Dear John --
We're focused on the issues that
matter to Kiwis. Catch up on the latest in politics with our Week in
Review below.
→ Labour
adopts National policy at the border → Emergency
Housing costs up to half a billion dollars →
Health
reforms about ideology over delivery → Time
to take the guns off the gangs → Auditor
General finds Labour’s Ihumātao deal was ‘unlawful’
Another day, another National border policy
adopted
News the Government will move to a risk-based approach for overseas
arrivals is welcome but well overdue. Back
in January National proposed precisely this approach and since
then we’ve been calling for a traffic light system for MIQ
arrivals.
The Government should also adopt National’s
other recommendations, such as:
- Introduce rapid antigen testing for everyone getting off
international flights.
- Conduct daily saliva testing of every person who works in a MIQ
facility.
- Investigate construction of a purpose-built COVID-19 quarantine
facility on the outskirts of Auckland.
We said then, and repeat now, it simply does not make sense for
passengers from higher risk countries like India and the United
Kingdom to be treated the same as passengers from lower risk countries
like the Pacific Islands.
The Government promised New
Zealanders a smart border, we’re still waiting for
it.
→ You can read more from Chris
Bishop here.
Minister of Motels spends more than half a billion
New figures show the multi-million dollars being netted by
top-earning emergency motels with the Government expecting this to
continue for at least the next few years.
Since Labour
came to office:
- One emergency housing supplier has earned $14.7 million.
- One motel has earned $10.5 million.
- Ten motels have earned more than $5 million.
- 128 emergency housing suppliers have earned more than $1
million
In total more than half a billion dollars has been spent on housing
people in emergency accommodation since Labour came to office, with no
plan to end long-stay emergency housing.
What’s worse
under Labour is:
- No value for money, with motel owners charging more than $440 a
night.
- Rooms don’t even have to meet quality standards.
- People are living like this for longer, average stay now more than
three months.
- They can’t confirm the safety of people living in emergency
housing.
- They aren’t monitoring the conditions in these motels.
- Labour said $90,000 a day was too much to be spending on motels,
but it’s now more than ten times that.
- They expect emergency housing grants to peak at 170,000 for each
of the next two years, compared to 35,994 in 2017.
This is a shocking policy failure with frightening consequences for
the thousands of children who are now being raised in
motels.
National would focus on getting houses built, and partnering more with
community housing providers who can provide wrap around support to
help people get back on their feet and into stable
accommodation.
→ You can read more
from Nicola Willis here.
Labour delivers worse health outcomes, Little champions
more control
Replacing all District Health Boards (DHBs) across the country will
see our regions and smaller communities lose their voice and autonomy.
Our regions know what works for them, and that isn’t always having
Wellington dictate terms.
This is just another example of
Labour’s centralise and control ideology. We’ve seen it with the
restructure of polytechnics, the three waters, and now they have their
sights on restructuring our health sector.
Other
concerning factors with Labour’s new ideological power
grab:
- Health treatment shouldn’t depend on your ethnicity; it should be
based on need.
- Removing DHBs is similar to when Regional Health Authorities were
centralised, it didn’t work then, and it won’t work now.
- We have no idea how much it will cost, how long it will take to
implement or how disruptive it will be.
- Labour’s track record of delivery on large projects is poor at
best.
- We’re currently undergoing three critical mass vaccination
programmes; this radical restructure couldn’t have come at a worse
time.
- The millions that will be spent on creating more bureaucracy in
Wellington should be going towards more frontline services, cancer
drugs, surgeries, and nurses.
National’s position is clear: in Government we
will retain the community and local voice, repeal a separate Māori
Health Authority, and work towards a better single integrated health
system focused on equal opportunity for treatment that deliver better
outcomes.
The Government needs to own its track record in
health. In the past four years every single National Health Target is
worse than when National was in Government. Facts become inconvenient
for those who rely on spin. Conveniently, Labour ditched the health
targets in 2018.
You can’t improve what you don’t, or won’t,
measure.
→ You can read more from Dr
Shane Reti here.
It’s time to take the guns off the gangs
With gangs trying to take control of New Zealand’s largest city, it’s
time to get tough on organised crime. The Government needs to
introduce our draft legislation on Firearm Prohibition Orders (FPOs)
immediately.
This law change would mean a gang member subject
to an FPO, will not be allowed to possess a firearm, get a firearms
license or be on a property where firearms are present. It would also
be an offence to supply firearms to someone subject to an
FPO.
The Government was willing to go to great lengths
to take guns off legal firearms owners but will do nothing about those
who illegally use them to commit crime and wreak havoc. We
are seeing a rapid rise in gang violence and a marked increase in
shootings. It is only a matter of time before innocent people are
killed.
Under Labour gang numbers have grown to almost 8000
nationwide. New Zealanders want real action, not just talk. We urge
all Kiwis to sign our petition and show the Government its soft
approach to crime isn’t working.
→ You
can sign the petition here.
Labour’s Ihumātao deal ruled ‘unlawful’
In response to a letter from National’s Housing spokesperson Nicola
Willis, written in March, the Auditor-General has confirmed Labour
unlawfully used millions of taxpayer dollars to settle the Ihumātao
land dispute.
This is a shocking abuse of privilege by Labour.
Taxpayers aren’t a bank to be called upon to clean up the Government’s
poor decisions, particularly when it is meddling in private property
rights.
The Prime Minister should never have involved
herself in the Ihumātao dispute and stopped 480 much-needed houses
from being built.
National would protect landowner’s
property rights and ensure full and final treaty settlements are just
that – full and final.
→ You can read
more from Michael Woodhouse and Nicola Willis here.
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