In Pursuit of the National Interest
In Pursuit of the National Interest
Over the last few years the information revolution has transformed the way we communicate and access knowledge. The New Zealand Centre for Political Research is a product of this. Every week New Zealand's largest weekly electronic newsletter - the NZCPR Weekly - is delivered directly into your home and office. If you like what you read, you can forward it on to people around the country and the world. Our www.nzcpr.com website, enables you to share your opinion, read our commentaries, use our research, or, through our new petition facility, add your voice to thousands of others who are demanding change.
This revolution has created an explosion in the number of on-line news outlets, blogs and information websites that are available to the browsing public. While some are run part-time by enthusiasts, others are fulltime operations facing the very real challenge of developing business models that can provide sufficient financial returns.
Just last week The Times newspaper has admitted defeat by radically changing its free Times-On-Line format to subscriber only. It explained that on-line advertising just doesn't pay and it is hoping that subscriber-only content will. In making this change, the Times follows the lead of other publications including the Wall Street Journal, the Financial Times, and our own New Zealand Business Review - although most other news sites continue to offer free as well as premium content.
For five years now, the NZCPR has been able to operate on a free content model because enough of our readers have believed that our contribution to public affairs and the democratic process is worth supporting. The problem is that since the recession things have become so tough that I worry that I may be forced to review the model. However, I strongly believe that the best antidote to poor government decision-making is an informed public, so today I am launching a mid-year appeal to ask all readers who find value in
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4,400
petitioners, was sent to the Prime Minister just before the
budget requesting that he suspend the ETS. Since he didn't
listen, we are renewing our efforts by asking anyone who
believes the country can't afford this new tax to sign the
ETS petition so we can really show the Prime Minister that
he has made the wrong call. Many of you have asked what
is driving the Prime Minister's commitment to the ETS, given
his more pragmatic approach to many other policy matters. I
believe he explained it in an interview with Leighton Smith
on Newstalk ZB back in February when he stated: "Those that
wanted a focus on climate change and nothing else, such as
Greenpeace, were winning public opinion. And there was a big
push in that direction. And we were out of sync with them."
In other words, the Prime Minister is desperate to retain
his popularity with celebrity environmentalists like Lucy
Lawless - who are a key part of the women's demographic that
the National Party is actively striving to retain. That
demographic is more important to him than the interests of
struggling families and businesses. So, if you haven't
signed the petition, please do so by clicking this ETS
Petition icon. If you know others who believe National has
done the wrong thing by extending the ETS, please ask them
to sign too. Further, please keep your eyes peeled for
examples of cost-price rises, business relocations, or other
adverse impacts of the ETS, and visit the petition website
to share those with us too. Another public policy issue
that the government is pushing that puts the rights of a
small racial minority ahead of the majority public interest
is their proposals for the privatisation of the foreshore
and seabed. This week's NZCPR Guest Commentator, Dr Roger
Bowden, a Visiting Research Fellow at Ulm University in
Germany and the former Professor of Economics and Finance at
Victoria University, shares this concern - not only about
the direction that National is taking, but at the underhand
way that they are forcing through major constitutional
change: "Just in case you hadn't heard, it's now official;
under the coalition Government's proposed Foreshore and
Seabed Act Mark II, customary title is recognised as
ownership. This is a change of constitutional character. It
advances by Crown proclamation the economic interests of one
specific group of New Zealanders at the expense of the
remainder. Constitutional changes, official or unofficial,
are not to be taken lightly. To be sure, the present
government has muddled enough on other fronts, notably the
emissions trading scheme, a good enough idea in principle
but an operational disaster in practice. The difference is
that the ETS can be suspended with a stroke of the pen by
whatever government succeeds the present one. It does not
take too much political or behavioural insight to realise
that Foreshore and Seabed Mark II will be irreversible. That
is why it is constitutional in character. To be sure, so was
the Seabed and Foreshore Mark I from the previous Labour
government. But that simply recognised a long standing
convention with well established legal precedent. "For
make no mistake, Mark II creates a valuable property right.
It will allow qualifying iwi or hapu to build marinas, fish
and mussel farms, or wave platforms for generating
electricity, in practice with little control or recourse on
the part of local authorities. Iwi business interests will
be able to mine iron sands, coltan, or whatever else is
revealed in the fullness of time. And it will endow iwi or
hapu with a moral case for access fees or cultural deprival
compensation for the nationalised minerals (gold, silver,
uranium, and above all, oil in prospective provinces like
the East Cape). If that doesn't work, then under the
proposed power of veto, they can hold to effective ransom
any party that does want to do such things. Money for jam.
Or as an economist might put it, deadweight economic rent."
To read Roger's full article, The foreshore smell has become
deafening, please click the sidebar link>>>. The National
Party is planning to deliver effective sovereignty of New
Zealand's foreshore and seabed - including our territorial
sea out to the 12 mile limit - to Maori. While they have
stated that only 10 percent of the coastline - 2,000 km - is
expected to be privatised to Maori at this stage, as we all
know, once this process starts, Maori sovereignty activists
will not be satisfied until the 10 percent becomes 100
percent. That National is to take the country down this path
without public mandate demonstrates an astonishing arrogance
given that only a few short years ago they promised voters
an end to race-based laws. In his review document the
Attorney General stated that the rights of all New
Zealanders would be taken into account when considering the
future of the foreshore and seabed, including recreational
and conservation interest, business and development
interests, and local government - as well Maori. However,
the only group to have been consulted is Maori - and all of
the protestations by self-interested Maori that National has
not gone far enough on the deal, has undoubtedly been
orchestrated to make the public think that the new bill will
be reasonable. Unfortunately, the reality is very different
from the spin. Just as the National Party acted without a
mandate when it signed the United Nations Declaration on the
Rights of Indigenous Peoples, now it appears they are
pushing New Zealand further down the indigenous rights path
- towards Article 26 in fact. Article 26 of the Declaration
states, "Indigenous peoples have the right to the lands,
territories and resources which they have traditionally
owned, occupied or otherwise used or acquired".[1] If the
government's foreshore and seabed plan succeeds and Maori
are given control over our territorial sea and all of the
resources within the foreshore and seabed, this will
effectively satisfy parts of this article even though the
Prime Minister stated categorically that the Declaration was
only symbolic! The legal history surrounding the
foreshore and seabed is very clear. Up until 2003 the public
and the government all believed that the foreshore and
seabed was owned by the Crown. Had that not been the case,
Treaty of Waitangi claims would have included the foreshore
and seabed as a matter of course. Then in 2003, the Court of
Appeal's activist judges controversially ruled that some
Maori with land contiguous to the foreshore and seabed (in
other words adjoining it) might have customary title.
However, they also pointed out that the test - having to
prove in a court of law continuous and uninterrupted use of
the area since 1840 - was very high and they believed that
few would succeed. So with Labour's Foreshore and Seabed Act
being passed in November 2004 to reaffirm Crown ownership,
Maori customary title might have existed for just over a
year. In spite of those facts, National is intending to
significantly lower the bar for Maori who are planning to
claim "customary title" or ownership of the foreshore and
seabed. First they intend to drop the "contiguous" land
requirement, which will have the effect of massively
expanding the number of iwi around the country who will be
able to lodge claims - instead of it being restricted to the
small number envisioned by the Court of Appeal. Secondly,
National intends dropping the requirement for Maori to have
to prove in a Court of law that they have had "continuous
and uninterrupted use of the foreshore and seabed since
1840", instead enabling them to negotiate directly with a
Minister. The option to go to court will still be available
- no doubt for those who fail to successfully negotiate with
a Minister - with taxpayers being required to fund much of
the costs of preparing their case. Those Maori who cannot
claim ownership but can argue a "customary right" to the
foreshore and seabed, will gain protected status under the
Resource Management Act, priority status in planning
processes, the right to restrict public access to any part
of the beach they deem to be areas of special significance
to Maori, as well as the right to obtain "commercial
benefit" from the area. These can be negotiated with a
Minister, or proven in court. National also intends to
create a third property right to the foreshore and seabed,
to ensure that other Maori do not miss out. "Mana tuku iho"
is a 'universal acknowledgment', a blanket provision that
will allocate the foreshore and seabed area all around the
country not only to coastal iwi, but also to any others who
can claim a connection with the area. There will be no need
for negotiation or court application - Mana tuku iho will
essentially be available on demand and will provide for the
co-management of the area in addition to other rights. If
you are concerned about all of this, then join the Coastal
Coalition - an umbrella group that wants to keep the
foreshore and seabed in Crown ownership by retaining the
present 2004 Foreshore and Seabed Act. That Act gives Maori
the opportunity to have their day in court to establish
their customary rights. To find out more, click the Coastal
Coalition icon.
Time is running out -
the new bill is expected within a few weeks. At least the
Labour Government had the decency to release a policy
document outlining their proposed foreshore and seabed law
before the legislation was tabled in Parliament so that the
public could provide feedback. However, National is clearly
desperate to rush this through by Christmas - before the
public realises what's going on - so the next thing we will
see is the bill. The Attorney General has stated that
National's proposed law, which will undoubtedly open the
floodgates to a new Maori grievance industry, will rely
heavily on the concept of "tikanga" Maori. To help to
clarify what that means, I will leave you with the
definition of "tikanga" used by the Waitangi Tribunal in its
report on the Crown's foreshore and seabed
policy: ".everything is about tikanga, and tikanga is
about everything. In the traditional Maori world view there
is no matter that does not have tikanga attached to it, and
the foreshore and seabed are quintessentially bound up with
tikanga. Tikanga imbues consideration of every aspect of the
elements themselves, and how humans interact with
them." ENDS