📌 View
Online | 🚀Share on Facebook | 📬 Forward this
Email
Hi Friend,
In this week's Taxpayer Update, we celebrate another
Taxpayer Victory that ensures your money isn't being spent on creating
conflict and reveal, yet again, more issues at Wellington City
Council.
But first, after a post-election Summer break, our exclusive
Taxpayers' Union – Curia poll is back!
NEW POLL: Big boost for ACT sees Nats and ACT
able to govern alone 🟡📈
February's Taxpayers' Union – Curia poll was conducted
over the period including Waitangi Day. ACT's proposed Treaty
Principles Bill might have been receiving a lot of heat in the media,
but it doesn't seem to have done the party any harm in the polls. In
fact, these results suggest the opposite.
National is up 2.6 points on our last poll in November
2023 to 39.6% while Labour drops marginally to 27.9% (-0.4 points).
ACT is up significantly to 13.7% (+5.6%) while the Greens are down
substantially to 9.0% (-4.8 points).
The smaller parties are NZ First on 5.0% (-1.0 points),
Te Pāti Māori on 2.3% (-1.1% points), and others combined were on
2.5%.
Here is how these results would translate to seats in the
Parliament:
National is up 3 seats on November 2023 to 49 while
Labour is unchanged on 35 seats. ACT has jumped up 7 seats to 17 while
the Greens are down 6 seats to 11. NZ First is down 2 seats to 6 while
Te Pāti Māori is unchanged also on 6 seats. Parliament would have 123
seats as it does now due to an overhang created by the Māori
electorates.
The combined projected seats for the Centre-Right of 72
seats is up 8 from November 2023 while the Centre-Left is down 7
seats. This is the biggest gap between blocs since Sep 2021 when the
Centre-Left led by 27 seats.
Victory for the taxpayer: NZ Government pauses
funding for UN agency linked to terrorism in
Gaza ⏸️💰
Last week saw a quick taxpayer victory following a fast response
campaign from the Taxpayers' Union after news broke
that UNRWA employees are not just implicated in the 7th October
massacres in Israel, but – according
to reporting by the Wall Street Journal – 10% of UNRWA employees
are linked to terrorist groups including Hamas.
While minds may differ on the Gaza conflict, when an agency we as
taxpayers are funding is being accused of funding terrorism, it's
certainly right to hit pause and take a proper look! The
Government agreed. Within a day of our campaign, the Government
announced it was pausing taxpayer funding for UNRWA until it can be
confident that the relief agency's staff are not linked to terror
activity.
The New Zealand Government now joins Australia, Canada, Britain,
the EU and others in looking to divert funding away from UNRWA to
organisations like the Red Cross and World Food Programme.
Thanks to those who added their voice, wrote to Ministers, and
reminded the Government that Kiwis expect our foreign aid budget to be
spent working for humanitarian relief, not fuelling the conflict.
More Chaos in Wellington City Council ✂️
Last week, Wellington
City Council proposed a number of cost-saving measures to free up
funds for its ailing water infrastructure.
Unfortunately, it seems the Council is going after core services
people value such as the libraries before the glaringly obvious vanity
projects are put on the chopping block.
Take, for example, the
news Wellington City Council is spending an ‘undisclosed’ amount of
money to install bilingual parking meters:
Wellington City Council has decided
to replace its parking meter system at a cost it will not disclose,
despite paying $1.5 million to install a new sensor network as
recently as 2016.
The new pay-by-plate meters that
went live this month are a paperless system that uses a vehicle
licence plate number, rather than a numbered car park, to record
parking time and payment.
The meters also offer the choice of
English or te reo Māori instructions, which the council says supports
its commitment to Pōneke becoming a bilingual city.
[continue
reading on the NZ Herald here]
Your humble Taxpayers' Union has had to use the new meters
(they are right outside out office). The 'new' meters are clunky, and
clearly a step down from the old ones. Instead of an off-the-shelf
solution, the boffins at the City Council had these custom build so
that you can pay your parking taxes using te
reo prompts. Strangely, we're yet to meet a Wellington ratepayer
saying kai pai! 👏
And Wellington Water can’t be trusted either… 🚰
At about the same time, a
scathing report into Wellington Water’s operational performance shambles was
released. It shows Wellington Water is incapable of delivering its
services efficiently, failing to sufficiently report on the quality of
its operations, failing to meet key contract obligations with
Wellington City Council. Despite spending 71% more on maintenance year
on year, the quality is getting no better!
It’s now evident that the water provider needs a complete overhaul
to get its priorities straight and spend its money efficiently.
Our
replacement to the last government's Three Waters can't come soon
enough!
And the Council secrecy continues… 🤐
Long time readers will recall the endless tales of cloak and dagger
with Wellington City Council, where Council officials have hidden
critical reports and key information from elected officials. True to
form, officials
tried to bury the bad news and refused provide a copy of the draft
Wellington Water report to councillors who had previously only
been shown parts of it on a screen during a closed workshop.
To state the obvious, how can we expect good governance at local
town halls, when those who are supposed to be in charge (and
accountable to ratepayers at the ballot box) are being drip fed
information. Here at the Taxpayers' Union, we are working
with some of New Zealand's most respected councillors to give elected
officials more rights to go round their CEOs and access information
(even if it isn't welcome news). More to come on this...
Nearly 15,000 Signatures on Petition for Media to Return Taxpayer
Funding 📝
With the pandemic over, and most media companies back in the black,
we say they should do the right thing and return their Public Interest
Journalism Funding (PIJF) to protect their independence and the
public's trust.
While people hold a range of views as to whether this funding
undermined the actual independence of newsrooms, what is undeniable is
that the perception of independence was certainly
eroded.
Our petition calling for the media to help restore public trust and
confidence in their profession by paying back all taxpayer funding has
almost hit 15,000 signatures. If
you haven't already signed, add your name here so we can get it over
the line.
MPs in Depth: National MP Greg
Flemming🎙️
The latest episode of Taxpayer Talk is another edition in
our MPs in Depth podcast series where we get to know
Parliament's new MPs. In this episode, Jordan sat down with newly
elected National Party MP, Greg Fleming.
Greg tells us about his journey into politics and how he formed his
political ideology, starting with an egg business at age nine and
eventually leading to his founding of the Maxim Institute think
tank.
This podcast gives a fascinating insight into what makes Greg tick
and is well worth a listen.
Listen to the episode on our
website | Apple | Spotify | Google
Podcasts | iHeart Radio
Other News in Brief ⏰
-
We challenged
the Government to go further and faster in reducing the size of
the public service to help get inflation and interest rates under
control. We
also slammed them for asking department CEO's – the same people
responsible for staff numbers ballooning by up to 50% – to identify
cost savings rather than having Ministers going through with a fine
tooth comb to identify those wasteful projects that the CEOs don't
want cut.
- ACT called for a simpler and flatter tax system with fewer income
tax brackets. We
responded by urging them to be more aspirational and aim for a
flat tax instead which would be simple, fair and encourage
productivity while allowing people to keep more of their own
money.
- Nicola Willis's app tax was dealt a blow when it was revealed that
she had not read a joint letter from the large app-based service
providers requesting an urgent meeting to discuss how unworkable the
new tax will be. We
told National to focus on cutting waste, rather than hiking taxes
on summer holiday Airbnbs.
That's it for this week.
Yours aye,
|
Callum Purves Head of
Campaigns New Zealand
Taxpayers’ Union
|
Media
mentions:
NZ Herald Act
Party supports calls for Tauranga’s commission to act in caretaker
role
SunLive ACT
backs call to make commissioners
"caretakers"
NewstalkZB The
Huddle: Why haven't MFAT pulled their funding from
NRWA?
Kiwiblog Taxpayer
funded conspiracy theories
BusinessDesk Business
of Government: marking your own homework, silo mentalities and more
...
Newsroom Nats’
summer slumber lets ‘rabid dog’ run amok
NZ
Herald Napier
City Council indicates possible record rates rise for
Napier
Wairarapa Times-Age Lobby
group's wages war
Newstalk
ZB Morning
Edition: 02 February 2024 –
Selwyn proposed rate
hikes (02:27)
BusinessDesk On
the Money: Milky bonds, flamboyantly dressed accountants and more
...
Newstalk ZB The
Huddle: What else can we expect ahead of Waitangi
Day
NZ Herald Act
launches Treaty principles referendum campaign to twist National’s
arm
NZ Herald Treaty
of Waitangi: Christopher Luxon cannot stop voters having their say on
Act’s bill
Waikato Times Hamilton
rate hikes set to ‘crush’ whānau, MP warns
Press
Releases:
Taxpayers’
Union Calls On Public Service Cuts To Go Further, Faster
Income
Tax System Should be Flat, not ‘Flatter’
Taxpayers’
Union calls on NZ Government to follow international counterparts and
pull UNRWA funding
Wellington
Ratepayers Reliant on Leaks for Info on Leaky Pipes
New
Zealanders elected a Government to cut waste, not have Ministers take
lazy route and delegate to CEOs
Taxpayers’
Union Welcomes New Zealand Joining EU & International Partners in
Pausing UNRWA Funding
National
Party U-Turn Robbing Kiwis of a Summer Holiday
Double-Digit
Rate Hikes Across Councils Cannot Become The Norm
New
Zealand Must Advocate For Tobacco Harm Reduction At
COP10
Government
Could Reduce Prices With The Stroke Of A Pen
Red
Tape Won’t Keep Rooves Over Wellingtonians’ Heads
Hamilton
City Council’s Never-Ending Rate Hikes Are
Unjustifiable
|