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Dear Friend,
NEW POLL: Centre Right could form
government while Greens see bump in support 📊🟢
Exclusively for our supporters like you, here are the results of
June's Taxpayers’ Union – Curia Poll:
National is unchanged from last month on 36% while
Labour drops 1 point to 33%. ACT is also unchanged on 13% while the
Greens are up 3 points to 10%.
The smaller parties are the Māori Party 3.5% (-0.2 points),
NZ First on 1.6% (-1 point), New Conservatives on 1.3% (-0.3 points),
Democracy NZ on 0.9% (+0.6 points), and TOP on 0.8% (-0.9
points).
Here is how these results would translate to seats in the 120-seat
Parliament, assuming all electorate seats are held:
National is unchanged on last month
on 46 seats while Labour is down 2 seats to 42. ACT remains constant
on 16 seats while the Greens pick up 3 seats to a total of 12. The
Māori Party is down 1 seat on last month to 4.
The combined projected seats for the Centre Right of 62 seats
is unchanged on last month and would allow them to form a government.
Following National's decision to rule out working with the
Māori Party, we are now including their seats in the Centre-Left
bloc. Given that the Green gains have come at the expense of Labour
and the Māori Party, the Centre Left's total is unchanged on last
month at 58 seats.
Some good news for Christopher Luxon in the favourability
stakes 📈🔵
Net favourability is a measure of the number people who have
a favourable view of a politician minus those who have an unfavourable
view. A positive score means more people have a favourable view of
someone than unfavourable while a negative rating means the
reverse.
Chris Hipkins drops 3 points to a net favourability of +19%.
While still some way behind the Prime Minister, Christopher Luxon
jumps 5 points for a net favourability rating of -2%.
David Seymour has a net favourability of -4% (+7 points)
while Māori Party co-leaders, Rawiri Waititi and Debbie
Ngarewa-Packer, have net favourability ratings of -26% and -27%,
respectively.
Among undecided voters, it is now an effective tie in the net
favourability stakes between the two candidates for Prime Minister as
Chris Hipkins drops 36 points to -6% while Christopher Luxon increases
19 points to -7%. David Seymour has the highest net favourability
among undecided voters of those politicians we included of +5%.
Visit
our website for more information and details of how to get access to
the full polling report.
David Parker U-Turns Under Pressure From Taxpayers’
Union ↩️⚖️
Our Hands
Off Our Homes: Stop Central Planning Committees roadshow is
well under way. We’re traversing the length and breadth of the country
from Invercargill to Whangārei to raise awareness about
the Government's latest power grab. By increasing the profile of this
issue, we are putting pressure on the Government to scrap these
undemocratic reforms.
And we have already made some progress.
We invited all Members of Parliament, mayors
and councillors to come along and listen to voters' concerns about
these reforms and give their own view about the proposals. On the
very first day of our roadshow, I received an email from Minister
Parker where he refused to attend one of our events as they were,
apparently, "political grandstanding".
While he clearly wasn't interested in
hearing what New Zealanders think, he did confirm a Government back
down.
Under his original plans, these reforms
would have given the new National Māori Entity the ability to monitor
and issue directions to the Minister and all bodies acting under these
new laws, including the Environment Court. This prompted an
unprecedented intervention from the Chief Justice, Dame Helen
Winkelmann, who said such an approach was "inconsistent with New
Zealand's constitutional arrangements".
In his email, Minister Parker announced that
the Government would remove National Māori Entity oversight of the
Environment Court. This simply goes to show that our efforts are
already making a difference. Everyone who signs
and shares our petition, or comes
along to one of our roadshow events, or buys a banner
or yard
sign, is applying pressure on the Government.
It is a small step in the right direction,
but we will continue to ramp up our campaign. These planning reforms
are so bad that they must be withdrawn and the Government must go back
to the drawing board.
ACT announces plans to slash red tape ✂️🟡
Here at the Taxpayers' Union, we believe that excessive
regulation is holding New Zealand back. Red tape hampers productivity
and growth by putting costly and unnecessary barriers in the way of
working, operating a business, or making improvements to your
property.
But unlike tax and spend policies, the introduction of new
regulations often receives little scrutiny. The current lack of
careful analysis often leads to the implementation of unworkable
rules, which in turn produce unintended consequences. In many cases,
the costs associated with such regulations far outweigh any potential
benefits they may bring.
Last weekend, ACT announced a policy to create a new Ministry for
Regulation run by a minister responsible for subjecting proposals for
new regulations to the same level of scrutiny we give to public
spending. The Minister would also have the responsibility of reviewing
existing regulations to see whether those that are unnecessarily
burdensome can be scrapped.
We are generally cautious of proposals to create a new Ministry –
there are far too many already – but we believe that this may be one
of the few exceptions. Too often cost/benefit analyses can be a
tick-box exercise, but having a Minister specifically charged with
casting a critical eye over new and existing regulations will ensure
that preventing and reducing unnecessary red tape will be given the
priority it requires.
Michael Wood must resign over shares scandal 🔍❌
At the time of writing, Michael Wood remains a Minister and has
only been temporarily relieved of his transport portfolio. In the
unlikely event that you missed it, Michael Wood failed to declare his
financial conflict of interest in Auckland Airport despite being the
minister responsible for rules around aviation and the wasteful
Auckland Light Rail to the airport.
While the story is news to the public, it
apparently isn't to Michael Wood. Two-and-a-half years ago, he
was instructed by the Cabinet Office to sell his shares to ensure that
his financial interest would not influence his decision making.
Despite assurances that he would do so, Minister Wood only just sold
his shares this week after the story appeared on the front page of the
NZ Herald.
And this wasn't just a case of the Minister
being careless and forgetting to sell the shares after a single
reminder. The Cabinet Office told him to sell the shares not once, not
twice, but a staggering twelve times. On at least one occasion, the
Minister actually told the Jacinda Ardern's office that the shares had
been sold despite this being demonstrably false. In addition, we
now know that Minister Wood mislead the media, in response to a
question from Newsroom about the accuracy of his interests register
decorations.
Call us old fashioned, but we remember when
Labour Ministers were sacked (or forced to quit) for lying to the
media, let alone, the Prime Minister. Just
ask Lianne Dalziel...
We say it is simply untenable for Michael
Wood to remain a Minister. Chris Hipkins should have taken swift
action to remove Wood from office immediately to send a clear signal
that this type of conduct is unacceptable. This demonstrates a lack of
respect to New Zealanders who expect our MPs – and Ministers
especially – to be transparent (and honest).
As the Prime Minister isn't taking decisive
action, we have set up a petition calling on Michael Wood to do the
honourable thing and resign. You
can add your name here.
Thank you for your support.
Yours aye,
|
Callum
Purves Campaigns Manager New Zealand
Taxpayers’ Union.
|
Media
coverage:
NZ Herald On the Tiles: Episode 54 – The challenges facing
National pre-election (01:51)
Stuff Where is the Green Party at for the upcoming election
campaign?
TVNZ Donations, voting age: Panel recommends sweeping
election changes
Wairarapa Times-Age Groups link up to oppose RMA
plan
whatsoninvers.nz Huge Response In Southland To Hands Off Homes
Roadshow
Otago Daily Times Mayor's comments on media funding labelled
ignorant
The News Addressing the people
Southland
Times Gore District Council chief executive breaks his
silence on bullying claims
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