Journal argues that some dependent drinkers would not be able to afford to maintain their drinking habits if there was a minimum price for alcohol.

POLITICS PULSE

Media releases issued from Parliament by political parties today included:

Government: NZ calls for international action on fishing subsidies; Takahē release shows success of Recovery Programme; High Commissioner to Singapore announced; New Health Research Council chair appointed; Te Aupōuri Ministerial Inquiry completed; Deed of Settlement signed with Ngatikahu ki Whangaroa; Nearly 100 significant school property projects progress over holidays; Water safety campaign launched; Upgraded Hooker Valley track opens

Labour: Blurred lines cited in dodgy roadshow review; Troubled fishing parks sink without trace; Salary curb call after bumper CEO pay hike

New Zealand First: Wellington Rail Decision “Another Serco” In The Making

LINKS OF THE DAY

DEED SETTLEMENT: The Crown has signed a Deed of Settlement with Ngatikahu ki Whangaroa settling the iwi’s historical Treaty of Waitangi claims. A copy of the Deed of Settlement is available at http://www.govt.nz/treaty-settlement-documents/ngatikahu-ki-whangaroa

STAFFING IN PUBLIC HOSPITALS: “There’s a good argument for specifying minimum staffing levels in public hospital departments and services, even – or perhaps, especially – during times of financial constraint,” says Ian Powell, Executive Director of the Association of Salaried Medical Specialists (ASMS). Click here for more in the latest copy of the ASMS magazine, The Specialist: http://www.asms.org.nz/wp-content/uploads/2015/12/10921-The-Specialist_Dec15_WEB.pdf

SURGICAL TEAM SURVEY: As part of the evaluation of the Health Quality & Safety Commission’s Safe Surgery NZ programme, a baseline national survey of district health board (DHB) surgical staff has been undertaken. For more information see http://www.hqsc.govt.nz/our-programmes/health-quality-evaluation/projects/quality-and-safety-markers/qsms-april-june-2015/

WORLD BANK REPORT: East Asia and Pacific is aging faster – and on a larger scale – than any other region in history, which could lead to a steep drop in the size of its workforce and sharp increases in public spending on pensions, health care and long-term care in the coming decades, according to a new World Bank report. Click here for the report: https://openknowledge.worldbank.org/bitstream/handle/10986/23133/9781464804694.pdf

WATERWAY CONTAMINATION: New research shows wildfowl, such as ducks and Canadian geese, are the biggest contributors to faecal contamination in Christchurch’s waterways, and that following rainfall human and dog faeces can also be present. The reports are available here: http://www.waterquality.org.nz

And that’s our sampling of “news you can use” for Friday 18th December.

Brought to EveningReport by Newsroom Digest.

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Bryce Edwards’ Political Roundup: Dirty Politics won’t die

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Political Roundup by Dr Bryce Edwards.

[caption id="attachment_4808" align="alignleft" width="150"]Dr Bryce Edwards. Dr Bryce Edwards.[/caption]

Last year’s Dirty Politics bombshell keeps going off. The ruling by the High Court against the Police for raiding Nicky Hager’s home is an important judgement in yet another busy year for the various Dirty Politics characters. 

Yesterday’s landmark judicial ruling against the Police for raiding Nicky Hager’s house is just the latest chapter in the ongoing saga of Dirty Politics. For the best coverage of the ruling, see David Fisher’s Police house raid on investigative journalist Nicky Hager found to be unlawful

For an explanation of why the judgement is so important for democracy and the public, see Regan Schoultz’s Hager decision: Why you should care and Matt Nippert’s Nicky Hager police raid ruling a win for journalism. Both pieces make significant points about the need to have properly functioning mechanisms that hold the powerful to account, and say the police raid undermined that mechanism. 

But for the hardest-hitting criticism of the Police, see Gordon Campbell’s On the Police harassment of Nicky Hager. His short must-read column paints a picture of the Police acting as blatant stooges for the political Establishment, to take out a critic. And he warns that it will continue to happen. 

Hager spoke about his victory and the “strange” actions of the police in a five-minute interview with Alison Mau – see: Hager: Police raid ‘weird overkill’.

Attention is now turning to the question of how the Police could get this case so wrong. Various politicians and partisans are pointing the finger at the National Government’s role in the saga – see Greg Presland’s blog post, What was National’s role in the police raid on Nicky Hager? and Sam Sachdeva’s Nicky Hager case ‘raises questions’ about political pressure on police – MPs

To understand the case properly it’s worth going back and looking at some of the material from the court case in July. Alastair Thompson of the Scoop website used the Official Information Act to obtain the various court documents relating to the case – see: Inside The Hunt For Rawshark – Hager Raid Court File and Inside The Hunt For Rawshark – Hager Raid Court File Part 2. This includes my own affidavit, which you can read together with other Dirty Politics material.

The court case itself was also covered in depth by Jon Stephenson – see: Nicky Hager Case – Breaking News Reportage. See also Giovanni Tiso’s essays, The Life and death of the political author and The raid.

Of course, it’s also worth remembering the way the Police carried out their investigation, using controversial methods – see my October column, Libertarians against dirty politics

And for more on the police investigation of Rawshark, see Paul Buchanan’s latest blog post, The Impunity Files, Police Edition: Trolling for Rawshark, and Juha Saarinen’s Hager, Whale Oil, Dirty Politics, Rawshark, and what the police should have done

Cameron Slater’s ongoing Dirty Politics

You probably shouldn’t trust anything written in this column. At least that’s what Cameron Slater would have you believe. Slater has just launched his latest project with co-conspirator Simon Lusk, which includes an evaluation of political journalists and commentators. The first issue of their monthly Incite newsletter came out on Tuesday, and it labelled my work as “Not to be trusted” and gave me an evaluation of two out of ten. Other pundits and journalists fared worse – Richard Harman got 8/10, followed closely by Barry Soper on 7/10. At the other end of the scale, Rachel Smalley would have been very happy with her 1/10.

For an amusing review of the new publication, see Danyl Mclauchlan’s blog post, Why You Need Incite in Your Life – a Review of Cameron Slater’s $35 Monthly Newsletter. See also Pete George’s Incite review. For a more favourable spin, published on Slater’s Whaleoil blog, see Inside Incite (and why you should subscribe).

Pete George blogged that Slater’s Whaleoil blog could be in a perilous state – see: Conflict at Whale Oil. This blog post reports a testy exchange between Slater and the blog’s apparent co-owner, and in the comments section there are further revealing discussion from former Whaleoil volunteers. 

Part of Whaleoil’s decline is financial, and the latest advertiser to pull the plug is entrepreneur Rod Drury – see Matt Nippert’s Xero boss withdraws advertising from Whaleoil. According to this article, “Rodney Hide has confirmed he was probably behind a series of Whaleoil posts attacking Xero that led Rod Drury to suspend advertising on the controversial blog.”

Not all is going badly for Slater however. He has was the first case of complaint for the new Online Media Standards Authority, and he won – see David Farrar’s OMSA rules in favour of blogger

Slater also brought out a slim book this year about trade unions, titled “Dodgy Unions”, which got a very positive review on Amazon by a certain “B Edwards”, explained by blogger Pete George in his post Which B Edwards? This was followed by a more legitimate evaluation: Dodgy Unions – review. And it got the usual endorsement from Scott Yorke – see: Why you should get Cameron Slater’s book

Slater also got some heat from his National rival Michelle Boag, who made further Dirty Politics-style claims about his activities – listen to RadioLIve’s Are Kiwi bloggers taking payment to stay silent? Slater categorically denied the allegation – listen to: Cameron Slater denies Michelle Boag’s claim he takes payment for silence

The “Exoneration” of Judith Collins 

The reappointment to Cabinet of one of the main politicians in Dirty Politics has irked Nicky Hager, especially because of accompanying claims she had been exonerated – see Hager’s blog post, Spinning the return of Judith Collins

Collins herself explains why she feels “pretty damn vindicated, frankly” in Tracy Watkins’ article, Judith Collins – ‘exonerated, vindicated’ and on the comeback trail. Watkins also reports on the various objections that might be made about her claims of exoneration. 

For an examination of the official “Chisholm inquiry into Allegations concerning Judith Collins”, blogger Peter Aranyi has used the Official Information Act to obtain all of the witness transcripts, testimony and evidence for the inquiry – you can read all 60 of them here: Judith Collins Lester Chisholm Inquiry evidence

Aranyi has commented on these files at length in follow up blog posts such as Who was actually on trial? and ‘Taking one for the team’. In the latter he discusses the transcripts of the inquiry, as well as Slater’s lessened financial situation, and concludes: “Maybe he could get an honest job. Does Mrs Collins need a press secretary?” He also highlights an extract on how Slater’s wife felt about the Dirty Politics controversy.

Celebrating the return of Collins, Matthew Hooton declared “It’s good to again know with certainty there is at least one right-wing minister in John Key’s cabinet” – see his NBR column, Collins’ return a good signal to the right (paywalled). 

In this column he reflects on how Collins might yet become National Party leader: “Her moment comes if and when the public develops fatigue with Mr Key’s blancmange style of politics and perceives his government’s lack of a serious reform programme will only ever deliver slow relative economic decline”. Hooton argues that “the idea of a future Collins leadership is no longer as fanciful as it was 15 months ago, when the media mob so disgracefully drove her from office relying on the unsubstantiated testimony of a blogger.”

And for a faux-women’s magazine exclusive on Collins’ return, see Andrew Gunn’s Crusher Collins awakens the Force. Here’s John Key on why Collins had to be let back into Cabinet: “Judith’s always been really good at projecting the National-led government’s core philosophy. And I’d much rather she was inside the tent projecting out than outside the tent projecting in”.

Simon Lusk’s dirty politics

The most shadowy figure in Dirty Politics was self-declared political hit man Simon Lusk, who Duncan Garner profiled and interviewed last month on TV3’s Story – watch the nine-minute item: Shadowy political figure’s motto: ‘Dominate, intimidate and humiliate’

The story involved claims by Lusk that he paid “people, on behalf of clients, to get a certain voting outcome”, which Garner examined in a follow up item, Lusk goes public on ‘koha to vote’

There were also allegations of Lusk targeting and befriending Labour politicians. The supposed links to MP Stuart Nash were then examined in the six-minute item, Nash embarrassed by links to Simon Lusk. And a threatened campaign against another MP was explained by Isaac Davison in Phil Twyford won’t be intimidated by smear campaign

All of these issues were then examined by RNZ’s Mediawatch – see: Dirty Politics players back in the frame

Earlier in the year Lusk also published a book – see David Farrar’s Lusk: A Campaign Professional’s Guide to Winning New Zealand Campaigns

Rachel Glucina and Scout

The gossipmonger at the centre of Dirty Politics, Rachel Glucina, has made plenty of news herself this year. For a good backgrounder on Glucina and the controversies she caused, see: Rachel Glucina: the queen of gossip

Much of her notoriety in 2015 came out of her coverage of Ponytailgate for the Herald, which received criticism from the Press Council – see the Herald’s story, Press council rules against Herald on ‘Ponygate’ interview

The Prime Minister’s Office was also caught up in the controversy, especially after it “declined to make public conversations or messages with former New Zealand Herald writer Rachel Glucina over Auckland’s Cafe Rosie” – see Andrea Vance’s Ponytailgate correspondence with gossip columnist probed

Glucina left the Herald for a new job at Mediaworks. Upon this announcement there was a raft of humorous tweets and speculation on Glucina’s likely influence and future with the TV3 company – see my blog post, Top tweets about Rachel Glucina going to TV3

The new project for TV3’s Mediaworks was announced as Scout. Not surprisingly, the actual scouting movement was very quick to distance itself from the new TV3 product – see Brittany Mann’s ScoutsNZ distances itself from Rachel Glucina website, seeks legal advice

The site soon ran into all sorts of trouble, detailed in MediaWorks staff turn on Scout, Rachel Glucina’s new gossip site, and analysed on The Standard in the blog post, No Friends: The One about Rachel

But the must-read account is Duncan Greive’s Anatomy of a Corporate Disaster – Inside Weldon and Glucina’s Gossip Site Scout. See also his post, Cool Story #2 – Two Sides of the Gluc

The Other players

Carrick Graham became known as Cameron Slater’s paymaster, and in June North and South magazine published Peter Newport’s excellent feature about him and his PR activities, which is now available free to read online: Carrick Graham: Without Apologies. Similarly, see my column Dirty digital politics

Jordan Williams and David Farrar are still very actively running their lobby group, which David Fisher investigates in The Big Read: So what’s this Taxpayers’ Union, which purports to represent us all? Earlier in the year, the group was also in the spotlight for their focus on author Eleanor Catton – see the Herald’s Kiwis have been generous to Catton, says Taxpayers’ Union

But is the group partisan? Not exactly. And David Farrar has the figures to prove it – see his blog post, Taxpayers Union critical regardless of party

Ben Rachinger, another mysterious figure who was, for a time, close to Cameron Slater, also created some minor news about Dirty Politics this year which I covered my column, Dirty Politics “done dirt cheap”

For an update on him see Keith Ng’s illuminating and indepth investigation The Whaledump Saga: Scooby-Doo Edition. Or for the main points see Danyl Mclauchlan’s Shorter Ng/Rachinger/Slater/Key

There was another more high profile figure who related to Dirty Politics in some curious ways. In July, the then Conservative Party leader Colin Craig published his booklet Dirty Politics and Hidden Agendas, which was aimed at Cameron Slater, Jordan Williams, and others in his own party. 

Craig explained this in a guest post on the Daily Blog, drawing parallels with Hager’s 2014 book – see: Dirty Politics, why should we care? But last month, in a typically bizarre twist, TV3 reported Colin Craig unveiled as ‘Mr X’

Of course the character who has come out best from the Dirty Politics saga is Hager himself. Hager continued to publish vitally important research on New Zealand politics which I covered earlier in the year in three columns: Who cares about the #SnowdenNZ revelations?Should John Key resign over ‘mass surveillance’? and The ramifications of the spying scandal

For more on Hager, see his essay about his investigative journalism, Loose lips, and his interview with Toby Manhire, “A Kick Back Against Government Intolerance” – an Interview with Nicky Hager

Finally, for one of the best reads about Dirty Politics and how it played out for a television journalist covering last year’s election campaign, read Nicola Kean’s academic chapter on #PeakCray – Making Current Affairs TV During NZ’s Strangest Election

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NZ Presents Horror-thriller: “Before the Darkness”

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NewsroomPlus.com After a successful launch at the American Film Market of the feature film Broken Vows, Kiwi-American Producer Wendy Benge has signed on to aid in the production of the horror-thriller Before the Darkness, written and to be directed by New Zealander Alex Galvin. Before the Darkness (Rt to Lt) Sharon Roggio, Wendy Benge, Alex Galvin The film has also attached other prominent industry professionals, including Producer Sharon Roggio (House of Cards, Whip It, Red Dawn, Parks and Recreation), Executive Producer David Hillary (American Psycho, The Virgin Suicides, Dog Eat Dog, Broken Vows) and former Weta Workshop wizard Gareth McGhie (The Lord of the Rings trilogy, District 9, The Lovely Bones, Avatar). Set in a New Zealand forest, Before the Darkness tells the story of two American sisters who are terrorised by a killer. In order to survive they must face their own demons and unleash their most primal instincts against the unspeakable horror. “This exhilarating, psychological film will keep the audience on the edge of their seat until the end,” says Benge. “Throughout the journey, Galvin ensures you’ll never know who to trust,” states Roggio. Before the Darkness is the first of several local content-driven projects that Benge and Roggio aim to film in New Zealand. “We are proud to be part of an initiative that will bring further international exposure to both the talent and beauty this country has to offer, along with creating new avenues to aid the sustainability of New Zealand’s screen economy,” says Benge. To this end, Benge, Roggio, Hillary and James Agnew (Broken Vows, Rage) will continue to work with James Partridge of Admit One and Screen Wellington, plus other film and government agencies, to offer lectures and seminars that will provide upcoming filmmakers a strong understanding of how to: protect their intellectual property, develop film financing and create effective budgets. They will also provide knowledge of emerging marketing and distribution trends. Starting with Before the Darkness, and in coordination with the Wellington Institute of Technology (WelTec), the producers will seek to inspire and mentor the next generation of filmmakers through an internship – designed to give firsthand experience in various production departments, while exposing participants to international film production. “WelTec wants to offer students the opportunity to work with top industry professionals. This type of opportunity will not only improve their skills but aid them in developing industry connections both in New Zealand and abroad,” explains Galvin. –]]>

NewsRoom Digest: Top NZ News Items for December 17 Edition, 2015

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Newsroom Digest

This edition of NewsRoom_Digest features 8 resourceful links of the day and the politics pulse from Thursday 17th December. It is best viewed on a desktop screen.

NEWSROOM_MONITOR

Noteworthy stories in the current news cycle include the Department of Corrections getting an extra $17.6 million of funding from the Government, the New Zealand economy accelerating over 0.9 % for the September quarter and Women’s Refuge is welcoming a new scheme that allows people to check if their partner has a violent past.

POLITICS PULSE

Media releases issued from Parliament by political parties today included:

Government: Additional Auckland Unitary Plan Independent Hearings Panel members appointed; Disclosure scheme to increase safety of family violence victims; New immunisation resource for primary care; $17.6 million in additional funding for Department of Corrections; Tourism, manufacturing drive economic growth; West Coast visitor safety measures completed; New Zealand meets Kyoto climate target; McClay welcomes new WTO IT Agreement; Appointments to NorthTec Council; Appointments to new CPIT Aoraki council; New regulations lower cost to food businesses

Greens: National allows oil exploration to block marine protection; National must honour Paris with deadline for agricultural emissions; National failing on climate change – emissions set to double in 15 years; Lack of Govt support means Kiwirail loses Wellington trains contract

Labour: Nasty Christmas present for seniors; Economy not keeping pace under National’s watch

New Zealand First: Government Neglecting Women Of Merit

United Future Party: Retailers and shoppers big winners in Council’s free parking trial

LINKS OF THE DAY

CLIMATE TARGET: Three reports released today show New Zealand met its target for reducing emissions under the first commitment period of the Kyoto Protocol and is on track to meet its 2020 target. Click here for more:http://www.mfe.govt.nz/publications/climate-change/biennial-report-and-net-position-snapshot-2015 orhttp://www.mfe.govt.nz/publications/climate-change/nz-second-biennial-report-under-unfccc

DISCLOSURE SCHEME: A new disclosure scheme will make it easier for Police to disclose a person’s violent criminal past to a concerned partner or friend. Further information is available at http://www.police.govt.nz/advice/family-violence/family-violence-information-disclosure-scheme-fvids

LABOUR FORCE GROWS: New Zealand’s labour force is projected to keep growing, driven by an increasing population and people working into older ages, Statistics New Zealand said today. Click here for more:http://www.stats.govt.nz/browse_for_stats/population/estimates_and_projections/NationalLabourForceProjections_HOTP15-68.aspx

PARIS AGREEMENT: The Agreement includes several key elements that are of particular importance to the Pacific region, including recognition for pursuing a temperature goal of 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre industrial levels, a strengthened mechanism for loss and damage, and the provision for scaled up and simplified access to climate finance for small island developing states.Further information about the Paris Agreement of the COP 21 can be found here:http://unfccc.int/resource/docs/2015/cop21/eng/l09r01.pdf

FETAL ALCOHOL: The Chief Archivist’s report to the Minister of Internal Affairs on the state of recordkeeping in public offices and the 2014/15 recordkeeping audits was presented to the House of Representatives today. The report may be viewed at http://archives.govt.nz/chief-archivists-annual-report-state-government-recordkeeping-2014-15

SAFER SUMMER: The New Zealand Mountain Safety Council (MSC) is encouraging people heading outdoors over the holiday break to tell someone where they’re going and when to expect them back, and to look out for each other to ensure a fun, safe trip. For outdoor safety tips, advice, and resources or for more information about the MSC, visit:http://www.mountainsafety.org.nz

SERVICE & MANUFACTURING RISE: The New Zealand economy grew 0.9 percent in the September 2015 quarter, following an increase of 0.3 percent in June, Statistics New Zealand said today. Click here for more:http://www.stats.govt.nz/browse_for_stats/economic_indicators/GDP/GrossDomesticProduct_HOTPSep15qtr.aspx

SIGN LANGUAGE: The next round of the New Zealand Sign Language (NZSL) Fund opens for applications today. Further information about the NZSL Fund, including how to make an application, can be found here:http://www.odi.govt.nz/nzsl-fund

And that’s our sampling of “news you can use” for Thursday 17th December.

Brought to EveningReport by Newsroom Digest.

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Bryce Edwards’ Political Roundup: An Erosion of integrity in 2015

Political Roundup by Dr Bryce Edwards.

[caption id="attachment_4808" align="alignleft" width="150"]Dr Bryce Edwards. Dr Bryce Edwards.[/caption]

Some soul searching about the state of democracy and transparency in New Zealand public life is warranted at the end of the year. In this column I look back at the struggle for integrity in politics in 2015. 

The integrity of governance of any society is dependent on numerous pillars that hold up democracy. Akin to an old roman temple, important institutions such as the Official Information Act, public servants and watchdogs act as the foundations of a corruption-free society.

But in 2015 it became apparent that some of the pillars of New Zealand’s governing arrangements have eroded, making democracy less stable. There have been apparent failings in the OIA regime, transparency of Government ministers and departments, murky deals struck and clampdowns on attempts to get accountability.

Tightening elite control over information

Currently a stark erosion of integrity is occurring in an area unlikely to arouse much public protest: the Official Information Act regime. But the decline of this comparatively mundane, yet vital, part of democracy is causing a lot of angst and protest from the media, especially after a long-awaited review of the OIA came out recently and appeared to be somewhat of a whitewash.

The strongest reaction came in an Otago Daily Times editorial, which pointed to an overall trend of increased opaqueness in public life: “There is a slow, steady and insidious eroding of transparency in too many areas, however.  Smokescreens, part-truths, secrets, semantics, brain fades, fudgings, refusals to comment, commercial sensitivities, redacted documents, and the shutting down of discussion about issues of interest and concern have become too frequent in officialdom” – see: Safety, trust and transparency.

The ODT’s strongly-worded protest against the decline of the OIA and of the Ombudsman Office is also a vigorous defence of the need to hold those in power to account: “The actions of those in central and local government, police and the judiciary should be highly scrutinised, as they are our elected or appointed representatives, charged with working for the community good, and for making and upholding the laws that govern us.” It warns of the possibilities of corruption, if transparency and accountability are not maintained in the system. A similar point is made rather elegantly by columnist Narelle Henson in Watching the watchdogs.

Commentators on both the political left and right have pointed out that the Official Information Act regime is no longer fit for purpose. For instance, Nicky Hager has been reported as saying he’s used “the Act more than 1000 times” and that it’s fine for obtaining basic information, but is “basically useless” for getting hold of important material: “In practice I’m sick of it. If someone in power wants to evade it, it’s frustratingly easy” – see Colin Peacock’s Getting it out in the open: reviewing the OIA.

Rodney Hide has also complained recently about his inability to acquire fairly straightforward data from the largest government department, MBIE, about how much it spends on a particular accounting contracting firm – see his paywalled column, Worst minister hides department’s costs.

Hide says the relevant minister, Paul Goldsmith, has continued to stonewall and provide differing justifications for why the figures can’t be provided. Hide draws some tough conclusions about the minister and department’s lack of aptitude, accountability and transparency.

The OIA “Game of Hide and Seek”

Many journalists, political activists and politicians regard the Official Information Act regime as requiring urgent reform and modernisation, alleging that the system is abused by authorities. Many had high hopes for the major review of the Act carried out this year by Chief Ombudsman Dame Beverley Wakem. The report, titled “Not a Game of Hide and Seek” has just been released, and many regard it as something of a whitewash. For the best coverage of this, see RNZ’s The watchdog and the rottweilers, or listen to Sunday’s Mediawatch programme: Information watchdog’s probe into political meddling.

The report is being criticised for the finding that there is no political interference occurring with OIA requests. For the Opposition’s point of view see Kate Gudsell’s OIA report shows interference, opposition parties. And for anecdotal examples of officials and ministers attempting to thwart the OIA regime, see Jane Patterson’s Ombudsman takes aim at ‘fishing trip’ OIA requests.

Blogger, No Right Turn, also declares the report a “whitewash” – see: Wasting our time – and says “we should all be glad that she’s retiring in a week – because she’s just shown herself to be an embarrassment to her office and fundamentally useless at doing her job” – see: The blind watchdog.

Similar notions were put forward in last week’s incredibly strong Dominion Post editorial, which reacted to the Chief Ombudsman lashing out at journalists – see: Chief Ombudsman shows how not to be an information watchdog.

The editorial says that Wakem’s anti-media statements were “truly extraordinary”, and “what you would expect from a bad-tempered bureaucrat, not an ombudsman”. The newspaper also declares that Wakem’s “retirement is welcome”, and that “If Wakem had made these statements when first appointed, they would be good grounds for seeking her resignation. They show a fundamental misunderstanding of her role and an establishment mentality.”

The Herald has also admonished the Ombudsman’s Office, calling into question its integrity and abilities – this time, following on from the publication of the Office’s annual report to Parliament – see the editorial, Ombudsman badly needs health check.

The editorial complains “There is no room for the sorry lack of self-awareness displayed this year” by the Office, and considers it problematic that there is no robust “review system for the office itself” saying  “it is time this once energetic public watchdog received a thorough check-up on its own health.”

Part of the Herald’s complaint about the Ombudsman’s Office was its recent role in siding incorrectly with Tim Groser in his illegal refusal to release TPP information. To make matters worse, when the High Court ruled against Groser and the Ombudsman, the Office stubbornly refused to admit it was wrong. For more on this high court verdict and what it means for the OIA regime, see Andrew Geddis’ lengthy blog post, Comes the rule with no exception.

See also the Otago Daily Times editorial, which points out that the Ombudsman’s Office has been around “for more than 30 years” and hence it is concerning that it has little training and policy about the OIA – see: No room for complacency.

Another government watchdog is being accused of becoming a lapdog of power. On Friday the NBR’s political editor Rob Hosking sarcastically declared State Services Commissioner Iain Rennie his “politician of the year”, because he has allegedly allowed the public service to become politicised and closed off to public scrutiny – see: Politician of the year – and a warning (paywalled). Hosking says “The lack of openness by the State Services Commission is now a byword in Wellington”, and New Zealand is losing its open and accessible culture.

Similarly, Vernon Small has warned of the problem: “the threats to public service neutrality (or at least the appearance of neutrality) have not gone away.  Earth to Rennie. Come in please” – see: Public watchdogs need to bare their teeth over misuse of OIA, taxpayer events.

And for an example of the questionable role of spin doctors in government departments, see Kirsty Johnston’s article from last month, Ministry tried to mitigate risk posed by report. The article points out that such manipulation, has “raised queries about potential political interference in an independent body, plus a lack of transparency at the agencies.”

For more detail on many of these problems, including criticisms of the State Service Commission’s woeful Open Government Partnership initiative, see my earlier column, New Zealand’s closed government.

Taxpayer-funded politicisation

Much of the disquiet about the public service losing its integrity relates to the increasingly powerful role of taxpayer-funded political advisers working for parties in power. Spin doctors from Heather Simpson (under Helen Clark) to Jason Ede (starring in Dirty Politics) have played an effective personal role in shaping political and bureaucratic life from behind the scenes.

For more on this, see Brent Edwards’ Public Service Neutrality under Threat?  He reports the views of the PSA and Victoria University School of Government’s Chris Eichbaum, who both see the need for reform due to the politicising influence of these political advisers on the public service. Listen also to RNZ’s 28-minutes Insight programme, Politics and Public Service.

Similarly, on reviewing the Ombudsman’s Office report on the OIA, Richard Harman says “Perhaps the most revealing part of her report deals with the activities of Ministerial advisers, generally young people, often members of the National Party, who have varying degrees of influence within both their offices and over the departments their Ministers preside over” – see: How ministerial advisers thwart the Official Information Act.

The latest example of alleged attempts to use state resources for party campaigning, was highlighted by Labour’s Kris Faafoi, who uncovered an attempt by Government MPs to use the Housing ministry to increase the electoral chances of its candidates – see Isaac Davison’s National MP busted ‘trying to use taxpayer money for political campaigning’.

This was condemned by Vernon Small who believes the documents “show a disturbing willingness to use a taxpayer-funded event to promote a purely political agenda”, and that the close liaison of officials “with National Party headquarters takes the whole thing well outside the bounds of acceptability” – see: Public watchdogs need to bare their teeth over misuse of OIA, taxpayer events. He concluded “It will be interesting to hear whether the Auditor-General thinks taxpayers money has been mis-spent, or if State Service Commissioner Iain Rennie thinks a boundary has been crossed … and if he or the Ombudsman think the OIA has been rightly used or abused.”

Yet parliamentarians are seemingly always clamouring for more taxpayer funds to run their parties and campaigns. Claire Trevett reports that the latest parliamentary review of MP funding has recommended the parties get “an extra $5.2 million a year” – see: More funding ought to equal more transparency.

Trevett points out that existing funding is already used in a very opaque fashion for an array of activities including campaigning and partisan advertising, and she concludes “If MPs and parties want a big boost in funding, that should come hand in hand with similar transparency”.

David Farrar also says that some of this funding – the “leader’s budgets” (currently $3.7 million for National, $2.9 million for Labour, $1.3 million for the Greens) – are “really just a euphemism for slush fund. Millions of dollars in taxpayer funding disappear into these slush funds every year with little public accountability” – see: Greens wrong on Ministerial funding.

Cronyism in government

This year has seen an increased focus on ministerial appointments of people with close ties to the National Party. The best coverage of this issue came in August via Torben Akel’s ten-minute TV3 report on Jobs for the boys and the girls? Looking at partisan appointments, Akel found that the last Labour Government had made 30, while the current National Government has so far made 36.

More recently Duncan Garner has listed the latest selection of National appointments, including: John Carter, Tim Groser, Eric Roy, Wayne Mapp, Georgina Te Heuheu, Kate Wilkinson, Katherine Rich, Tau Henare, and Phil Heatley – see: Jobs for the boys… and girls. Garner says “Parliament is a cosy club where those in power rub the backs of their mates and those they like or owe favours to.  Sometimes it’s about giving them a job, to get them out of the way or to make way for someone else”.

Blogger No Right Turn has taken a close interest in ministerial appointments, blogging, for example, in July about a former National Party MP and party president being appointed to the Environmental Protection Authority – see: Another crony appointment, and then in November about the appointments of Tau Henare and Phil Heatley – see: More crony appointments.

He’s been using the OIA to get background information on such appointments, and relays the results in Another appointment from nowhere and The usual crony process. The latter is an extraordinary insight into the process, with the conclusion: “it’s clear from this that unless you are a National crony, there is simply no point in applying for a position under this government, as the outcomes of these recruitment processes have already been pre-determined.”

Risks of corruption in New Zealand

New Zealand enjoys its reputation for low corruption, but a number of reports this year suggest that complacency could be a problem. In March Deloitte released its Bribery and Corruption Survey 2015 for Australia and New Zealand. For the best news report on this see Richard Meadows’ Rising bribery and corruption tarnishing NZ image: Deloitte. See also Daniel King’s Bribery and corruption report should be ‘wake-up call’.

In June the World Justice Project published it’s 2015 Rule of Law Index, which ranked us 6th of the 102 countries surveyed – see Beith Atkinson’s blog post, New Zealand holds 6th place on Rule of Law Index. He points out that “The elements making up the New Zealand rank show a deterioration in four of the elements, an improvement in one and no change in the other three.” Perhaps of most concern, in this index New Zealand dropped from 3 to 6 in terms of “Absence of Corruption”.

In September the Chartered Accountants Australia and New Zealand published a paper titled Are Australia and New Zealand Corrupt? written by Victoria University’s Lisa Marriott. For the best news report on this, see Ellen Read’s CAANZ: Rising corruption a serious threat to New Zealand.

Chartered Accountants CEO, Lee White explained the research and reported “We also called for corruption to be one of the top risks discussed by the board. But, worryingly, the reality is that boards simply don’t see this as a priority” – see: Corruption – the next business battleground.

But the ultimate verdict will come when Transparency International publishes its annual Corruption Perception Index in late January. Last year New Zealand lost its top spot in the rankings, and numerous corruption-type scandals over the last 18-months could see us take a further tumble.

Government efforts against corruption

The Government’s major anti-corruption achievement of the year was ratifying the United Nations Convention Against Corruption – see: NZ signs UN convention against corruption. Unfortunately it took 12 years to go from signing the convention to getting it ratified. The final step was passing “new laws that tackle organised crime, money laundering and bribery” – see: Parliament passes anti-corruption Bill.

There is still some concern about the new rules making up New Zealand’s anti-corruption regime. The Government’s decision to continue to allow New Zealanders to make “facilitation payments” was widely criticised. For example, Michael Macaulay of the Institute for Governance and Policy Studies asked: Why is bribery still legal in New Zealand?

Macaulay explained that the new legislation “doesn’t necessarily go far enough.  Why? Because under certain circumstances, the Bill allows bribery to remain perfectly legal under New Zealand law.  For example, it is currently OK for New Zealanders to bribe foreign officials as long as the value of the benefit is small, and that it is paid to expedite an action the official would already do.  In other words, you can pay a bribe to get the job done quicker or more smoothly.”

Justice Minister Amy Adams justified the allowance of “facilitation payments” like this: “if you are operating overseas and you are offered a situation to perhaps pay $50 or $100 and go through a fast lane or get something processed as a priority application and the payment is small, it is in the usual course of activity” – see Jane Patterson’s thorough discussion of the issue in: ‘Facilitation payment’ does not condone bribes – Govt.

Despite criticisms of “facilitation payments”, the Government has still made a considerable achievement in introducing new measures to combat any corrupt practices of New Zealand companies operating overseas. The KPMG firm published a useful overview of these changes – see: Strengthening of Anti-Bribery and Corruption (ABC) laws.

Saudi Sheep scandal rolls on

Earlier in the year Murray McCully’s unorthodox deals involving sheep farming in Saudi Arabia became publically known and debated, which I covered first in my column The Bizarre “bribery” and flying sheep scandal, and then in Guilty or not? The Saudi sheep scandal.

The latest chapter in the scandal involves the Government agreeing to pay a further $2.5 million to build an abattoir – see RNZ’s Govt to build Saudi businessman abattoir. Apparently, “The abattoir will be gifted to the Saudi government then installed on the businessman’s farm in the Saudi desert, which the Government said doubles as a New Zealand agri-hub.”

The Government’s dealings over the issue are still opaque, with further refusals to supply information – see: Govt agency refuse to release Saudi sheep report.

Nonetheless, the Auditor-General’s report on her investigation into the controversy is due early next year. According to Matthew Hooton, this is part of the reason that John Key felt he had to bring Judith Collins back into Cabinet: “As we head toward 2016, senior ministers suspect the Auditor-General will soon throw the book at Foreign Minister Murray McCully over the Saudi sheep scandal but Mr Key may be unable for internal political reasons to sack him.  Mr Key could hardly deny Ms Collins her return to government having been cleared but then decline to act against Mr McCully when he has not.  The gender optics of such differential treatment would be awful” – see: Collins’ return a good signal to the right (paywalled).

But the return of Judith Collins – as covered in my column last week, The Political comeback of the year – is also being taken as a sign of the return of Dirty Politics. See, for example, today’s column by Bryan Gould: Kiwis scoffing at US politics on shaky ground.

Of course many other Government scandals of 2015 have also involved questionable transparency and integrity. These included the handling of the Mike Sabin Police investigation, and the Northland by-election bridge bribes – as examined this earlier column, The bizarre by-election – and the continued controversy about the unorthodox Government-commissioned convention centre in Auckland, as explained in my February column, Left and right unite against SkyCity ‘crony capitalism’. And other agencies of the state – such as the Police – were implicated in various clampdowns on journalists and researchers – see my columns, Libertarians against dirty politics and Police vs democracy.

Erosion of public information

There’s plenty to say about the erosion of the media’s ability to scrutinise power in New Zealand. But in relation to the role of the politicians themselves in escaping media scrutiny, Gordon Campbell made the observation last month about the increasing non-appearance of ministers and officials whenever questions arise about their policy areas – see: On being accountable, and holding the powerful to account.

Campbell says: “it seems as though the balance is tilting increasingly towards politicians (a) picking the interviewers/outlets to which they deign to make themselves available, while (b) dodging those they don’t like and (c) choosing to go AWOL when they land themselves in hot water. Whatever is driving this trend, it is eroding democratic accountability”.

New Zealand political and public debate will be worse off due to the forced closure of the Victoria University’s iPredict service – see Hamish Rutherford’s iPredict to close after Govt refuses anti-money laundering law exemption. And for more on the background and future situation, see Henry Oliver’s Cashing out: Prediction market iPredict closing its virtual doors but (maybe) opens a window.

Reaction has been strong from bloggers and commentators. For example, National Party blogger David Farrar says “The Government must be joking. Or high” and he calls it a “nuts decision”, complaining “So much for being a Government that believes in small Government and proportionate regulation!” – see: Government thinks iPredict is a money laundering risk! Similarly, see Eric Crampton’s iPredict ‘a thing of beauty’ and no sensible place to launder money.

Finally, although it’s surely entirely unconnected, it’s worth noting that Simon Bridges – who made the decision about iPredict – may have ambitions of being the next National Party leader, but iPredict’s trading currently only gives him a 3% chance.

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NewsRoom Digest: Top NZ News Items for December 15 Edition, 2015

Newsroom Digest

This edition of NewsRoom_Digest features 15 resourceful links of the day and the politics pulse from Tuesday 15th December. It is best viewed on a desktop screen.

NEWSROOM_MONITOR

Noteworthy stories in the current news cycle include Commerce Commission approval for Chorus to raise the price it can charge for access to its network, responses to a proposal to open up a road between Westport and Nelson across Kahurangi National Park and the release of the Children’s Commissioner’s latest Child Poverty Report,

POLITICS PULSE

Media releases issued from Parliament by political parties today included:

Government: New report on safety from violence highlights key factors for Samoan women; Rheumatic fever campaign evaluation positive; Minister opens Cambridge section of $2.1 billion Waikato Expressway; Auckland’s social housing growth continues; Gaining better understanding of treatment injury; Public has its say on future of education;Christmas cheer for Settling In fund recipients; New Zealand’s dairy food safety capability in good shape; Disability Action Plan and Disability Strategy being updated; Support for Pacific language education

Greens: Govt inaction on poverty killing kids; Surplus gone, time to concentrate on serious economic issues; Consumers pay the price of broadband decision

Labour: Lotu Iiga must come clean on rumoured u-turn; Poverty grim reality for many Kiwi kids; Govt gets its way – phone line prices going up; Surplus sideshow over, time for action

New Zealand First: CAA Risks Losing Public Trust Over Armstrong Prosecution; Let’s Go With New West Coast Tourism Road; Kiwirail Must Come Clean On New Problems With Floating Scrap Heap

LINKS OF THE DAY

$2.1 BILLION EXPRESSWAY: The Cambridge section of the $2.1 billion Waikato Expressway was opened today. For more information go to: http://www.nzta.govt.nz/waikatoexpressway

BANKS SUPPORT FARMERS: The latest Federated Farmers Banking Survey shows a virtually unchanged level of farmer support for banks over the past three months of low dairy prices, with 80.5% satisfied with banks regarding mortgages compared to 80.7% in August.Survey results can be found here:http://www.wiredmail.co.nz/clients/74/img/files/Banking%20survey%20results%20-%20December%202015.pdf

BROADBAND PRICES: The Commerce Commission has today released its final decision setting the prices that Chorus can charge for use of its local copper lines and broadband service over the next five years. Read more:http://bit.ly/1ofpQNm

CHILD POVERTY MONITOR: The Office of the Children’s Commission released the Child Poverty Monitor 2015. The report can be viewed at: http://www.childpoverty.co.nz/

CLOSED COURT: In a report on the use and protection of national security information in legal proceedings, the Law Commission says a court should be able to order a closed session to consider rare cases involving classified and security sensitive information. Read more; http://www.lawcom.govt.nz/media-release/law-commission-review-use-national-security-information-legal-proceedings

DAIRY SECTOR VULNERABILITIES: The Reserve Bank today published a Bulletin article, ‘An updated assessment of dairy sector vulnerabilities’. The article investigates the severity of cash flow pressures currently facing dairy farmers, and assesses the potential financial stability implications if the payout remains low for an extended period. Read more:http://www.rbnz.govt.nz/research_and_publications/reserve_bank_bulletin/2015/

DISABILITY ACTION PLAN: The updated Disability Action Plan 2014 – 2018 and the first steps in the revision of the New Zealand Disability Strategy was announced today. The Updated Disability Action Plan 2014 – 2018 is available at: http://www.odi.govt.nz/what-we-do/ministerial-committee-on-disability-issues/disability-action-plan/index.html Nominations for the New Zealand Disability Strategy Reference Group is available at:http://www.odi.govt.nz/nzds/2016-revision/reference-group/index.html

FUTURE OF EDUCATION: Submissions on the proposed update of the Education Act closed last night 1814 submissions had been received. A report summarising submission themes will be made available on the Ministry’s website in early 2016 here: http://www.education.govt.nz/education-act-udpate.

GOVT FINANCES: The Treasury released its latest forecast for 2016. The Half Year Economic and Fiscal Update and Budget Policy Statement are available at:www.treasury.govt.nz/budget/2016/bps andwww.treasury.govt.nz/budget/forecasts/hyefu2015

MILK PRICE: The Commerce Commission today released its final report on its statutory review of Fonterra’s Milk Price Manual for the 2015/16 dairy season. Read more: http://bit.ly/1O12jbE

NITROGEN REPORTS: Dairy farmers around the country can access free support to help them come to grips with their farm nitrogen reports and how to use them to support N-loss improvements, thanks to a partnership between Ballance Agri-Nutrients, Fonterra, Tatua and Dairy Women’s Network, and DairyNZ. The link to the resources, including videos and workbooks, is: http://www.ballance.co.nz/Our-CoOp/Sustainability/Farm-Nitrogen-Reports

RHEUMATIC FEVER EVALUATION: The independent evaluation by Allen + Clarke Policy and Regulatory Specialists Ltd describes the rheumatic fever campaign as efficient, effective and relevant. The evalution is available at:http://www.health.govt.nz/publication/evaluation-2015-rheumatic-fever-awareness-campaign

SETTLING IN FUND: A total of $315,820 in funding has been approved for 48 applicants from not-for-profit organisations working with refugees and migrants. The money comes from the Office of Ethnic Communities’ Settling In fund. Read more: http://ethniccommunities.govt.nz/story/2015-2016-settling-funding-round

SEXUAL VIOLENCE COURT: The Law Commission has completed a review of trial processes in sexual violence cases and makes recommendations for change. More details at: http://www.lawcom.govt.nz/our-projects/alternative-models-prosecuting-and-trying-criminal-cases?id=1270

VIOLENCE FREE SAMOAN WOMEN: The report, A malu i ‘āiga, e malu fo’i i fafo: Protection for the family, protection for all, exploring protective factors in keeping Samoan women and girls safe from violence, was developed by the Ministry for Women in partnership with the Ministries for Pacific Island Affairs and Social Development. The report is available http://women.govt.nz/news/keeping-samoan-women-free-violence

And that’s our sampling of “news you can use” for Tuesday 15th December.

Brought to EveningReport by Newsroom Digest.

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