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NZCPR
Mid-week Politics
Winston Peters
31 October 07
Speech
to NZ First Conference (28
October 2007) |
This
has been a great convention - which demonstrates New Zealand
First's many strengths - its people, its policies and its
principles.
And
it is a convention with a much needed message for all New
Zealanders.
Thank
you to every volunteer.
Other
parties have bigger cheque books but that will never
substitute for thousands of committed workers.
Thank
you to all those nominees for board elections and other
positions. It is a sign of a healthy, democratic party.
A
special thanks to Dail Jones, Shona Keown, Ernie Davis and the
many other volunteers for their long hours in preparing for
this convention 2007, along with the behind the scenes work
which has made it such a success.
Thanks
also to my caucus colleagues for their hard work and
dedication to our cause.
They
are a critical part of our success.
Now
some of you will be aware that the Prime Minister is about to
reshuffle her cabinet.
There
are at least two vacancies and maybe more.
When
you look across the other side of the chamber there is no
doubt that one of National's big weaknesses is their lack of
experienced and talented MPs.
It
is a source of great pride that if either side needed ready
made Ministers to fill cabinet posts then New Zealand First
could better fill that void.
Peter
Brown would make an excellent cabinet minister. He is an
acknowledged expert in transport and energy.
The
same is true of Brian Donnelly in education and local
government - more than capable and with experience to burn.
As
for Ron Mark well here are the facts. National put up law and
order spokespeople who talk tough, Labour put up people who
try to act tough. Well Ron Mark is tough and that is why he
would make an excellent Minister.
In
Barbara Stewart parliament has somebody who actually brings
caring to the health portfolio - not an obsession with money.
Doug
Woolerton has the skills and experience that more than two
decades involvement in politics brings.
Pita
Paraone is one of the few Maori MPs who actually understands
what it means to be a New Zealander and a Maori.
Now
we raise the suitability of our caucus for higher office
because frankly those of us who have been around long enough
to know what talent looks like, are tired of the procession of
mediocrities. We are not talking about the Mahareys, whom we
rightly respect, but the time servers, we don't.
We
have a ready made team for 2008, capable of filling roles
across parliament.
They
know what it means to be uniquely Kiwi.
This
way of life is the interaction between our people and our
environment - working, enjoying and engaging with our
landscape - our mountains, our forests, our rivers and lakes,
our high country and lowland farms, and our coastal waters.
Our
economy rests on industries linked to our surrounds - we are
still farmers, foresters and fishers.
The
fact remains that most of our wealth comes from our lands and
waters. That is the base from which we should build our
entrepreneurial and innovative future.
We've
been saying that, the only ones saying it, for the past twenty
years. We've been saying we should rewrite the Reserve Bank
Act to reflect New Zealand's economy. They jeered at us once,
but they aren't jeering now. And tax cuts for new exports so
common in every successful small economy.
These
policies will make us prosperous again.
Ladies
and gentlemen, we are passionate about outdoor recreation.
Our
landscape lends itself perfectly to outdoor activities and we
have an obligation to preserve and protect it.
We
work the second longest hours in the OECD - yet we still value
time for recreation.
But
access to some of the best places is under threat.
It
is this critical part of our identity that New Zealand First
wants to protect and secure now, and for future generations.
There
is a noose tightening around some of these outdoor activities,
by often well meaning, but ultimately over the top and out of
control bureaucrats.
Too
much of our environment is being locked away, or limited in
what it can be used for.
The
purpose of conserving these parts of the country - so that we
can enjoy them - has been lost.
This
tightening noose is easily seen in marine reserves, where
recreational fishing is threatened by the struggle between
eco-fundamentalists and commercial fishing.
New
Zealand First is going to save recreational fishing.
We
have a policy to get the balance right between outdoor
recreation, conservation, and commercial interests.
We
will create a middle tier of marine reserves, which allows for
recreational fishers, but not commercial fishing. There is
some abuse of the system, but recreational and customary
fishers, properly managed, are not a threat to fishing stocks.
Dramatically
restricting access to recreational fishers, when commercial
fishing is the target of marine reserves, reeks of overkill.
And
we will have local participation in decision-making over these
matters.
We
will be announcing detailed policy soon.
To
date a pendulum has swung between commercial and conservation
interests, depending on who is in government, and
recreationists have been caught in the middle.
The
uniquely Kiwi New Zealander is becoming an endangered species.
Being
uniquely Kiwi is more than a way of life or embracing our
environment - it is an attitude - and a vision.
We
started this party over 14 years ago with a vision of what
this country and its people could be.
A
vision based on the belief that we could do much better than
the two old parties.
A
vision for all New Zealanders and not just the privileged few.
Decided
by all New Zealanders and not just a few over-mighty subjects,
either from the left or the right.
And
we have spent the past 14 years fighting for this vision,
often against the odds.
Despite
our many successes there is still much to be done.
I
am going to say something now which needs to be said.
But
before I do I want to ask you some questions and please
answer me!
(List
the questions on New Zealand First's achievements)
That
is our record.
Now
answer this please, which subject about New Zealand has had
the most coverage internationally - in all the major media
outlets across the globe - in the last ten years?
I'll
tell you, because I saw it unfolding last week. It is an
unnerving feeling, to be overseas and to see our country
headlined, not because of economic or sporting success, but
because of a bunch of malcontents running around the bush with
guns.
That
was the news that the world heard from New Zealand last week.
The
biggest New Zealand story in more than a decade.
The
result of behaviour which has been excused, condoned, nurtured
and even encouraged over the past twenty years.
What
type of country do we live in, when it is not the malcontents
with the guns that get turned on by society, but the police?
That
is an indictment on our values system.
We
had hundreds of people protesting against the police arresting
Tama Iti and his mates.
They
are marching - not because he is guilty or innocent - they are
marching because he is brown.
We
once marched against apartheid, now they are marching for it.
We
have groups calling for separate nations within our nation and
prepared to use guns and violence.
If
you don't believe that - watch TV One's Sunday programme
tonight.
What
is most obscene about this is that these same people who want
their separate nation, want us the taxpayer to pay for it.
Just
last Friday I was in a helicopter flight overlooking the
forestry estate around Taupo.
What
I saw were Maori workers, hundreds of them, on tractors and
trucks, working hard and being paid for their work.
Not
looking for a handout, not prancing around protesting
they were too busy working to pay their taxes and support
their families.
What
a contrast!
This
is where the system is failing - taxpayer sponsored militant
separatism.
These
groups want separate development - but your money to fund it.
Rejecting
all our values except collecting the dole each fortnight.
Get
this clear - we are not having people opting out, demanding we
pay for it, and then ramming their hymn of hate down our
throats.
Fortunately
this situation is not without hope.
Most
Maori in New Zealand actually want to be part of and enjoy
their country.
The
overwhelming majority of Maori have jobs and want to raise
their children for a better future.
Today
we call on these Maori to join the fight against militant
separatism.
Our
track record speaks for itself.
Every
single positive development for Maori in the last two decades
has either been New Zealand First policy or with our support.
I've
given you the record, but I left one part out. It was a New
Zealand First MP who passed the first ever legislative
transfer of church land back to its Maori owners, and that
happened 27 years ago Pehiaweri Marae.
If
it is right and good we will support it - in fact we will lead
the way.
But
we will always fight separatism wherever and whenever we see
it.
New
Zealanders are sick and tired of being called racists by those
who are clearly the most militant racists in the country.
New
Zealanders wonder why a political party based solely on race
is held up as the moral compass for the country. In South
Africa we called that apartheid, and the rest of the world
including New Zealand condemned it.
But
these symptoms run much deeper.
You
have felt this impact.
You
will be wondering at the farce of so much of our land
belonging overseas, and so much of what is left, being fought
over in Treaty claims.
Reconcile
that paradox of pathetic policies, and remember Labour and
National did that.
You
will be wondering why the PC police think it's more important
to pander to cultural sensitivities than deliver services.
You
will be wondering what sort of country promotes prostitution
as a career option for young women, and then makes laws to
support it.
You
will be wondering why the only man to come to this country
with terrorist-related convictions is turned into a folk hero
at over $3million of taxpayers money. Now we have his whole
family here, and you are going to pay all over again.
It's
hard enough to understand why soft headed do-gooders support
this, but why would Maori see their total present population
after one thousand years exceeded by just thirteen years of
imports, and support this.
We
have an education system which drives men out of nearly every
primary school. So who is the male role model now - the
boyfriend mum picks up at the pub?
You
will wonder why your suburbs are covered by the scourge of
graffiti and why youth gangs rule the streets and our shopping
centres.
You
will wonder why two boy racers can kill a young woman and then
get only ten months home detention. Where is the justice in
that?
You
cringe in disbelief every time a young child is killed from
violence and child abuse.
You
wonder when you are going to feel safe on the streets again.
You
wonder why you have to change your way of life and have the
beliefs of others forced down your throat.
It
just feels wrong - because it is wrong.
It
didn't happen overnight - this decay of our society has grown
over the past two decades.
We
are losing a national compass and certainty about our values
and it is getting worse with each generation.
The
two tired old parties have been equally culpable in its spread
and offer no solution.
Indeed
on this front there is now so little between the two old
parties, despite the rhetoric, that National is now simply
Labour in drag.
However,
we have seen the veil slip on National's true intentions.
National
has never learnt the lesson that no means no when it comes to
asset sales.
They
will be reminded every step of the way up to the 2008 election
and beyond.
On
the other hand, Labour is so captured by ideology that it
cannot see the damage it is doing in its pursuit of liberal
causes.
Their
liberal crusades have resulted in a pervasive identity theft
of who we are as New Zealanders, despite all their best
intentions.
Our
values have been diluted.
Our
society has become so obsessed with promoting people's rights
that we neglect to demand the obligations and responsibilities
that go with them.
And
the most depressing aspect of this social and cultural decay
is the plague of separatism actively destroying the
foundations of our society.
Both
Labour and National tolerate separatism.
We
have been warning them for more than twenty years and yet they
still can't accept the blight of separatism - because they do
not want to cause offence.
They
have become indifferent. They have no idea how to handle it.
Gangs
are flourishing because neither Labour nor National has the
courage to confront separatism.
Our
ancestors built this nation on values such as tolerance, and
now their offspring are having tolerance thrown back in their
faces by militant separatism.
New
Zealand was built on unity, working together as one people.
We
intermarried, we worked together, we grew to respect each
other and we had a shared sense of identity.
Now
we are being told that if we don't accept everybody else's
values, imported or not, then there is something wrong with
us.
Well
we in New Zealand First say that some things are just plain
wrong.
Separatism
is wrong.
Gang
violence is wrong.
Killing
our children is wrong.
Not
treating our seniors with respect is wrong.
Stealing
is wrong.
You
know more than most that values do matter.
If
we do not face up to the scourge of separatism we risk being
overrun - the uniquely Kiwi will become extinct.
Fortunately
New Zealand First has changed the nature of politics in New
Zealand.
We
are not afraid to speak out on the tough issues.
We
have are a strong voice for ordinary New Zealanders, for their
values and beliefs and for their right to protect their
lifestyle.
We
will confront separatism where we see it.
We
will point out the hypocrisy we see in our parliament.
Let's
begin with our young.
Why
don't we have the national anthem sung again in our schools?
We
must ensure all immigrants have a proper civics programme.
They must understand our values, not expect us to adopt
theirs.
Now
we will announce more policy on this front as we draw closer
to the election.
We
are not about to let this endangered species become extinct. .
We
will be fighting for your cause, your values and your way of
life.
And
we need your help more than ever.
If
we are to stop gangs and violent crime then we will need your
fundraising efforts, your work in electorates and your support
as we build to the election campaign.
If
we are to stop the separatists in their tracks then we need
more of you we must grow the party.
You
have a chance to be part of something great - the preservation
of your unique way of life.
It
will be a long, hard struggle, against an army of taxpayer
funded apologists and card carrying politicians.
So
let us prepare for this battle.
And
when we have saved the uniquely Kiwi way of life - you can
look back and say - I was there, and I helped the right side
win.
All
roads lead to election 2008.
Go
home and please tell your fellow workers and friends that our
flag is still flying.
A
bright beacon, for a unique way of life, for a new dawn and a
brighter day.
If you
would like to comment on this issue please click
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