Free Press is Back
After a seven-month hiatus, the Free Press is back on a
Monday. If you previously received Politics in Full Sentences
at the end of the week, we are bringing back ACT’s forward-looking
weekly for election year. If you like Free Press, please
forward it to your contacts, so they can subscribe
at this link.
Superficial Times
Media took the bait hook, line and sinker, going nuts at the title
of our Waitangi
Day State of the Nation Address (Make Aotearoa Great Again). As
the week went on, smart commentators pointed out their
good-people-and-bad-people, with-us-or-against-us reaction was
Trumpian. Meanwhile, if you want to have a pleasant brunch at a fun
and informative event to kick off election year, please join us by
registering here.
What’s
at Stake
This year will decide whether we are governed by spin or substance.
The current Prime Minister’s idea of an election year kick-off
announcement is that she’s changing the Labour Party’s Facebook
settings. The real issues remain untouched. Productivity growth is
woeful, education test scores are sliding down the international
rankings, and we still can’t build houses at prices the average person
can afford.
Government Spending
Will we return to restrained government spending, or give an
emboldened Labour government a blank cheque? Before the last election,
Treasury forecast the government would spend $86 billion in 2020.
After three years of this Government, Treasury now forecasts this
year’s spending will be $94 billion. Revenue forecasts have risen
fractionally, but in three years the Government has turned a forecast
$6 billion dollar surplus into a $1 billion deficit. ACT’s
17.5 per cent flat tax is the antidote, putting new and dopey
spending off the table in favour of the private
sector.
Trump-Ardern 2020
Free Press predicts Trump will be re-elected. His fiscal
policy of running deficits in good times is insane but he’s delivering
for his voters. The hangover from this binge will be nasty, but he’s
exclusively focused on re-election. Ironically, Jacinda Ardern also
needs the global economy to stay rosy until election time later this
year, so she’s counting on him. She’s also running the well dry in
election year, and the private sector is paying for
it.
Regulatory Assault
Will the constant regulatory assault on business in general and the
rural sector in particular be turned back? Abrupt charter school
closures, oil and gas exploration ban, firearm laws, plastic bag ban,
Zero Carbon Act, freshwater regulations, and market studies on whole
sectors have chilled the New Zealand economy. When your rights can be
struck out by a pen stroke (or an announcement in the case of oil and
gas), why plan for and invest in the future? ACT’s Regulatory
Constitution would deliver something New Zealanders have never
had: rights they can uphold against
Parliament.
Housing
The National-Labour consensus: wave hands wildly but carefully do
nothing effective is the single biggest policy failing of the past 30
years. Free Press spoke to American truckies who earned $70,000 and
were mortified by $180,000 houses. “Our market is going crazy”, they
cried… Now they’re just grateful they don’t live in New Zealand.
Working people must be able to afford their own future in our country.
Industry insiders quietly tell ACT that only our
policy would work: Replace the RMA. Share GST on new builds with
the consenting council. Replace council building consents with private
insurance.
Firearms
Will New Zealand have a firearms register? The Government will find
it technically impossible to implement it before the election, so the
winner can cancel it before the Police lose everyone’s details. The
gun buyback was a disaster. The most honest handed in the least
dangerous guns and bought new ones. Meanwhile the firearm community’s
faith in the Police is at an all-time low. A perfect environment for
the next terrorist. ACT’s
policy is no register, a restored E-Category, and to get the
woeful Police out of administering firearm laws.
Free
Speech
Will free
speech remain a cornerstone of our liberal democracy? Free
Press suspects that Government will be too chicken to introduce
hate speech laws before the election. If we’re wrong, the result is
the same, the criminalisation of unpopular speech from 2021. The
freedom to think and express ourselves freely is reason enough all by
itself to win this election.
Education
New Zealand students continue to slide down the international
rankings, even as domestic test scores have risen. The Government’s
cancellation of charter schools has not helped. At least the Nats now
claim the schools were the best idea they never had. There is no limit
to what you can achieve if you don’t care who takes the credit. Now we
have a bigger idea. Put every parent in charge of their kids’ share of
the education budget and let them take it to a public or private
school of their choice. Student
Education Accounts could transform New
Zealand.
Next Week
We’ll be back with the State of the Political Parties. If you like
Free Press, please forward it on. If you are not a member of
ACT, please consider joining.
You can also donate whether you are a party member or not here.
We can win, but we need your help.
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