Transtasman Political Letter – 20 July Digest
Transtasman Political Letter – 20 July Digest
Transtasman is a subscriber newsletter published weekly and read widely in New Zealand and abroad. The following is a summary of this week's edition. To subscribe and read the full newsletter see.. http://Transtasman.co.nz
20th July 2006
Winston Peters plays Maxwell Smart on a top
secret mission to Washington which has fooled no-one
...
Taito Phillip Field gets away with it, but there’s a bad
smell lingering
... Helen Clark’s dash to London holds
up the boat on business tax policy release
... Charlie
Pedersen gets into the green movement
... And despite a
range of poll outcomes the Nats are still up for it heading
into their annual conference.
Peters On Crucial Mission In Washington
Foreign Minister Winston Peters’ mission to Washington, crucial to his ambition to take NZ into a new era in its relationship with the US, earlier this week appeared in danger of falling between the cracks of the Middle East crisis.
Phillip Field Decision: Stain On Parliamentary Democracy
Taito Phillip Field claimed he had been exonerated, the Govt claimed he had done his penance for “errors of judgement” and the taxpayer was left holding the $490,000 bill for the cost of the inquiry.
Nats In Upbeat Mood
Despite further media speculation over Don Brash’s leadership following the latest political polls, the National Party conference this weekend is likely to show the party in an upbeat mood.
Tax Ideas Ready For Debate
The Govt may be planning to outflank the National Party on tax issues. High-level Beehive sources told Trans-Tasman Cabinet’s Policy Committee had a “good discussion” on tax ideas this week, and once Cabinet signs off the business tax document next week, it is expected to be released for comment.
CAPITAL TALK
Press
gallery relations between TV1 and TV3 reached a new low this
week after Duncan Garner’s latest scoop. Garner got his
hands on TV1s latest opinion poll, to be broadcast on
Sunday, and announced the results on Saturday.
Play Of The Week: Bad Judgement, Bad Taste
There are no speed ticket quotas, and Taito Phillip Field is basically innocent of anything other than trying too hard to help constituents. Well, at least they didn’t try to blame this one on “the 1990s.”
Transtasman is a subscriber
newsletter published weekly and read widely in New Zealand
and abroad. The above is a summary of this week's edition.
To subscribe and read the full newsletter see..
http://Transtasman.co.nz