A Week Of Reckoning
It is 20 months since ACT stood alone against the madness of rushed
gun laws. We are not pleased to be vindicated. The spate of gun
violence shows how irrelevant the Government’s laws were to those who
would do harm with guns. Imagine understanding a problem, then
legislating. The Royal Commission of Inquiry into the Terrorist Attack
on Christchurch Mosques, delayed twice before, will release its
findings tomorrow.
What Will It Say?
The report must be about how such an obviously unfit person was
able to get so many firearms and so much ammunition. It must be about
how an individual who openly expressed such odious views was able to
plan such an attack under the noses of the security agencies. It is
impossible for this to happen if everyone was doing their job and
following the law.
The Government’s
Problem
The Government legislated with Police as its main advisor on
firearm laws. But what if Police is culpable for not doing its job
under the existing laws? Did the Prime Minister and her Ministers ask
the obvious question: How did this happen on your watch last March?
What answers did they receive? Why were they happy to take the
Police’s advice and legislate the way they did?
The
Week
ACT will be asking these questions and more all week. 51 people
died and it is impossible that every government agency was doing its
job. The Prime Minister and her Ministers were asleep at the wheel.
Did they make rules punishing the innocent, at the behest of the
guilty, doing nothing for the victims? ACT will be asking the
questions that all of New Zealand deserves to have
answered.
Charity Begins At Home
ACT’s Environment Spokesman Simon Court skewered the Government for
its posturing ‘climate emergency’ this week. He pointed out that
Members of Parliament have unlimited travel budgets. We are not aware
of any other organisation in the world that gives staff an unlimited
travel budget. It is not every week that a rookie MP keeps
a story going on One News for two nights. The best bit of the
story (best for cynics, at least) is watching James Shaw and Grant
Robertson and someone who was reported as a National MP say they
couldn’t possibly cap their air travel budgets.
A Huge
Question Time
Brooke van Velden had a commanding first day in Question Time, highlighting
that the Government has a big job implementing the End of Life Choice
Act. Meanwhile James McDowall had his first
run as immigration spokesman, pointing out the absurdity of
letting only 60 sheep shearers into the country. To top it all off,
Nicole McKee had
the Speaker force the new Police Minister to answer her question
again after dodging it. All this while David Seymour confidently left
the caucus in Wellington to attend events in
Auckland.
A Good Read
If you are looking for a thought provoking piece, you can’t go past
Cai Xia’s piece
on President Xi. Xia was close to the centre of the CCP, an academic
who hoped Xi would be a liberal reformer. Today, she explains, it is
not safe for her to be in China. A useful insight into the Middle
Kingdom. Free Press is afraid to predict that, as Covid-19
was the story of 2020, China may be the story of 2021.
Handout Culture
As David Seymour said in his Address in Reply speech: “This
Government is so focused on dividing up the pie for its own political
advantage instead of growing it.” The logic of this Government’s
handout culture reached its tragicomical crescendo when desperate
people descended on Aotea Square hoping for free money to solve their
problems. When they didn’t get it, they turned violent and people were
hurt.
Commentators No Better
If you find this odd, you are (almost) alone. Rather that noticing
how bad handout culture has got, we hear a constant refrain of how
cruel it was to get people’s hopes up by promising more handouts.
Free Press has not detected anyone in our society who says
it’s ridiculous to think your problems will be solved by a handout in
the first place. Successive governments have turned us into
peasants.
|