Richard Prebble’s Letter From Wellington
Economic shock
One law firm
has told The Letter that three property deals fell over on
Friday because of the latest U-turn on immigration. The
Auckland Chamber of Commerce estimates that the changes will
have a $2 billion negative impact. The requirement that
immigrants from non-English speaking countries have
university-level English will bring migration from China to
a halt. Also excluded are skilled tradesmen from Central
Europe. The English language test is racist because (if it
were a compulsory standard for English speaking countries)
many immigrants from the UK would not pass it.
Pacific
Island quotas
Many Pacific Island immigrants would also
not qualify on the points system so Labour created a special
quota system for them. No justification has ever been given
for this favourable treatment. Could it be because Pacific
Islanders are Labour voters?
Betrayed
Labour’s
election strategy has been to court the immigration vote
with policies like the ministry of ethnic affairs. Labour’s
focus groups’ polling has told the party that Peters’
attacks are causing Labour to lose its traditional “working
class” vote. So Labour has decided to abandon ethnic voters
and introduce a policy that’s tougher than anything Peters
ever asked for. Last week’s decision could be as divisive as
National’s dawn raids that the Pacific Island community has
still not forgotten.
Select committee inquiry
ACT has
been a critic of immigration policy under both old parties.
The refugee policy which is used for foreign policy -
accepting queue jumping boat people to make Helen Clark’s
visit to Indonesia a success - is totally unprincipled. The
latest changes are a panic measure. ACT has launched a
petition aiming to gather 10 thousand signatures and force a
select committee inquiry. For a copy of the petition go to
www.act.org.nz/immigrationpetition <http://www.act.org.nz/immigrationpetition>
.
Trademark political correctness
Last week under
urgency parliament passed a new trade marks law.
The new
law contains two bizarre provisions:
- If a trade mark
has become a common term, e.g. nugget, jandals, sellotape,
then the trade mark is lost!
- If your trade mark is
offensive to Maori, e.g. Air New Zealand’s koru, the
Warrior’s League team logo, then the registrar can revoke
the trade mark. The United party not only voted for this
but were against an ACT amendment that would have
compensated trade mark owners for their loss of
property.
Better week
The National party had a better
week. National MPs put up a vigorous opposition to measures
like the Trade Marks Bill. National has the hapless George
Hawkins trapped in the headlights. National has finally
jumped off the fence on Maori and have announced they will
be voting alongside ACT against separate Maori
representation on local councils. (The bill also gives
council the power of general competence that allows councils
to use rate payers money to enter any field of business in
competition to the private sector.)
“On his own”
Last week Helen Clark’s press secretary, Mike Munro,
went down to the office of George Hawkins to tell him that
he must deny to all media that he had been told about the
leaky homes problem. George got the message - he is on his
own - and Helen Clark will not defend him. If there are any
more leaks, George is history.
Where is the briefing
note?
Before meetings, Ministers are normally given a
briefing note by officials that states who they are meeting,
what issues will be discussed and matters the Ministers “may
care to raise”. Amongst the Official Information documents
there are no briefing documents for George Hawkins’ meeting
with the Building Industry Association. No former Ministers
in parliament believe the claim that Hawkins was not
briefed - it’s a smoking gun.
Super resource ministry
The Letter has learnt that the environment lobby is
using the row over the scampi quota to press for a new super
resource ministry covering DOC/MAF/Ministry of Fisheries and
Ministry for the Environment. The environmentalists see the
new Ministry as a way to introduce their ‘sustainable
development’ policies in the same way they have under the
Resource Management Act - to promote their extreme
anti-development agenda. A lot is riding on the scampi
inquiry. The word is that it’s TVNZ that is going to look
bad not the Ministry.
NCEA opposition select committee
inquiry
ACT has received 30 submissions to the
opposition select committee inquiry into the NCEA. The
committee is holding public hearings: 11 December - Westlake
Girls’ School, Auckland (time tba).
-9 December -
Parliament Buildings (time tba) (Contact Scott Dennison on
04 4706625.)
Submissions are still open and you can have
you say at
http://www.act.org.nz/ncea <http://www.act.org.nz/ncea>.
Let them in
The Letter had a good response to our
readers’ poll on nuclear propulsion and the Free Trade
Agreement (FTA). More than 500 responses were received. 537
agree that an FTA should be negotiated and 29 are against.
491 support the amendment to the nuclear free law while 75
are against amending the law.
A benign environment
The Labour government decided against purchasing
sophisticated air defence equipment for the frigate Te Kaha
on the basis we live in a “benign environment”. Now our
Prime Minster has sent the Te Kaha to the Persian Gulf - a
“flash point”. Military experts have told The Letter that
the US Admiral would have to deploy resources to protect our
ship - ironical.
The Letter has also learnt that the air force advised against upgrading the Hercules. The decision means our air crews will be flying the oldest Hercules air frames in the world.
Radiographers strike
The
strike is getting worse. MPs are beginning to get letters
like this one “My thirteen month old grandson…urgently
requires a liver transplant…As a direct result of the
strike, the scheduled surgery has now been postponed
twice…surgery will now be postponed until the New Year at a
date not yet fixed…Meanwhile (his) liver malfunction
condition worsens…” Annette King says it’s nothing to do
with her. What the Minister does not say is that she wrote a
letter to the Auckland Hospital Board instructing them not
to offer more than 2%. The Letter is told the union is
staunch. Radiographers know that they are being paid 30%
less than in Australia and they will not accept a below the
cost of living increase. A copy of this letter is at
www.act.org.nz/radiographers <http://www.act.org.nz/radiographers>.