The Nation: Lisa Owen interviews Willie Jackson
On The Nation: Lisa Owen interviews Willie
Jackson
Headlines:
Labour’s
Maori Campaign Director Willie Jackson says he has spoken to
“two or three” Green Party candidates, about cooperating
in the Maori seats, in order to beat the Maori Party/Mana
Party. But Green Party co-leader Metiria Turei has already
tweeted telling The Nation “That is not the case. The
leadership discussed this last year and agreed not
to.”
Jackson says
Labour’s internal polling shows Labour can win all seven
Maori seats. He says the gap between their candidate Tamati
Coffey and Maori Party co-leader Te Ururoa Flavell in
Waiariki is as little as one percentage
point.
Jackson says his
priority is getting the Maori electorate MPs re-elected,
over his own campaign to get in to
Parliament.
Lisa Owen: Well, Labour launches its Maori
campaign this weekend, looking to retain its Maori seats as
well as bring in some new blood off the party list. But with
the party’s polls in a slump, how optimistic are they?
Labour’s Maori Campaign Director, Willie Jackson, joins me
now. Good morning.
Willie
Jackson: Kia ora. Kia ora, Lisa.
Your job is
to get Maori MPs elected, but, actually, you’re number 21
on the party list, so it’s actually in your best interests
that not all of them do get elected. So how does that keep
you honest?
No, no, well,
my absolute priority is to get them elected. If I get in,
well, then that’s fine. I don’t know what your last poll
said. Did I get in on the last poll? I’m not
sure.
So you’re not the priority? You’d
take one for the team?
No,
no, I’m not the priority. Absolutely, because I want to
see a strong Maori presence – a Maori Labour Party
presence – in those seats. And, look, I think I think I
should get in, because the polls might say one thing, but
we’ve got eight weeks to go, and I’m sure we’re going
to get 32%, 33%, 35%.
Because at the moment,
you’d be hanging on a ledge at number 21 on the
list.
But that’s okay.
I’ve been in Parliament before. If I don’t get in, such
is life. You know?
So it’s a possibility you
won’t, you think, on your current
polling?
Oh, current
polling suggests not, right? But the polling in the Maori
seats tell us that we’re going very well. I think we could
be looking at a sweep of the seven Maori
seats.
Okay. So you’re polling in the Maori
seats, are you?
We’re
polling in the Maori seats. We’re going pretty well, and
we’ve got some—
So what’s pretty well?
Let’s be a bit more specific. How many do you expect to
win?
Uh, probably all
seven. I expect to win six, but I wouldn’t be surprised if
we took the whole seven.
So the one that
you’re, kind of, not so 100%
on?
Well, Lisa, you’ve
got
the—
Waiariki?
You’ve
got the Minister of Maori Affairs down there in the
Waiariki, so it’s always hard to take out an incumbent;
anyone will tell you that. However, he’s a minister under
a lot of pressure. He’s in an area that’s suffering.
They’ve had a Maori housing policy out, and they’ve got
some funding for Maori housing. Sadly for him, he didn’t
get one new house built in Rotorua, and so we’ve got an
excellent candidate down there in Tamati Coffey, who’s
really applying the pressure.
So if you’re
polling and you’re thinking that you’re going to win
them all, what are your polls telling you about Waiariki,
then?
It’s telling us
that we’re… Well, there’s a couple of polls out,
but—
Come on. What are they telling
you?
Well, you know, I’ve
got a couple of other programmes I’m going on, so we’re
going to talk about—
You brought it up. You
brought it up. You opened Pandora’s Box
here.
It’s very close.
Look, I think we’re within—
So, what? 1%?
2%? 5%?
Between 1% and 6%,
I think. It’s within that.
6% is a lot. 1%
not so much. Which end of the scale are you
on?
There’s a couple of
polls out. Couple of polls out. One’s talking about 1%.
Another poll that Farrar’s done – Kiwiblog – I think
is about 5% or 6%.
But the 1% poll, is that
your own polling?
Yeah.
There’s a lot of legitimacy in our own polling; just ask
Paddy Gower that.
Hang on, Mr Jackson. The 1%,
is that in your internal polling? You think there’s only
1% in Waiariki?
I’ve got
to have a look at that. I’m not quite sure. I’m not
quite sure, but it’s pretty close, but
you—
Well,
so—
Hang on. You don’t
want to be rubbishing internal polls. Youse jump on them as
soon as we go down.
I’m not; I’m asking
you if your poll is the 1%
poll.
We—
Hang
on. So, basically, then you are predicting the end of the
Maori Party.
I think it
could be very close to the end for the Maori Party if Te
Ururoa doesn’t win Waiariki. You know, that’d be sad for
a lot of people if that happens, but that’s the game
we’re in, you know? This is the game we’re in. We’re
in to sort of knock each other out. Nothing personal. Te
Ururoa and Marama Fox have done their best in terms of
advocating for our people, no doubt about that, but
they’re with a National government that doesn’t
prioritise people – Maori, working-class
people.
It kind of does sound a little bit
personal, because at every opportunity the Maori Party gets,
they want to say that Labour throws Maori under the bus,
that Andrew Little doesn’t know what ‘kaupapa Maori’
means. So why do they hate you so
much?
Well, no, I don’t
think that’s personal from them, and it’s certainly not
personal from me. I think they’re talking about the party;
they’re not talking about individuals. No, what they’re
trying to do is survive. They talk a load of nonsense. They
start spinning nonsense with regards to
that—
So you think they’re fighting for
their life?
‘Course
they’re fighting for their lives. If Te Ururoa doesn’t
get in, they’re gone, and there’s a real chance that he
won’t get in. Look, I say, sadly, they’ve been selling
us out a bit in the last year or two. The funding they got
in terms of the budget was a disgrace – less than 1% of
funding from the National Party
government.
It’s more than what the Labour
Party got in the budget, isn’t it, though? That’s their
whole point – they’re at the table; they’re getting
funding.
No, it’s not a
very good point, because I think Bill would’ve given 1% in
his sleep. It wouldn’t have mattered if there had been a
party at the table or not. To get the sort of funding they
got for Whanau Ora is an insult to our Whanau Ora providers.
It’s just disgraceful. We’re doing the busin—Look, can
I just say the Whanau Ora policy that Tariana Turia came out
with – brilliant. I roll it out.
They’re
getting more money for Maori than you are, because they are
at the table.
You don’t
have to be a genius to know that. When you’re in
Opposition, you don’t get any money. We all know
that.
Precisely. That’s the
point.
But they should be
getting four, five times more than what they’re getting.
Look, they’re getting peanuts. They’re getting crumbs.
They haven’t even put one house in the
Waiariki.
Let's talk about you, though. Labour
and the Maori seats. Aren't you worried that your friends in
the Green Party could split the vote in some of those
seats?
Having a talk to
them now. Am talking to some of the individuals in the Green
Party.
What are you saying to them about that,
then?
That we should work
together and we should do a deal because the reality is the
Greens are just talking about the party vote, aren't they?
Our Maori MPs went off the list and they're looking at just
winning their seats, so—
Are they open to
this?
Well, I've talked to
two or three candidates. I can't name those
candidates—
Auckland — Tamaki Makaurau —
is one of the ones where you could potentially be in strife
with splitting the vote
there.
Well, she's got
popular, hasn’t she, Marama Davidson?
So...
High profile. So is that one of
the—?
Well, I can't
divulge the type of conversations we're having, but,
obviously, the Greens should work with
us.
They haven't ruled it out, though, Mr
Jackson?
They certainly
haven't. Talking with different candidates, no, they haven't
worked it out because they are very clear, they just want
the list vote.
So, in some seats, would your
ideal scenario be, before the election, that you will do
what Bill English did this week and say, 'In this
electorate, can you please vote for this candidate?' You
want an endorsement from the Greens in some of the Maori
seats?
Absolutely. I have
talked to one or two of them and we're working this through
because, surely, you don't want to put the Maori Party
candidate back in who will be jumping up and down trying to
deal—
Is that a dirty deal, Mr
Jackson?
No, that's what
you call a New Zealand political deal that your prime
minister is doing every single day and that most politicians
do. So, you know, National's been doing it in Hawera forever
and National's going to try to do it again in the Epsom
electorate.
Well, you raised the issue of the
Maori MPs coming off the list. How involved were you in that
decision?
Not at
all.
Well, how
come?
Not at
all.
Aren't you, like, the
strategist—?
No. No. They
asked me to do that after they made those
decisions.
Oh, after the list came out? The
consolation prize?
No. No.
So that decision was made, in terms of the campaign
director, a month before the list came out. But they made
their decisions with regards to coming off the list, and I
was surprised. I was surprised.
Do you agree
with it?
I thought it
was... 'Good on them.' I thought it was terrific what they
did. It was a principled decision that they made in terms of
coming off the list, and the whole idea was to come off the
list so that more Maori could come
through.
All right. We've got a bit to get
through, so I wanted to just talk to you about, quickly,
charter schools. You're involved with them. Kelvin Davis is
supportive of them, but the fact is, Labour's policy is no
charter schools. So you're on a hiding to nothing with that
one, aren't you?
Not at all
because Labour has said they'll support successful schools.
Our schools are very successful—
No charter
schools.
Yeah. Yeah. No,
but—
I've got the policy right here. Let me
read it to you. (READS) 'Repeal the legislation allowing for
charter schools.' No charter
schools.
Yeah, well, you
mightn't have heard the other part that they've spoken to us
about, which is if your school's doing well, if you've got
qualified teachers, if you're adhering to the rules, there
shouldn't be any problems whatsoever.
But
that's not the policy. The policy is no charter
schools.
But we support the
policy. We support the policy.
Are you just
going to call it something
else?
They can call it
whatever they like, but myself, Kelvin Davis and Peeni
Henare will never walk away from our kids and we'll work
with any government that will support our kids in terms of
advancing.
Labour's going to backtrack on the
charter schools—?
No.
Labour's not going to backtrack at all. Labour is saying we
don't want a charter-school policy in that's very similar to
America. They don't want a policy in where big companies can
come in and run schools in terms of
profits.
Show me a charter school that's run
by McDonald's, Nike or a big American corp here in New
Zealand.
Well. No. What I'm
saying, here in New Zealand, they'll support schools like
ours who are run by social providers who live off the smell
of an oily rag.
No, they won't. Their policy
is no charter schools. There's no exceptions. There's no
buts. No charter
schools.
Have you not been
watching the news? Maybe you're watching the wrong news.
Andrew Little's been very clear. 'If your school's doing
well, if your school's successful, if your school's
advancing Maori aspirations, we'll find a way to accommodate
it.' I think that's pretty clear.
Let's talk
about Metiria Turei because everyone's been talking about
Metiria Turei. Are you OK with her committing benefit fraud?
Is it OK to pinch money from the taxpayers and other
beneficiaries?
At a
personal level... From a personal perspective I could do
nothing but support Metiria because I represent
beneficiaries and I've represented them for years and
years.
Her actions? Are you OK with
those?
Well, it's not about
being OK. It's about understanding what she did and I
understand—
I'm asking you a specific
question. We can talk about whether beneficiaries get enough
money on one hand. I'm asking you is it OK to break the
law.
Of course it's not OK
to break the law. Of course not. But I still have a lot of
sympathy for what she went through at the time and I
understand the plight of our people and I understand that we
had a National government at the time that was bashing
beneficiaries. That there is no doubt
about.
So how worried are you that her
admission of a fraud is damaging to Labour's brand because
you're a package
deal?
We're a package deal
and we need to work together. She's probably got as many
supporters as she's got detractors, so I'm not worried about
Labour. It's the Greens. They need to worry about their own
strategies.
Yeah, but it could have an
influence on people who vote for
you.
It could have an
influence. I mean, Winston, at the moment, is stealing some
of our votes, you know. People need to understand that a
vote for Winston looks like it's going to be a vote for
National. He seems to be gravitating, going down that
track.
Well, hang on a moment. He's saying
he's leaving his doors open. If your internal polling is
right, which you'd like to think it's right in the Maori
seats, so let's assume it's right across the board. If it's
right, Winston is above the Greens, so does that make them
potential senior coalition partner above the Greens if you
get together to form a
government?
Well, no,
because we have an agreement with the
Greens—
Yes, but it only lasts until
election night.
Yeah, well,
we'll just see how Winston goes. He's been a bit out of hand
in the last couple of weeks, you know. You know, you've got
him... And Shane Jones wants to nuke all his nephews up
north.
If he gets more at the polls than the
Greens, then that would make him the senior coalition
partner with you, wouldn't
it?
Well, we'll see what
happens after election day.
Is he good for
Maori?
Well, getting rid
of the Maori seats is not good for Maori. But is Winston
good for Maori? Well, he gets a bit of Maori support,
right?
Yeah, well, you raise that cos the
Greens are currently trying to scare voters when it comes to
Winston Peters, but here's the thing. Maori voters do like
Winston. If you look in the Maori seats, New Zealand First
is the third most popular party behind Labour and the Maori
Parties. So should you have done an MOU with Winston
Peters?
The problem with
Winston, you don't know where he is sometimes. You know,
you've got to remember, he started his political career in
the Maori seats. Then he had all the Maori seats, so he was
backing in the Maori seats. Now today, he's not backing the
Maori seats. He was the minister of Maori affairs. Now he
thinks Maori Affairs is a waste of time. It depends what
week it is with Winston. If we get him on the right week, we
probably could do a deal.
We're out of time,
but your party is polling sub 30 pretty regularly, so is
this the life time we're going to see you
or—?
Well, no, I'm
available again next week, if you like. I can come in again
and tell you all about the Maori campaign
tomorrow.
Well, nice to talk to you, Willie
Jackson.
Transcript provided by Able. www.able.co.nz