Dear Supporter,
Will Winston put the kibosh on the Ihumātao deal?
After months of delays, it's been reported
again that the Government is on the verge of purchasing the land
at Ihumātao using $30 million of taxpayer money.
This would be a disgraceful capitulation to illegal occupiers.
However, we understand that New Zealand First Leader
Winston Peter is furious about the deal and had a tense exchange with
the Prime Minister on Tuesday night. He has the power to
block the deal at the 11th hour and gain huge publicity.
Jordan texted Winston yesterday to remind him of our
petition against the deal, which has 11,000 signatures. We're
watching very closely.
Petition launched for resignation of David Clark
Health Minister Dr David Clark was missing in action for
virtually all of the COVID-19 pandemic after repeatedly breaching his
own guidelines by travelling unnecessarily, mountain biking when that
was forbidden, and moving house and his office at the exact time he
was requiring people to stay home and work from home.
And now he's overseen a series of quarantine failures: most
spectacularly, the two COVID-19 positive women who were allowed to
travel the length of the North Island without being tested.
In fact, 51 out of 55 quarantined individuals released
under compassionate exemptions were not tested. That is disgraceful
and Dr Clark has accepted no responsibility.
He's now been shunted away from the media, with Megan Woods
brought in as a "Dr Fix-It". Why keep David Clark on a $300,000
salary?
We've launched a petition calling on the Prime Minister to
immediately sack the Minister for his repeated failures in response to
the COVID-19 pandemic.
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Click here to sign the petition <--
Electoral Commission investigating 'Aroha'
posters
We're glad to hear that the posters of Jacinda Ardern
plastered across the country have been taken down while the
Electoral Commission investigates whether they count as election
advertisements.
The posters are clearly advertisements: by the artist's own
admission, they are drawn in a "propaganda style" and are inspired by
the famous "Hope" posters of Barack Obama.
This means they need a promoter statement and should fall
within election spending limits.
If the Commission finds that the posters are legit, we'll be
surprised, but it means we can crowdfund our own poster campaign. Our
posters could look like this:
Ratepayer heroes! Horowhenua Council CUTS rates in response to
COVID-19
This is what leadership looks like. Horowhenua District
Council hasn't just frozen rates – it's cut
them by 1.83% in response to COVID-10 hardships.
The Mayor and his officials wanted higher rates, but six out
of eleven Horowhenua Councillors seized their democratic
responsibility and put the interests of ratepayers first.
Well done to Councillors Wayne Bishop, Victoria
Kaye-Simmons, Todd Isaac, Robert Ketu, Pirihira Tukapua and Sam
Jennings.
Yes, the Council will have to cut employee costs and sacrifice
spending plans, but it’s a necessary sacrifice that reflects the
cut-backs being made in households across the country.
Ultimately, this move will make Levin and surrounding
areas better off. More money in ratepayers’ pockets means more demand
for local goods and services. And ratepayers from other parts
of the country will be looking on in envy – perhaps even considering a
move!
Is your local council hiking rates? Contact them NOW and tell
them what Horowhenua District Council has
done.
Petition launched: Keep it The Tron!
As if New Zealand doesn't have bigger issues to debate, Newshub,
Stuff,
and RNZ
are all reporting on calls to change the name of Hamilton to
"Kirikiriroa".
If the Council considers a name change, it will mean a
divisive consultation process, a potential referendum,
ratepayer-funded revamps of branding and signage, and staff and
councillors' time wasted.
The change would then be considered by the New Zealand
Geographic Board, meaning taxpayers across the country cough
up.
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Click here to sign our petition against the name change
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We say Hamilton City Council should ignore the vocal
minority and stick to their core business of delivering value for
ratepayers.
There's also the suggestion the Council could go for a "compromise"
option of a dual name. Based on previous government and council
rebrands, we can imagine the new council logo looking like this:
As if that will make anyone happy!
A surprise from Labour's list ranking...
Last week Labour revealed
their updated Party list for the 2020 election.
We were astonished to see Phil Twyford moved from #5 up to #4 after
his calamitous management of KiwiBuild, and more recently, his total
failure to deliver his Auckland tram project.
(In fact, Twyford has now confirmed he's given
up on Auckland Light Rail this side of the election. That project
was the main reason for increased fuel taxes, so why is he planning to
hike fuel tax again on 1 July?!)
For fun, I also researched Labour's lowest-ranked candidates. At
the very bottom, #84, is a teacher unionist named Georgie Densey. Her
Twitter page has one post, where she shares this praise of Metiria
Turei:
Interesting.
How would this look on a billboard?
National MP Nick Smith has
revealed that Parliament's architecturally designed playground –
which is basically just a slide and some stepping stones – went
$172,000 over budget.
All up, the design, construction, landscaping, and engineering fees
totalled $572,000.
We plan to make taxpayers remember this kind of waste when
they cast their votes on 19 September.
All the best,
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Louis
Houlbrooke Campaigns Manager New Zealand Taxpayers'
Union
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