'The Nation': Goff interviewed by Duncan Garner
'The
Nation'
PHIL GOFF interviewed by DUNCAN GARNER
DUNCAN With me this
morning is Labour Leader Phil Goff, it's been a tough year
and a tough week for Mr Goff, he's admitted that John Key is
a slick Prime Minister and he's asking his own members what
should Labour stand for and what should Labour look like,
and to me it sounds like a complete overhaul of the party.
Good morning Mr Goff, is it a complete
overhaul?
PHIL GOFF – Labour
Leader
Good morning Duncan, no but it's a time in Opposition when you reflect on how you want to move forward, what you want to do differently, we've put out a survey around our members about the sort of values, about the symbols that the party should represent, their views on that, it's an open process, the media had a bit of fun with it but that’s how it goes.
DUNCAN What's broken, I mean
what's specifically broken, because I mean your branding's
still quite specific, it's still quite well
known?
PHIL Well it's not broken.
You know we hold to our values, we've been promoting the
values that Labour stands for, looking after the many not
the few, a social just society, a dynamic economy, those
sort of things go on, but you’ve gotta look at the things,
when you lose an election you examine the reasons for
that.
DUNCAN I think people also want
to know is how is a Phil Goff Labour Party different to a
Helen Clark Labour Party, can you tell viewers out there
today how it is different, if at
all?
PHIL Well, there's some
continuity in principles bit it's a focus I think back on
the things that count for people, it's about jobs, it's
about incomes, it's about having the health services that
you and your parents need.
DUNCAN But
it was for Helen Clark too, all those things remain from
Helen Clark, is it any
different?
PHIL Oh there's a
difference in style, I come from a different background from
Helen, we'd have some similarities, we both went to
university together, I come from a more working class
background, my kids are tradesmen, so I see the world in a
slightly different way.
DUNCAN So
just in saying that, if we can move on to policy and what
you do actually stand for as a party. You know that we're
borrowing a lot of money, effectively the government's
borrowing a lot of money to govern a 62 billion dollars
overseas debt by 2013, 240 million dollars a week, we know
it's all there, we know what the figures are, David Cunliffe
suggested this week that borrowing is not actually the
issue, would Labour borrow
more?
PHIL Look we left the
government a situation where there was a nil public debt on
a net basis because we'd managed responsibly over those nine
years. Yes we would be borrowing. Would we be spending in
the same way – there are a lot of things that we'd cut,
that the government has done, we wouldn’t be spending 110
billion dollars on paying polluters to pollute, that’s one
very big difference.
DUNCAN Tell me
what you'd cut.
PHIL Well Emissions
Trading Scheme, you'd be keeping the incentive there for
people creating pollution to do something about that, and to
reduce that pollution, not having the taxpayer pick up the
bill on their behalf.
DUNCAN Would
you also cut the GST increase which is coming in the May
Budget, you’ve campaigned on it for the last few months,
more than 15%, can you give us a direct answer to
that?
PHIL Yeah well I've given the direct
answer and it said that the honest answer is we can't tell
at this stage whether we can do that, we've gotta sum up
what the situation is at the time, we're going to under
promise and over deliver, not the other way
around.
DUNCAN Okay, well that’s a no as far
as I'm concerned.
PHIL No no, it's that we're
keeping our options open, but we're not making promises that
we don’t think that we can carry out or don’t know
yet.
DUNCAN Ten years ago when Labour came to
office you campaigned on that top rate of tax 39 cents, it's
now 38, it's not secret that John Key and the National
government are going to drop that to 33 in the next budget.
Would you go into the next election campaigning for a return
to that top rate?
PHIL What we'd go in to the
next election about is using that two billion dollars, most
of which will go to the very top income earners, to help
middle income and low income earners in New Zealand, it
shouldn’t just go to the few the top 7%, middle income
earners are finding it pretty tough, they miss out both
ways, low income earners are struggling to make ends meet,
they're the people that are the
priorities.
DUNCAN Can I get a specific answer
to that question?
PHIL Yeah, it will be about
making sure that the tax cuts when we get in are turned
around to be fair to middle and lower income earners, and
not just to reward the privileged
few.
DUNCAN Philosophically Labour has always
agreed with that top rate of tax targeting those people just
like Michael Cullen did when he came to office in 1999, you
still haven't given me and the viewers a direct answer about
whether Labour would have a top rate of
tax.
PHIL Oh look 38 cents in the dollar is not
a high top tax rate by international standards. In
Australia it's 45, in the United Kingdom it's 50, in
Scandinavia it's 60. We're comfortable with 38, if there's
gonna be tax cuts they should go to the middle and lower
income earners, not simply the privileged elite. That’s a
very clear answer.
DUNCAN Just to make it even
clearer would you restore it back to
38?
PHIL Oh 38 I'm very comfortable with, I see
no reason to cut the top tax rate below that, in preference
to helping middle and lower income
earners.
DUNCAN Okay so you restore
that, what about some of those KiwiSaver incentives,
National cut that down to 2% employer contribution, it was
your scheme that they cut, would you bring that back into
the level that it was before you got kicked out of
office?
PHIL Well what's really clear
is that this country's gotta save more, KiwiSaver was a
brilliant way of doing that, they’ve cut it back, again
we've gotta prioritise, we can't do everything when we get
back into office, there's so much damage that will have been
done. One of the priorities will be how we can increase
savings. Now we're looking – we're going through the
policy development process now as to how to best do
that.
DUNCAN But in principle would
you like to go back to the scheme that – New Zealanders
really liked that policy.
PHIL Look
we want to encourage people to save, and we want to make
sure that the superannuation fund that we set up we're
contributing to as well. We know there's 16 billion dollars
there, we know it produces a huge rate of return and we know
it's my generation meeting our share of the cost of our
retirement, so your generation doesn’t carry it for
us.
DUNCAN Just quickly yes or not,
would you restore the full
KiwiSaver?
PHIL I'm not going to
develop policy on the hoof here, but would we do things to
promote savings like incentives in KiwiSaver, yes that would
be on our list of agenda
items.
DUNCAN You mentioned last
year, we turned up at a speech of yours that talked about
changing monetary policy in New Zealand up to 20 years of
consensus between all parties, what have you
decided?
PHIL Oh we're developing
that policy and it's clear that we think there are changes
that are needed to monetary policy. Why do we need that –
because if you put the whole weight on interest rates on
people's mortgages, you're not going to achieve the results
you want, you're gonna hurt a lot of people, you're gonna
hurt a lot of businesses, because higher interest rates
means a higher exchange rate, which puts your export
business out of business.
DUNCAN So
are you listening to groups like the Fabian Society and so
forth in the background who are developing policy like this
around monetary policy?
PHIL We're
talking to a lot of groups, we're talking to the
Manufacturers and Exporters Association, we're talking to
people like Selwyn Pallet, we've got a group called the
Fabian Society that are exploring different ideas, we're
talking to economists.
DUNCAN So
they're working on your behalf are they, when you say we've
got a group, are you actively involved with the Fabian
Society?
PHIL Well the Fabian Society
is one of a number of groups, it's an inhouse think tank
that the Labour Party operates, so will we do eve they say
– no, will we listen to a whole range of opinions on this
– yes, will we get the best policy internationally and
from our people in New Zealand, the economists here that are
looking too for some changes in that policy –
yes.
DUNCAN So you are looking at
changing and ending this current consensus aren't you,
because those people on the Fabian Society are saying look
this needs to be changed Mr
Goff.
PHIL Yes, I've made that
announcement that we are in Opposition challenging that
consensus, it's not delivering everything we want. Does
that mean we'd give away inflation control – not on your
life, that’s critical but it's not the only thing, it's
also about growth, it's about getting you're export sector
up so that this country can live within its
means.
DUNCAN Of course you won't be
able to do any of this unless you're in government of course
and have coalition partners. How would you describe your
relationship with the Maori
Party?
PHIL Oh well, we're
competitors in many senses, there are things that we share
together, there are things that we are totally opposed to
each other on, that’s the same with any political parties.
Would I work with the Maori Party – if that’s the way
the electorate played its cards at the next election we'll
look at any other party that will work with us for the
values that we think are important to New
Zealanders.
DUNCAN You see Shane
Jones says the party is toxic and should be taken down, is
that the Labour Party position, or is that Shane Jones'
position, and I want a direct answer if I can Mr
Goff.
PHIL Yes well Shane feels very
strongly about that, and he feels strongly about it because
he sees a lot of rubbish that’s being talked, including by
the local Member of Parliament in his neck of the woods,
Hone Harawira, and he's responding in
kind.
DUNCAN Is it
toxic?
PHIL There are things that I
disagree with that they do, some of their policy I think are
bad, some of their other policy ideas are akin to ours, if
we have to we'll work with the Greens, we'll work with the
Maori Party, we'd work with New Zealand First if it came
back, but it would be around a programme that we think is
for New Zealanders and what New Zealanders
need.
DUNCAN Because last year you
talked about in your Crossroads speech, or that race
relations speech, that New Zealand is at a crossroads.
Since your speech we've had the Whanau Ora, we've had the
Declaration on Indigenous Rights for indigenous New
Zealanders, and we've had the Foreshore and Seabed. What
group did the government take since that crossroads
speech.
PHIL Well I think they're in
some serious trouble over the Declaration on the Rights of
Indigenous People, they’ve signed up to something that
says one sector of the community has a veto right over any
legislation or administrative action, they’ve signed up to
something that says that the indigenous people of this
country are entitled to all land that they’ve ever used,
so they know they can't deliver on that, but they’ve
raised the expectation.
DUNCAN So if
Labour was to take office next year would you pull out of
that declaration, would you send someone to the UN and say
we don’t want a bar of this any
more?
PHIL Well I'm not sure of what
the withdrawal provisions are like for a
declaration...
DUNCAN You would look
at pulling out of it?
PHIL No, I
don’t know what the provisions are yet, what I'm saying to
you very clearly today is that that declaration and the
things that it commits New Zealand to, cannot be
implemented, falsely raises expectations, is dishonest and
has been signed for the wrong
reasons.
DUNCAN I just want to look
at your leadership to end this interview. Why are you
getting so little traction in the polls personally do you
think, and you mentioned this week before your caucus
meeting that one on one it's fine but as a group perhaps
people don’t know you yet, you’ve had 29 years for
people to get to know
you.
PHIL People know me well in my
electorate and that’s why I get a very good result in my
electorate, they know in the wider public that I was a
competent minister, that I handled every portfolio that I
was ever given in an effective and competent way, and that I
was strong in representing New Zealand on the international
stage. What I think they don’t know about me Duncan is
what makes me tick, and that’s because I've had a
different role up to this point, and that’s because as we
were talking about before there's very little opportunity
for a politician, a Leader of the Opposition, to have the
sort of in depth interview that you need to say what that
person believes in, what makes them
tick.
DUNCAN What about that Prince
Charming approach that was talked about on the panel
earlier, you’ve simply been around too long, by next year
it's 30 years.
PHIL Prince Charming
.....
DUNCAN I just want one thing,
this week you had that survey, you talked about funky,
futuristic, cool.
PHIL I didn’t
talk about those things.
DUNCAN Well
your party is, how would you describe yourself in one
word?
PHIL In one word, I'm
interested in a better New Zealand, that’s why I'm in
politics.
DUNCAN Thank you very much
Mr Goff for coming in this morning and there'll be more from
Phil Goff with Stephen and the panel after the break, stay
with
us.
ENDS