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Dear Supporter,
New Poll: Māori Party recapture balance of power
Exclusive to supporters like you, this month's Taxpayers'
Union-Curia Poll shows an overall gain for the Labour/Green
centre-left parties at the expense of the National/ACT centre-right
bloc. Applying the results to seats Parliament, neither has the 61
seats required to govern without the Māori Party.
With five seats, the Māori Party would determine who will form a
Government next year on these numbers.
We've just released the key results on our website
here.
Not good news for Luxon
Christopher Luxon's Preferred Prime Minister results continue their
slide. Mr Luxon was on 28% in June is now on just 19.5% today. Jacinda
Ardern is at 39.5%.
Cost of Living (22.7%) is by far the issue most Kiwis are thinking
about when considering who to vote for, followed by the economy.
Despite what the media would have you believe, just 4% of Kiwis rank
the environment as their most important voting issue right now.
Most Kiwis want the Government to cut taxes...
As part of this month's poll, our polsters asked voters whether
they support a temporary 10% reduction in overall income tax for all
families to help with the increased cost of living. 59% said yes.
Something that the Beehive should take note of is that
Labour voters are the most in favour of a temporary package
for across-the-board tax relief!
...and cut spending!
Our pollsters asked 1,200 Kiwi voters if the Government should be
increasing, decreasing, or maintaining spending
levels in response to high inflation.
The most popular response – 45% – was that Government
should decrease spending. Only 12% of respondents
thought increasing spending was the right idea and 27% said spending
should be kept the same.
The poll suggests that Kiwis know very well that the Government's
record spending is driving up prices across the board. So next time
Labour MPs try to troll National Party leader Chris Luxon with claims
his Party will 'cut spending' Mr Luxon should say yes!
Information about access to the full report, and methodology, is on our website.
Taxpayer Talk's new host: Peter Williams
Former TVNZ broadcaster (now Taxpayers' Union Board Member) Peter
Williams has taken over as host of our new weekly Taxpayer
Talk podcast. In this week's episode, he speaks to author
and social commentator Ewen McQueen on his book One
Sun in the Sky: the untold story of sovereignty and the Treaty of
Waitangi. He also hosts our first of what we plan to be a weekly
political panel, this week covering the Taxpayers' Union-Curia poll
and problems within National.
You
can listen to the episode on our website here, or via Apple
Podcasts, Spotify, Google
Podcasts, iHeart
Radio or via any good podcast app.
Labour MP alleges misuse of taxpayers' funds
During our polling period, the National Party were dealing
with allegations of historical bullying by new MP Sam Uffindel, but by
the end it was Labour under the pump as they batted back accusations
of bullying from one of their own, Hamilton West MP Dr Gaurav
Sharma.
Buried in his lengthy allegations, was the assertion that a
Labour MP and Parliamentary Service staff member were "misusing
taxpayer's money". This could have been lost in the drama, but your
humble Taxpayers' Union is determined to get to the bottom of
it.
We are calling on an independent enquiry into the
claim by Dr Sharma. It isn't enough for Parliamentary
Services (which reports to the Speaker) to conduct a secretive
investigation. Remember that Parliamentary Services is one of the very
few public agencies not covered by freedom of information
laws.
And as we saw with Parliamentary Service's mishandling of
Trevor Mallard's outrageous and false rape accusation against a
Parliamentary staffer, that office can hardly be trusted
with protecting taxpayer money... Luckily Parliament
already has an officer tasked with protecting taxpayers, and we have
called on the Auditor General to investigate.
If not the Auditor General, we know of a reputable independent
organisation which has specialist expertise in throwing sunlight onto
government waste. That's
why we wrote to all MPs to remind them that (as the IRD used to say)
"we're here to help".
Leo Molloy calls it quits following Ratepayers' Alliance poll
Our sister group, the Auckland Ratepayers
Alliance has also been keeping the pollsters busy. In a first for
the Super City, they've been tracking support of the leading mayoral
candidates, and their poll released on Friday saw the self styled
shockjock-come-restaurateur, Leo Molloy pull out of the race.
Labour-endorsed and sitting councillor Efeso Collins is the
front-runner to take the Mayoral Chains from Phil Goff. But with just
22.3% of the decided vote, Aucklands are clearly wanting a change of
direction at Auckland Council.
Ex-Far North Mayor Wayne Brown was a close second on 18.6% and with
Leo out, C&R's Viv Beck (12.5%) in third place. Head over to the Auckland Ratepayers'
Alliance website to read the full poll report.
Council elections, can you volunteer?
In the coming weeks we will be preparing "ratepayer
voting guides" to increase transparency on local council election
canididates' positions on rates, Three Waters and issues such as
transport.
If you are in a position to help our student interns collate
contact information and contact local candidates in your region, good
with a phone (and on email) please drop me a line by reply email.
With your support, we'll be able to publish New Zealand's first
online ratepayer voting guide covering the whole country.
Interest deductibility U-turn - but only if you're a big
corporate
Last year the Government changed interest deductibility rules so
landlords cannot claim interest for tax purposes on existing rental
properties. However, now Housing Minister Megan Woods has decided to
do a U-turn, but not for mum-and-dad-investors, rather only for the
big end of town!
The Housing Minister has announced blocks of at least 20 new
and existing build-to-rent flats will be exempt from interest
deductibility tax changes in perpetuity if they offer 10-year
tenancies.
“We’re providing an exemption from
the interest limitation rules to certain types of new and existing
build-to-rent developments in perpetuity,” Housing Megan Woods
said.
This makes little sense. The removal of interest deductibility
breaches the fundamental principle that tax law should treat like for
like. Giving tax favours to well-connected big property developers
while still hammering those less close to Megan Wood's officials is
Muldoon-style tax policy. Yuck.
One more thing
We are 100% funded by our members and supporters like you, who make
our work holding the Government (and councils) to account. To back the
mission of Lower Taxes, Less Waste, and More Transparency, click
here to donate via our secure website.
Thank you for your support.
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Jordan
Williams Executive Director New Zealand Taxpayers’
Union.
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PS. Is the first newsletter this year that doesn't mention
Three Waters!? If you follow that campaign (i.e. signed our Stop
3 Waters petition, or used our select committee submission tool)
we'll be in touch separately later this week on the next steps for
that campaign...
Media
coverage:
Newstalk ZB Taxpayers' Union crying foul on Kainga Ora's plans to
hire more staff
Newstalk ZB Taxpayers' Union banned from Local Government NZ
Conference
Newstalk ZB The Huddle: Taxpayers' Union vs LGNZ, overseas
investors, mask use
Newstalk ZB Barry Soper on cost of living payment, unemployment
and Three Waters
Newstalk ZB Heather du Plessis-Allan re Commerce
Commission
Today FM: Do
you believe that Nanaia Mahuta lied to the NZ public about Three
Waters?
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