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Dear Friend,
First and foremost, our thoughts are with those who are
facing yet more severe weather across the North Island with Cyclone
Gabrielle.
Last week was a big week for the Taxpayers' Union
with multiple policy victories announced by the Prime Minister, Chris
Hipkins: The jobs tax was put on ice, the RNZ/TVNZ merger was
scrapped, and tax relief for motorists was extended for a third time.
None of this would have been possible without supporters like you. Thank
you for fuelling our work and forcing Wellington to
respond.
The new Prime Minister has said he wants to focus on bread and
butter politics, including tackling the cost of living. The results of
our first poll since Chris Hipkins took office reveal what effect this
is having on how New Zealanders plan to vote in October's
election.
NEW POLL: Labour bounce but Centre-Right remains ahead –
just 📊
Exclusive to supporters like you, we can reveal the results
of this month's Taxpayers' Union – Curia Poll.
The two largest parties are tied at 34% – Labour is up two
points on last month while National is down three points. ACT is up
one point to 12% while the Greens are down three points to
8%.
The smaller parties are NZ First on 2.9%, Māori Party on 2.1%, TOP
on 2.0%, NZ Outdoors & Freedom on 1.0%, Democracy NZ on 0.9%, New
Conservative on 0.8%, and Vision NZ on just 0.2%.
The two biggest parties are on 46
seats each with Labour up five seats on last month and National down
three. ACT is up one seat to 15 while the Greens are down four to 10.
The Māori Party is up one seat to 3.
As with other recent public
polls, Labour has clearly seen a bounce under Chris Hipkins's
leadership, but based on this poll, the increase in support has
primarily come at the expense of the Greens.
The means only a slight uptick in
the combined total for the Centre-Left to 56 seats – up one from last
month. While the Centre-Right dips to 61 seats – down two
seats – but still has just enough to form a
government.
Net Favourability: Voters like
Chippy
Voters seem to be willing to give the new Prime Minister a
chance – Chris Hipkins debuts in our poll with a net favourability
rating (the percentage of voters with a 'favourable' opinion less
those with an 'unfavourable' opinion) of +27%. This is 28
points higher than Jacinda Ardern's final score as PM.
Christopher Luxon’s net favourability has decreased four
points from -1% last month to -5% while ACT leader David Seymour dips
seven points from -4% to -11%.
Over
on our website is further polling information and details on how to
get access to the full report.
Taxpayer Victory! TVNZ/RNZ merger scrapped 📺🔥
Last week was a great week for taxpayers! The Government
was forced to drop its expensive plans to merge TVNZ and
RNZ on which it planned to spend $3 million on rebranding
alone.
The Taxpayers'
Union has been at the forefront of the campaign against the
merger. Far from creating a more diverse media landscape, the merger
would have served to concentrate power, and erode diversity and trust
in media sources.
Our former Chairman, a former TVNZ board member, Barrie
Saunders was among the first to ask the fundamental question
about what problem the proposed merger intended to solve, and point
out the disgraceful process in which this reform was
hatched.
While one of our Board Members and former TVNZ
presenter, Peter Williams, called out
the merger for being a waste of money, saying: "The
question I've had right from the time of the idea of merging TVNZ and
Radio NZ was first mooted is 'just what problem are you trying to
fix?' Is there not a better use of $370 million?"
Now TVNZ and RNZ can get back to the day job of good public
service broadcasting. That means a rejection of polarization and
striving to serve a wider audience rather than creating a safe space
for the intellectual or metropolitan elite.
Jobs tax put on ice 💰🧊
Another taxpayer victory last week was the decision to
scrap plans to introduce an unemployment insurance scheme during
this parliamentary term. This proposed jobs tax would
have cost the median worker more than $800 a year at a time when
people are already struggling with the cost of living.
But it isn’t just the wrong time to bring in the policy.
It’s the wrong policy too. Paying 80% of someone’s
salary not to work for six months would have created terrible
incentives for people to stay unemployed for longer, been open to
abuse (by making redundancy more attractive than resigning), and would
have failed to address skill shortages for sectors that are struggling
to find employees. We say Labour shouldn't just delay this policy, it
should be consigned to the scrap heap.
While Chris Hipkins is undoubtedly getting rid of unpopular
policies to boost Labour's re-election prospects, the work of the
Taxpayers' Union – supported
by hardworking Kiwis like you – has been vital to ensure that
voters are aware of just how bad Jacinda Ardern's policies
were.
Three Waters: How far is Hipkins
prepared to go? 💦❓
While last week's bonfire of policies was a step in the right
direction, we still await an announcement about Three Waters. Chris
Hipkins has said his Government plans to 'refocus' the reforms –
whatever that means.
Any changes must ensure that the property rights of councils are
respected and that those making decisions on water infrastructure
remain accountable to ratepayers. The biggest risk, however,
is that the Government makes some changes that might seem big on the
surface but fail to meet these key criteria.
With
the support of thousands, we have made Three Waters an albatross
around the Government's neck, but we need to keep up the pressure to
make it clear that cosmetic changes – such as renaming 'co-governace'
to 'mahi tahi' – will not be enough. Our new 'Scrap Three
Waters' banners have been doing just that with supporters across the
country putting them up in recent weeks. You
can get yours here.
While we await the Government's amendments, stay tuned for a big
announcement about the next step in our Scrap Three
Waters campaign in the coming weeks.
Taxpayer Talk with Peter Williams: Fed Farmers' Paul
Melville and Mark Hooper on the resource management reforms 🎙️
In the latest edition of Taxpayer Talk, host Peter
Williams talks with Federated Farmers’ Paul Melville and Mark
Hooper about the proposed new planning and environmental legislation
to replace the Resource Management Act.
While there is almost unanimous agreement the much maligned
RMA needs to be updated and changed, Federated Farmers have
serious doubts the new Natural and Built Environments Bill and its
companion Spatial Planning Bill is the way forward.
Also in this edition, a new segment called War on Waste where
a member of the Taxpayers' Union staff exposes profligate
spending by government or local authorities. This time researcher Alex
Murphy has Auckland Council in his sights.
Listen to the episode | Apple | Spotify | Google Podcasts | iHeart Radio
Thank you for your support.
Yours aye,
|
Callum
Purves Campaigns Manager New Zealand
Taxpayers’ Union.
|
Media
coverage:
NZ Herald PM
Chris Hipkins’ bonfire of the policies - refocus sees RNZ/TVNZ merger
gone, income insurance scheme to change
Newstalk
ZB PM's
policy bonfire- what you need to know NZ
Herald Chris
Hipkins’ ‘policy bonfire’: Government cops criticism for refocus with
more changes to come
NZ Herald Damien
Venuto: The slow, painful death of the TVNZ-RNZ merger leaves media
vulnerable
The Front Page Why
does housing remain such a problem in New
Zealand?
|