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Dr Muriel Newman
Contact Muriel:
Email: muriel@nzcpr.com
Phone 09 4343 836
or 021 800 111
PO Box 984, Whangarei
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18
December 2011
Merry
Xmas & Happy New Year!
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Hi there,
I
would like to take this opportunity on behalf of the New
Zealand Centre for Political Research to wish you a Merry
Christmas and a Happy New Year!
I
am writing this last newsletter of the year in a plain email
text format to make sure that it is safely delivered to those
of you who have difficulties receiving the NZCPR Weekly. As
Internet Service Providers upgrade their security systems to
protect clients from spam, newsletters like ours with images
and links are increasingly being blocked. So if you haven’t
heard from us for a while please let me know here
>>>
so we can sort it out.
A
special thanks to all who have taken
the time to share your views
with me – while I’m not always
able to reply to the hundreds of emails that I receive each
week, I can assure you that I read every message and take on
board your feedback. In addition, your excellent
contributions on the weekly polls and newsletters, ensures
that your values and views on the important political and
policy issues of our time is available as a wealth of strong
grassroots commentary on our New
Zealand Centre for Political Research website to influence
Members of Parliament and policy makers. The NZCPR
Forum,
where feedback is archived and daily debate encouraged,
has become a favoured destination for commentators and media who
like to keep their finger on the pulse of
contemporary public opinion.
Politics
is the battle of ideas. Ideas influence people and the NZCPR
plays a pivotal role in informing public opinion by speaking
out strongly and fearlessly on crucial matters that in
today’s politically correct world many others shy away from
tackling. Through our publications – and we owe a huge debt
of gratitude to our weekly Guest Commentators and bloggers -
we challenge the administration and advocate policies that
promote individual freedom, personal responsibility and
limited government. As the NZCPR is funded entirely by
newsletter readers I would like to make this end of year
appeal for a special Christmas donation: if you have followed
our work this year and believe we have made a worthwhile
contribution to public affairs, then please help to empower
our voice in 2012 with your support.
*To
support the NZCPR, please click here
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Some huge challenges lie ahead. In a country where all New
Zealanders, irrespective of racial origin should have equal
status and equal rights, the Maori Party - once more a partner
in government – wants to take the country further down the
path to racial separatism. Using the fallacious argument that
they have special governance rights as Treaty ‘partners’
with the Crown – a view that is already endemic within the
government service – the Maori Party wants to enshrine the
Maori seats and the Treaty of Waitangi in a new New Zealand
Constitution. This would give superior rights to the Maori
elite in the governance of New Zealand, turning them into a
permanent ruling class and everyone else into second class
citizens.
Their
plan must be derailed. The NZCPR will prioritise strong
opposition to the dangerous race-based ‘capture’ of their
Constitutional Review as a major component of our 2012 work
programme. In doing so we will utilise the superior
campaigning ability that our planned website upgrade should
deliver.
Another
strategy being used by the Maori Party to make the case for
special race based treatment is the newly established Ministerial
Committee on Poverty. Their coalition agreement states: “National
and the Maori Party agree to establish a Ministerial Committee
on Poverty to bring a greater focus to, and improve
co-ordination of, government activity aimed at alleviating the
effects of poverty in Aotearoa/New Zealand. The Ministerial
Committee will be chaired by the Deputy Prime Minister, Hon
Bill English, with Hon Tariana Turia acting as Deputy Chair.
The membership of the Committee will be determined by the
Prime Minister, Rt Hon John Key, but will include the Vote
Ministers of Education, Health, Housing, Maori Affairs and
Social Development and Employment. The Committee will publicly
release update reports no later than every six months, with
the first update report being released mid-2012.”
While
it appears that the Maori Party intends making the case for
special treatment in the form of additional welfare support,
history has shown that it is the free market and private
enterprise that enables people to improve their lives, not
state welfare. As Milton Friedman explained in his iconic book
Free to Choose, “A
free society releases the energies and abilities of people to
pursue their own objectives. It prevents some people from
arbitrarily suppressing others. It does not prevent some
people from achieving positions of privilege, but so long as
freedom is maintained, it prevents those positions of
privilege from being institutionalized; they are subjected to
continued attack by other able, ambitious people. Freedom
means diversity but also mobility. It preserves the
opportunity for today’s disadvantaged to become tomorrow’s
privileged and, in the process, enables almost everyone, from
top to bottom, to enjoy a fuller and richer life”.
The
NZCPR will enter the poverty debate in 2012 by establishing an
NZCPR Committee on Poverty to mirror the Ministerial Panel. We
will gather evidence to show that the poor are better off
today than they were in the past and we will make the case
that increasing welfare will entrench disadvantage, showing
that the way to help the underprivileged is through education,
jobs, and self reliance, not dependency on the state.
The
reality is that today’s poor are far better off than their
forefathers. Human progress lifts all sectors of a society. As
the OECD found in a recent report on poverty in member
countries, while the rich might be getting richer, so too are
the poor - and at a faster rate.
As we look ahead, New Zealand is going to face some tough
challenges. Prime amongst those is the perilous state of the
global economy. Taking an objective point of view, a
government has the power to change the way our economy works
– making it grow faster or slower through policy settings.
Reforming welfare, lowering taxes, reducing the regulatory
burden on small business, and restraining government spending,
will all help the economy to grow faster. The NZCPR will be
advocating for bold measures in all of these areas.
The NZCPR will also be scrutinising not only the dozens of new
Treaty of Waitangi claims that are ready to be passed into
law, but also the expected flood of tribal customary rights
claims for our foreshore and seabed under the new Marine and
Coastal Area Act. Like many of you I still feel a strong sense
of grievance at what the previous government did in
sacrificing public ownership of our coast. After almost 200
years, the iwi elite has no moral right whatsoever to steal
the coast from the wider New Zealand public through
legislation. That’s why we took a stand against the law
change by launching our Citizens Initiated Referendum to
restore Crown ownership of the foreshore and seabed. And with
our major CIR promotion on hold until February (to be clear of
the Rugby World Cup, the election, and Christmas!), I want to
take this opportunity to thank those of you who are working so
hard to help us gather the 320,000 signatures of registered
voters that we need by June next year if we are to succeed in
forcing a Referendum.
On Tuesday New Zealand’s 50th Parliament will sit
for the first time. Lockwood Smith is expected to be elected
as Speaker and Members of Parliament will be sworn in.
Ministers in the Executive received their warrants last week.
The State Opening of Parliament will take place on Wednesday
when the Governor General delivers the Speech from the Throne,
setting out the new government’s priorities for the next
three years. This will give us all an opportunity to assess
whether John Key is as serious as he says about getting the
country back onto a path to growth and prosperity. The Address
in Reply debate which follows will give us a glimpse of the
new forces in Parliament – the newly elected Leader of the
Labour Party David Shearer, Winston Peters who against all
odds brought New Zealand First back from oblivion, and John
Banks representing the ACT Party. Parliament is expected to
rise on Thursday for Christmas and will resume in February.
Now on a lighter note, from our Facebook
page - in response to the absurd new pronouncement by New
Zealand’s ‘thought police’ that golliwog wrapping paper
should be withdrawn from the shelves of a popular chain store
- Michael writes: “Race
Relations Commissioner Joris de Bres is, and has always been,
a complete WASTE of space! He didn't feel Margaret Mutu's
comments wanting to restrict "White Immigrants" to
New Zealand was inappropriate, but fun Golliwog doll wrapping
paper is. Give me a break!!!!”
And
an old favourite from our Christmas
Cheer file: A
British ambassador to the US was living in Washington. One
December, a radio station phoned him to ask what he would like
for Christmas. He tried to think of something small and not
too expensive. In the end he said, “A small box of
crystallised fruits would be lovely, thank you very much.”
On Christmas Day the radio station had a special International
Christmas Programme. “We asked three different ambassadors
what they wished for at Christmas,” the reporter began.
“The Russian Ambassador wanted world peace, the French
Ambassador wanted an end to hunger, and as for the British
Ambassador …well he said he wanted a small box of
crystallised fruits!”
Last
week our poll asked whether, since National already had the
numbers to govern with ACT and United Future, you supported
them entering into a Confidence and Supply agreement with the
Maori Party - 83 percent of respondents opposed the deal with
the Maori Party. Our summer poll asks you to share with us the
issues you would like us tackle in 2012. To share your views
please click here
>>>.
The
NZCPR’s regular newsletter service will resume in mid
January, but our NZCPR.com website, Forum and Breaking Views
Blog will all be updated on an on-going basis.
Finally,
the NZCPR could not exist without your support. Together we
have a very big year ahead. I hope I can count on your
backing. And please be absolutely
assured that frugality is our middle name so every
contribution goes a long way.
*To
support the NZCPR, please click here
>>>
Thanks
so much for your valuable support, and please accept my very
best wishes to you and your family for a great Christmas and a
happy and healthy New Year!
Warmest regards,
Muriel
Dr Muriel Newman
New Zealand Centre for Political Research
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