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Hi Friend,
It's definitely election season with the spending bribes announcements
coming in thick and fast. Your humble taxpayer advocates are keeping
count and will be 'keeping 'em honest' in the weeks to
come.
The main news this week has been Labour's new tax policy.
Here at the Taxpayers' Union we love tax relief. But Chris Hipkins
has achieved the impossible: Proposing a tax cut that even we don't
like! We
didn't think it was possible.
While the heath system declines, we blow the whistle on
a one million dollar 'wellbeing' website funded by the
Māori Health
Authority, sorry, taxpayers.
And last of all we respond to the hundreds of emails
received last week questioning whether Ruth Richardson really
still uses a Blackberry.
A Tale of Two Taxes: A few cents off fruit and
veg 🥝🥕
On Sunday, we had Labour's much anticipated tax announcement. But
it was something of a damp squib. The Prime Minister made just two
announcements: A big bit of jam for the base in the form of an
increase to the Working for Families tax credit and one to get the
headlines, the removal of GST off fresh and frozen fruit and
vegetables.
This is same policy that Finance Minister, Grant Robertson,
described as a 'boondoggle'. The old Mr Robertson clearly
understood that the reduction in GST would unlikely be passed onto
customers in full and would simply line the pockets of the big
supermarket chains while also making our tax system more
complicated.
These policies coupled with things like previous announcements
on free prescriptions, free childcare and public transport
subsidies are sticking plaster solutions that fail to tackle the root
cause of the financial problems Kiwi families are facing. High
inflation has been driven by high government spending and
this, in turn, has forced Kiwis to pay a higher share of their wages
in tax each and every year. If politicians really want to help Kiwi
families, those are the issues they need to
tackle.
Here's how: Cut wasteful spending and provide proper tax relief
across the board to Kiwi families and job creators. Fundamentally,
tweaking GST carve outs and increasing welfare isn't charting a course
for a more ambitious and prosperous New Zealand.
But another massive fuel tax hike to
come ⛽🤑
Rather than tax relief, on Thursday we got an announcement of
another tax hike. To fund their new $20 billion transport plan, the
Government intends to hike fuel taxes by a 14c per litre (that's 12
cents plus the GST) over the next three years. Let's not
forget that fuel taxes were only just increased by 29c per litre on 1
July this year!
The whole point of petrol taxes is to raise money to fund road
maintenance and investment – those who use the roads most should pay
the most for their upkeep. But for years politicians have been using
it as a slush fund for public transport and cycleways. The
announcement suggests motorists are going to continue to be used as
cash cows to prop up even more non-road projects.
Fuel taxes hit those in rural communities and the poor – for whom
fuel is a bigger share of their income – the hardest. Despite
tough talk on supporting those on low incomes, the Government seems
intent on putting fuel taxes up to a level where half of the cost of
filling up will be tax again.
Kiwis think public services are getting
worse 🏥📉
Spending on health is up 48% since the
last election yet A&E waiting times are through the roof. Law and
order spending has increased by 27%, but the country is gripped by
ram-raiding and violent crime. And education spending is up 15% while
attendance problems persist and literacy and numeracy rates remain
poor.
This
week The Post reported on our Taxpayers' Union –
Curia polling that showed New Zealanders clearly see they are
getting a raw deal with more respondents saying they thought services
had got worse rather than better in all five service areas we asked
about. Even Labour voters thought education, transport, health
and criminal justice have got worse.
Christopher
Luxon put our poll's findings to the Prime Minister at Question Time
on Wednesday, but Mr Hipkins refused to engage. We have a
Government whose only answer to any problem is to blindly chuck more
of taxpayers’ money on consultants and middle-managers. We urgently
need to see a reduction in wasteful spending.
Taxpayers' Union Investigation: Māori Health Authority’s million
dollar website 🔍💻
This week, Taxpayers' Union, Investigations
Co-ordinator, Ollie Bryan revealed that Te Aka Whai Ora (Māori Health
Authority) has spent an eye-watering $1,000,000 on their new Aroā
Wellbeing website that invites users to 'scroll through the
forest' to 'cleanse', 'breathe' and 'connect'.
While $300,000 was spent on the website's design and creation, the
Ministry could not provide the detail of how the remaining $700,000
was allocated as it did "not hold information on breakdown of costs
into areas such as music, voice actors, and graphic design." The
website has only been viewed 47,784, which translates into $20 for
each single view.
Kiwis are still struggling to get the mental health support they
despite a $1.9 billion spend and action needs to be taken to improve
outcomes. This money could have instead be used to fund thousands of
counselling sessions through a charity or more mental health
nurses.
Taxpayer Talk with Mark Mitchell 🎙️🎧
This week on Taxpayer Talk, our Executive
Director, Jordan Williams, sits down with National Party Police
Spokesperson, Mark Mitchell, to discuss National’s plan for law and
order if they are successful in the election later this year.
Jordan and Mark discuss the increasing levels of crime
in New Zealand, gang numbers, and what the National Party would do
should they be in Government after the election. They also cover the new firearms
registry, whether it will make the country more safe and if it is
worth the significant establishment costs.
Listen to the episode | Apple | Spotify | Google Podcasts | iHeart Radio
And one more thing: Yes, Ruth Richardson still owns a
Blackberry 🤳🏻📞
Last week,
Ruth Richardson sent many of our supporters an email about New
Zealand's serious debt problem. We were surprised to receive quite a
number of replies from people who couldn't quite believe the
'Sent from my BlackBerry' sign off at the bottom. We asked Ruth to
furnish us with photographic evidence of her preferred
telecommunications device and, yes, she is, in fact, possibly the last
remaining BlackBerry user on the planet. You can't beat that
full keyboard!
Thank you for your continued support.
Yours aye,
|
Callum
Purves Campaigns Manager New Zealand
Taxpayers’ Union.
|
Media
coverage:
NZ Herald Election
2023: New poll shows Labour crashing, NZ First rising, and
National-Act with enough support to
govern
RNZ POLITICS
ELECTION 202310 Aug 2023 Taxpayers Union poll suggests seven seats for
NZ First, in opposition
Hawke's Bay
Today Tararua
rates ‘middle of the pack’
The Spinoff Another
poll shows NZ First would be back in parliament
NZ
Herald Claire
Trevett: Latest poll - Labour now at risk of collapse, driving voters
to the Greens
RNZ The
Panel with Anna Dean and Phil O'Reilly (Part 1) – TU Curia
Poll
interest.co.nz The
latest Taxpayers' Union poll shows NZ First could be back in
parliament with Winston Peters at the helm of a 7-person
caucus
The Daily Blog BOOM:
Latest TU Curia Poll: Labour crash – Winston is
back
The Common Room Hipkins’
government enters election season in
disarray
Pacific Media News PMN
News 10 August 2023 – TU Curia
Poll
NewstalkZB Six
And a Song - The Election Edition: NZ First's Winston
Peters
NewstalkZB Afternoon
Edition: 10 August 2023 – TU Curia Poll
(01:20)
NewstalkZB THE
HUDDLE: DOES ACT'S SENTENCING POLICY HAVE MERIT? The Huddle: Does
ACT's sentencing policy have merit?
RNZ Taking
the public pulse with political polls
Waikato
Times Thames
joins Innovating Streets project flops
NZ
Herald Water
reforms: Alternative plan from Taxpayers’ Union ready by October
elections
Politik He’s back
NBR Jackson
vs Seymour, Remuera lawyer-angst, Hallenstein over
boards
Stuff Labour's
new polling 'shows rosier picture' for
party
NewstalkZB Brigette
Morten: Political commentator examines latest Taxpayers' Union Curia
poll
AM Show Election
2023: Labour does 'absolutely not' have plans to replace Chris Hipkins
before voting day - Ginny Andersen
RNZ Political
Panel – TU Curia Poll
Radio Samoa Sau
i luma le vaa o le NZ First – palota a le Taxpayers
Union
Waatea News Peters
ready to plant more trees
The Platform The
Taxpayers' Union explains their new significant
poll
The Kākā by Bernard Hickey Our
world-beating banks + AMA
The Westport
News Buller District Council says staff numbers are wrong
[print only]
NZ City Minor
conservative parties could pull support from the right bloc this
election
The Post Labour's
not dead, but it's lurching into last-gasp
territory
Newshub Nation 'Luxon
has a very difficult decision to make': NZ First's polling - Jordan
Williams
Newshub Nation '30-40%
of people haven't fully made their mind up, there's votes to win'
The Central App Mayor’s
column: Council debt - fact and
fiction
Kiwiblog Proactive
work on a Three Waters replacement
Bush
Telegraph Report says council rates are average [print
only]
The Listener Wealth tax or food GST
exemption: Which could make our tax system fairer?
The
Post Green
Party's 'zero carbon' loans will compete with banks' no-interest
energy efficiency home loan top-ups
The
Spinoff Will
Labour choke on its GST-free food policy?
The
Platform David
Farrar on New Zealand politics and polls
The
Platform Mainstream
media mired in mistrust
Croaking
Cassandra The
$11bn men and women of the MPC
The
Post Voters
to Labour: key govt services worse since 2020 -
poll
NBR Fairer
supermarket profit more important than GST on/off
fruit
The Northland Age FROM THE OTHER
SIDE Kids need rules -- they did me no harm as a child [print
only]
NZ Herald Government
unveils $20b transport plan - but fuel taxes going up 12 cents to pay
for it
NZ Herald Government’s
$20b transport plan: Auckland Mayor Wayne Brown and the AA support
fuel tax hike to pay for major projects
Hawke's Bay
Today Labour
Party candidate Mark Hutchinson opts out of televised Napier
electorate debate
NewstalkZB Kerre
Woodham: With an election approaching, Labour have fallen in love with
roads
NZ Herald On
the Tiles – Episode 62: Political polls - how do they work?
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