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lcid:image014.gif@01C7A844.ED724540Ownership of Rivers, Lakes, Seabed & Foreshore by Ross Baker
lcid:image014.gif@01C7A844.ED724540
Brownies, Darkies, Whities, Honkies, Andy Haden, Murray McCully & the PM!
by Gavin de Malmanche

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cid:image014.gif@01C7A844.ED724540Ngapuhi Ceded  Territories in 1840 
by Ross Baker

lcid:image014.gif@01C7A844.ED724540
Time to Toughen Up on Welfare by David Hill


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NZCPR COLUMNISTS
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Ronald Kitching  
ECONOMIC ISSUES & OTHER MATTERS

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Allan Peachey MP
FROM OUTSIDE THE TENT - On Education   View>>>

David Round  
REFLECTIONS ON THE TREATY 
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Frank Newman
INVESTMENT MATTERS
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Marc Alexander  
ISSUES IN LAW & ORDER  
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Stuart Birks
THE LAW AS A SERVICE INDUSTRY
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Lindsay Mitchell
WELFARE
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The campaign to keep the foreshore and seabed in Crown ownership.
cid:image014.gif@01C7A844.ED724540Sign Foreshore & Seabed Petition here >>>  cid:image014.gif@01C7A844.ED724540Visit the Coastal Coalition here >>>  

NZCPR this week...
Weekly expert comment from Dr Muriel Newman.
Tribalism vs democracy  
29 August 2010
Muriel Newman

New Zealand is at a crossroad between tribalism and democracy. The Maori tribal elite, backed by the Maori Party - and now the National Party - are gaining momentum, pushing the country towards a future where corporate iwi will control our key institutions and resources. More >>>


Expert comment from NZCPR guests.
A Crime Against the Public
29 August
2010
David Round

For the last couple of weeks we have been expecting the appearance of the government’s draft foreshore and seabed bill. Usually reliable rumours told us that it would be going to the Cabinet in the last week or two, and would then be introduced to the House. For some reason there has been a delay, and rumour has it that it may be another couple of weeks at least before it is introduced. I know not what the reason may be. It would be nice to think that the government is actually coming to its senses... More >>>


Expert comment on news as it breaks.
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Heat turned up on global warming  
22 August 2010
Muriel Newman
 
When a new supermarket in Mt Roskill recently advertised for new staff over 2,700 people applied for the 150 positions. This desperate situation is being replicated up and down the country. It is symptomatic of an economy in trouble.  More >>>
NIWA and the New Zealand Climate Science Coalition
22 August
2010
Bryan Leyland
The New Zealand Climate Science Coalition has asked the High Court to rule on the validity of NIWA's "Seven Station" New Zealand Temperature Record (NZTR) that features prominently on its website and is used in information... More >>>
The dark underbelly of welfare 
15 August 2010
Muriel Newman 
According to Saturday’s Herald, the co-leader of the Maori Party, Pita Sharples, is trying to save a Black Power gang house from being demolished by the city council because it caters for the "spiritual and cultural needs" of Maori.  More >>>
Welfare reform becomes political football - again
14 August
2010
Lindsay Mitchell
arlier this year the National government appointed a working group to look at ways of reducing welfare dependence. The group has consulted widely, too widely in my opinion. More >>>
Simplifying and Streamlining the RMA
8 August
2010
Owen McShane
For generations of Kiwi families, once the children arrived, so too did the dreams of a house and a bit of land in the country. Five or ten acre lots were ideal – they provided tons of space for the kids, room for a pony, a few steers, some sheep... More >>>
Simplifying and Streamlining the RMA
8 August
2010
Owen McShane
The Impact of the Simplifying and Streamlining Amendments to the RMA. The Government’s RMA (Simplifying and Streamlining) Amendment Act 2009 came into force on 1st October 2009. This Act was the outcome of a review that began in November 2008 which had the following major themes: More >>>
John Key - Selling Out to Maori Activists   
1 August 2010
Muriel Newman
 
Almost without a ripple, John Key’s administration is about to table a bill in Parliament that will have far reaching consequences that few can imagine. I am of course referring to the Government’s proposed changes to the... More >>>
The Great Foreshore and Seabed Sellout 
31 July
2010
Michael Coote
The National-led government’s attempts to sanitize its controversial “remedy” to the Foreshore and Seabed Act (2004) grow ever more curious and contradictory by the day.  It is quite clear that the government and Maori interests already do not see eye-to-eye over what the proposed replacement legislation ... More >>>
Problem or Fact of Life?  
25 July 2010
Muriel Newman
 
"What is happening to our young people? They disrespect their elders, they disobey their parents. They ignore the law. They riot in the streets inflamed with wild notions. Their morals are decaying. What is to become of them?"... More >>>
Youth Alcohol Abuse is the Symptom of a Wider Disease
25 July
2010
David Seymour
Any good economics student in year 11 will tell you that the cost of everything is what you give up to get it. By that logic the "cost" of a weekend's binge drinking can be 48 hours of life; drinking, recovering, drinking and recovering again ... More >>>
Arming the Police  
18 July 2010
Muriel Newman Without a doubt, drugs and organised crime are key drivers of the increase in violence in New Zealand society. Firearms are now commonplace within the illicit drugs industry. The question we should be asking ourselves is... More >>>
The Ability to Respond Quickly is Imperative
18 July
2010
Greg O'Connor
The recent incident in Christchurch in which two police officers were shot and seriously wounded and a police dog killed once again highlighted the risks that frontline police officers face going about what most would consider routine tasks. More >>>
A Triumph of Ideology Over Common Sense  
11 July 2010
Muriel Newman
 
In politics, ideology can be a very dangerous thing if imposed without proper constraint. Nine years of rampant socialism saw New Zealand’s public policy framework inundated with ideological dogma... More >>>
The Road to Hell...
11 July
2010
Karl du Fresne
In a column in The Dominion Post in February 2008, I wrote that a law change requiring intellectually disabled workers to be paid the legal minimum wage was a triumph of human rights ideology over common sense... More >>>
In Pursuit of the National Interest
4 July 2010
Muriel Newman
 
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... More >>>
The foreshore smell has become deafening
4 July
2010
Prof Roger Bowden
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... More >>>
Improving the Lives of Children
27 June 2010
Muriel Newman
 
A study released last year by the OECD on child wellbeing painted a grim picture of the status of children in New Zealand. It found that New Zealand children lived in poor conditions – average family incomes in New Zealand were low by OECD standards and child poverty rates high... More >>>
Agenda denial and framing – the Child Support Act 1991
28 June
2010
Stuart Birks
An American politician, the late Eugene McCarthy, described politics as a game. It is a game where the public see the performance, but not the behind the scenes planning. Much of the politics that we see is engineered... More >>>
Maori Ownership of the Foreshore and Seabed
20 June 2010
Muriel Newman
 
It has now been confirmed that under the new constitutional arrangements National and the Maori Party are planning to push through before Christmas, Maori will become the legal owners of large tracts of New Zealand’s foreshore and seabed. More >>>
Giving away the foreshore and seabed 
20 June
2010
Hugh Barr
Whatever the outcome of coastal iwi quests for customary title to the foreshore and seabed, under Mark2 of the foreshore and seabed agreement, two lessons stand out. Firstly the National Party is only too happy for power and political expediency, to racially privatise public property such as the foreshore and seabed to iwi... More >>>
Time to Make a Stand 
13 June 2010
Muriel Newman
 
Comments made by Nick Smith in 2005 highlight the monumental hypocrisy of the National Party. Then, when the economy was booming they campaigned against a carbon tax saying... More >>>
Why the ETS Should be Deferred 
13 June
2010
Roger Kerr
Calls are mounting for the next phase of the government's emmissions trading scheme, due to commence on 1 July 2010, to be deferred. There are string arguments for a temporary suspension of the scheme. More >>>
The Next Item on the Maori Agenda 
7 June 2010
Muriel Newman
 
Five years ago, the United Nations Special Rapporteur on the Rights of Indigenous People, Rodolfo Stavenhagen, visited New Zealand to consult with Maori... More >>>
Who is Indigenous? 
6 June
2010
David Round
There is, in the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, one very surprising omission. Nowhere is there any definition of who or what exactly an indigenous person is. It would surely not be unreasonable to ... More >>>
Welfare bad for Health  
30 May 2010
Muriel Newman
 
Last week the Royal Australasian College of Physicians released a report which strongly affirmed something we all know - that work is good for us. The report, Realising the Health Benefits of Work, was prepared by... More >>>
The Social Assistance Bill 
30 May
2010
Lindsay Mitchell
The most pressing problem with the DPB is not the mother who enters the system with a work history fresh from a relationship breakdown. The urgent problem is the young, sometimes very young mothers... More >>>
Rating the Budget  
23 May 2010
Muriel Newman
 
In Thursday’s budget speech the Minister of Finance, Bill English announced that this budget had four main objectives: “The first is lifting the long-term performance of the economy. The second is reform of the tax system, to make it fairer, more sustainable and more supporting of economic growth. More >>>
Budget not a Game Changer
22 May
2010
Roger Kerr
The annual budget is the main statement of the government’s overall economic and social programme. So in the first instance it needs to be evaluated in terms of the government’s own goals.  More >>>
Social Policy – evaluating success or failure  
16 May 2010
Muriel Newman
 
Last Monday, a teacher at Te Puke High School was stabbed in the neck and back with a kitchen knife by one of his students. The boy’s whanau said that the 13-year-old had been brought up by his grandmother because... More >>>
An ugly, greasy stew which is called policy
16 May
2010
Alex Penk
Family dysfunction ruins lives. We all know this; many of us will have personally seen its corrosive effects. Even if we’ve been fortunate enough to avoid this personal knowledge, we can’t escape the effects staring up at us from the pages of our newspapers. More >>>
Proportionate Representation, Disproportionate Power
9 May 2010
Muriel Newman The present move towards Maori privilege is a direct consequence of MMP. Under MMP the party that wins the greatest party vote on election night is given the chance to form a government by horse trading with potential coalition partners. More >>>
Why and How we Should Change from MMP  
9 May
2010
Peter Shirtcliffe
MMP is a frog, and no matter how many times the princess kisses it, it won’t turn into a prince. The forthcoming referendum is a one-shot opportunity to dismiss a voting system which has been a governance failure, a negative influence on the economy, and a blight on our democracy. More >>>
Protest, Propaganda and Petitions
2 May 2010
Muriel Newman
 
On Saturday some 20,000 people marched down Queen Street protesting against the government’s proposals to mine conservation land. The rally was organised by Greenpeace with some protesters bussed in... More >>>
Politically Correct Education and the Cultural Revolution  
1 May
2010
Kevin Donnelly
Across the English-speaking world, debates have flared periodically about the impact of political correctness and left-wing ideology on the school curriculum. Education has become a central part of the culture wars and debates ... More >>>
Acting without a Mandate
25 April 2010
Muriel Newman
 
There are turning points in public affairs when parliamentary parties cross an invisible line. We saw it when former Prime Minister Helen Clark forced her government to support the anti-smacking law against... More >>>
Democracy or Dictatorship?  
25 April
2010
Larry Baldock
Do you think we live in a democracy? Recently a radio interviewer asked me, “Why call it a Campaign4Democracy, when we already live in a democracy?” Well, it’s because more and more New Zealanders are coming to the conclusion that our democracy now consists of just having the privilege of... More >>>
A Call to Action
18 April 2010
Muriel Newman
It is crystal clear from the responses of the Minister of Treaty Negotiations, Chris Finlayson, to questions posed by TV3’s Duncan Garner on “The Nation” on 10 April 2010 that National has no concerns about opening up New Zealand’s foreshore and seabed to Maori development and mining. More >>>
Revisiting the Foreshore and Seabed Act 2004  
18 April
2010
Michael Coote
First up, let us refresh our memories as to what the foreshore and seabed is legally defined as being. Prime minister John Key for one keeps deliberately trivialising what the foreshore and seabed is all about by cynically rabbiting on about Kiwis retaining the right to walk along the beach and cook up a barbie there. More >>>
A Referendum on the Foreshore &  Seabed
11 April 2010
Muriel Newman
 
The government’s discussion document outlining their proposal for foreshore and seabed legislation was launched at the beginning of Easter. The period for submissions ends on 30 April. The Attorney-General Chris Finlayson says he is interested in the views of New Zealanders... More >>>
Riding Roughshod Over Our Right to the Foreshore and Seabed  
11 April
2010
David Round
The Attorney-General, Chris Finlayson, says that he is ‘very interested in hearing New Zealanders’ views. They matter.’  And seriously, it is really important that we do provide feedback. But actually, I do not believe for a second that Chris is very interested in hearing our views... More >>>
An Idea Whose Time has Come
4 April 2010
Muriel Newman
 
“Who speaks for me?” is a question being asked by more and more New Zealanders who feel increasingly alienated from the democratic process. Democracy is no longer working when politicians feel they have a mandate to do whatever they please.... More >>>
100 Days - Claiming Back New Zealand  
3 April
2010
Amy Brooke
The mood of restlessness and anger in the country at large will not pass. This allied to the growing recognition... that governments get most issues wrong… means that even if we have passed the crossroads of competent decision-making... it is not too late to reverse our thoroughly anti-democratic directions. More >>>
The Litmus Test of Welfare Reform
28 March 2010
Muriel Newman
 
The National Government has just announced their welfare reform package. The crucial question is whether the measures will fulfill John Key’s promise that “the problems of our growing underclass is a priority... More >>>  
Reforms Could Arguably be Worse than the Status Quo
27 March
2010
Lindsay Mitchell
The National government's  long awaited welfare reforms are at best a rehash of previous efforts to reduce the cycle of  dependency. At worst, they may increase it. More >>>
The Conceit of the Anointed
21 March 2010
Muriel Newman
 
All too often something odd seems to happen to people elected to public office. Instead of being a conduit for the opinion of those they represent – as promised in their campaigns - many turn into mini-dictators... More >>>  
Global Warming No Longer Cool Even in New Zealand
21 March
2010
Roger Kerr
From north America and western Europe to east Asia and Australia, politicians are raising doubts about the costs of reducing carbon emissions to combat climate change. But who would have thought that even in New Zealand, which likes to parade its environmental credentials, global warming is no longer cool? More >>>
Race Relations Commissioner Should Go 
14 March 2010
Muriel Newman
 
The Prime Minister has said that New Zealand has far too many state agencies for a country of our size. He’s not wrong. It’s one of the reasons why government spending has escalated out of control.  More >>>  
Will this Government end Political Correctness?
14 March
2010
Dr Greg Clydsdale
This week, the Race Relations Commissioner expanded his mandate.  No longer content to give certificates to school girls opposing right wing politicians, he is now entering the super-city debate. In fact, it seems there is no issue that Joris de Bres believes is beyond his influence. More >>>
The Sacred Cow of Nuclear Power
7 March 2010
Muriel Newman
 
There are a number of “sacred cow” issues in New Zealand that politicians shy away from. These taboos are embedded so deep within our culture that they have become sacrosanct...More >>>  
Floating Nuclear Reactors: coming soon to a port near you?
6 March
2010
Dr Ron Smith
Here’s an idea to address our continuing power generation anxieties: a nice new floating nuclear reactor.  Minimal infrastructure required; just tie it up in a convenient harbour and plug it in. More >>>
New Zealand Needs a Champion
28 February 2010
Muriel Newman

Sixteen months later, the polls show the Prime Minister and the National Party still enjoy majority popular support, while ACT and the Maori Party languish at around 2 percent of the party vote...
More >>>  
Politics, Parties, Voters
27
February 2010
Mike Butler
Sixteen months after winning the 2008 election, Prime Minister John Key and the National Party have increased in popularity, according to the latest opinion polls. The polls were published before Housing and Fisheries Minister Phil Heatley’s resignation after signing off an incorrect spending declaration, the second minister to go from the Key Cabinet... More >>>
Welfare Reform on the Agenda
21 February 2010
Muriel Newman
 
Our welfare system is long overdue for reform. Far too many people are gaming the system. That’s not to deny that there are many deserving people who need the full support of the state. More >>>  
Unemployment Returns as a National Scandal
21
February 2010
Roger Kerr
Recent unemployment numbers were not good news. Contrary to expectations, the overall unemployment rate in the December quarter jumped to 7.3% of the labour force... 
More >>>
Climate Change in Tatters  
14 February 2010
Muriel Newman
 
It's not often that international controversies directly impact NZ, but “Climategate” - and the collapse of the IPCC's credibility - most certainly does. More >>>  
The Cause of Global Warming
14 February 2010
Dr Vincent Gray
The theory that carbon dioxide emissions cause warming ran into an impenetrable road block from the start because there's no method currently available that can measure the average temperature of the earth's surface. More >>>
Hopes of a Nation 7 February 2010
Muriel Newman
 
While words sound good – it is actions that matter. After nine years of socialism the country was more than ready for a fresh approach. That’s why National was elected... More >>>  
Reaction to the Report of the 2025 Taskforce
7 February 2010
Dr Don Brash
Late last November, the 2025 Taskforce issued its first report.  As readers may recall, the Taskforce was set up by Government as a result of the coalition deal between the National and ACT Parties after the 2008 election. More >>>
A Radical Agenda
31 January 2010
Muriel Newman

Earlier this month Wikatana and John Popata, the two brothers who assaulted the Prime Minister at Waitangi Day last year, began an occupation on privately owned land at Taipa in the Far North. More >>>
National has no mandate for promoting racial separatism
31 January 2010
David Round

You and I, gentle readers, can see all too clearly what is happening to our country. In despair we watch the whole colossal slow-motion train wreck, helpless to do anything about it. It is not that we are not trying to help....
 More >>>
Less Tax Not New Tax Was the Election Pledge
23 January 2010
Muriel Newman
 
The Tax Working Group released its report on proposed changes to our tax system on Wednesday to a respectful response from the government. This is in sharp contrast to the dismissive reaction the 2025 Taskforce received...  More >>>  
Tax Working Group report over-hyped
23 January 2010
Roger Kerr
Following the tax reforms of the 1980s, New Zealand’s tax system was widely regarded as one of the least distortionary in the OECD. It remained largely that way through the 1990s... 
More >>>
The MMP Review: trashing our democratic rights 
16 January 2010
Muriel Newman
 
It can be argued that the announced referendum on MMP, to be held in conjunction with the 2011 general election, is one of the most important constitutional reforms undertaken... More >>>
A step toward constitutional reform
16 January 2010
Graeme Hunt
No one pretends that if the mixed-member proportional voting system (MMP) is thrown out by public referendum New Zealand’s constitutional woes will be over.   More >>>
Please note that the above columns are the most recent. Older columns by date can be found by clicking the ARCHIVES button on the top navigation bar and by topic by clicking the relevant topic button in the TOPIC INDEX on the left hand sidebar. 

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