John,
We’re focused on holding the Government to account for their lack
of delivery on issues that affect the lives of all New Zealanders,
like the cost-of-living crisis, making our communities safer, and
delivering outcomes in health and education.
Catch up on the latest in politics with our Week in Review
below.
Christopher Luxon: National's plan for the cost of living
crisis
Christopher Luxon was in Nelson this week where he spoke to local
businesses about the cost of living crisis.
Labour’s addiction to spending and economic mismanagement is taking
Kiwis backwards by putting more pressure on inflation and interest
rates for homeowners.
- National has a plan to deal with the cost of living crisis. We
would:
- stop adding unnecessary costs on businesses
- reduce bottlenecks in the economy, for example by allowing
immigration to alleviate skills shortages
- be far more disciplined with government spending
- provide tax relief for hardworking Kiwis, so you’ve got more money
in your back pocket
- focus the Reserve Bank solely on inflation.
You can see a short video from Christopher while he was in Nelson
here.
Nicola Willis: One in four Kiwis struggling to get by under
Labour
Under Labour’s watch, one in four New Zealanders are struggling to
make ends meet at least once a month and still this Government does
not have a plan to tackle the cost of living crisis.
The YouGov study released last week makes for sobering reading. 27
per cent of Kiwis are struggling to pay their bills or buy food for
their families at least once a month, and 23 per cent of people fear
losing their homes.
Times are tough and Labour is only making things worse with its
economic mismanagement and policy failures. Labour’s addiction to
spending and unwillingness to fix immigration settings are just adding
fuel to the cost of living fire, putting more pressure on inflation
and interest rates.
Read more from Nicola
Willis.
Dr Shane Reti: Surgical wait list doubles in 10 months
The health sector is under immense pressure, but Health Minister
Andrew Little’s ideologically driven health restructure does nothing
except create more delays for our vulnerable Kiwis.
In July last year, the number of people waiting more than four
months for a hospital procedure was over 14,000. By April this year,
that number doubled to almost 30,000. That is nearly 30 times the
number of people waiting for surgery compared to when National handed
over Government in 2017.
What makes matters worse is that for Kiwis to be included on the
surgical wait list, they have to be referred by a specialist – but
those wait times have blown out too. People waiting more than four
months to see a specialist is already up to 36,000.
Despite being warned by the health sector in July last year, Andrew
Little has spent money on bureaucratic health reforms instead of on
people. He has failed at his core responsibility of ensuring Kiwis get
access to appropriate health care.
Read more from Dr
Shane Reti.
Erica Stanford: More than half of Kiwi kids not at school
regularly
Worsening attendance data shows that half of New Zealand’s students
are not attending school regularly, risking a generation of children
being left behind.
Latest truancy data shows that just 46 per cent of students
attended school regularly in the first term of 2022 – down from 65 per
cent in term four last year. This means that 386,000 kids across
New Zealand failed to show up for class regularly.
In addition, more than 100,000 students were chronically
absent from school, meaning they attended less than 70 per cent of
school time. That is a staggering rise from 68,000 in term four of
last year, and 38,000 back in 2017. These students are at the greatest
risk of becoming even more disengaged with education, which will have
serious consequences for their futures.
National has warned the Government that it needs to do everything
it can to get our children back to school. This should be the number
one priority for the Ministry of Education, yet none of their 4,000
staff are employed to improve attendance rates.
This is not just a social failure but a future economic crisis.
Labour’s lack of delivery is failing a generation of children.
Read more from Erica
Stanford.
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