Archive for November, 2011

Nice try Greg

Tuesday, November 22nd, 2011 at 4:34 pm

Been released some amusing e-mails from one of the participants (should be easy to guess). Well known Labour activist and wannabee candidate Greg Presland e-mailed New Lynn and Waitakere candidates the following:

Greetings

I am the acting chair of the Titirangi Ratepayers and Residents Association.  We are intending to hold a “meet the candidates” meeting on November 22, 2011 from 7 pm to 9 pm at the Presbyterian Hall, 244 Atkinson Road Titirangi.  As the area has parts of two seats in it we are inviting all candidates for the New Lynn or Waitakere seats to attend. …

I am in the process of arranging an independent chair for the debate part of the meeting.

Can you each confirm that you are available..  Can national secretaries send this email to their local candidates.

Greg Presland

This was sent on the 10th of November. Most genuine meetings have had incites go out well in advance of the final fortnight. Now Paula Bennett could have just replied with a I’ve already got something on that day (which she has) but her reply was:

Dear Greg -

I must admit your invitation did make me smile. I well remember 6 years ago as a very new candidate unwittingly going to this meeting that was a complete set up by the Labour Party and how appallingly it was run and how rude everyone was, fool me once and shame on me, fool me twice … well it ain’t going to happen. I will not be attending.  Since the boundary changes around 4 years ago, none of the Waitakere electorate is in the Titirangi catchment – hence why I wasn’t invited 3 years ago.

Anything involving you would be blatantly party political as you are the West Auckland Labour Party Chairman and constantly negatively blog about me under the psuedonym Mickeysavage, I could bring as many of my supporters to match the Labour stacking that will go on and everyone could have a mud slinging match, but what a waste of everyones time.

Enjoy your evening.

Paula

So it was an invite for a group that do not even live in her electorate by the main Labour activist in West Auckland. Don’t have to be a rocket scientist to work out there won’t be a single undecided voter there. Now Paula’s response was fairly polite. Then Greg replied with this:

Dear Paula

Six years ago I arranged for a local Headmaster of impeccable standing to chair the debate because I acknowledged that I have strong political views and I considered that an independent chair was appropriate.  There were at least two members of the National Party on the TRRA executive at the time and I was careful to make sure that the meeting was conducted properly.  I received no complaints and thought the meeting went well.

Last election we decided to have candidates from the Tamaki Makaurau seat, this time we thought that we should have Waitakere candidates again.  And you are wrong, part of the Titirangi area is in the Waitakere seat.  You should get out a map some time and check the boundaries.

This time Deputy Mayor Penny Hulse will chair the debate.  Am I missing something?

As for blogging well using taxpayers money to advertise constituency clinics deserves criticism and your particular style of politics is appalling.  Why someone who gained a degree using public funds should destroy the opportunity for others to do the same is beyond me.  And your disrespect for the rights of privacy of beneficiaries while supporting a Prime Minister that tramples over the independence of the media in trying to protect rights of privacy that were surrendered as soon as he called a press conference is distressing in the extreme.

May this election return a Government that will work in the best interests of ordinary Kiwis.

By the way I am not the West Auckland Labour Party chair.  There is no such position.

The funny thing is Greg sent that version of the e-mail with the paragraph part-bolded just to Paula. The next day he sent a sanitised one to all the other candidates, including Paula.

What is funny is Greg regards Penny Hulse as an independent chair. I have no beef with Penny, but she is a politician of the left and not independent, in the sense of someone apolitical.

Anyway good on Paula for not falling into the same trap twice.

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Flirting with the truth

Tuesday, November 22nd, 2011 at 2:17 pm

My latest blog at Stuff is called “Flirting with the Truth“.

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Labour likes them young

Tuesday, November 22nd, 2011 at 12:26 pm

Clare Curran at Red Alert proudly blogs how a seven year old has been indoctrinated by her parents to believe that John Key will sell our fish and treasures and toys.

The fact that Clare thinks this is a great things tells us a lot. she even boasts how this is the future – indoctrinating seven year olds.

Her commenters are less impressed. Extracts:

Your kidding right? You should know that at 7 most children mirror their parents or their teachers attitudes. You might not think it is bad, but I take special care not to pollute my son’s attitudes with my political views. Teach them right and wrong i.e. good values and leave the rest of the indoctrination stuff out of it. …

I could tell my kid what to write as well!! Doesn’t mean they comprehend what they are writing..and don’t try to tell us that a 7year old has ANY understanding of politics(most adults have enough trouble understanding it all)…you can’t be that naive surely.

Is this what Labour means by own our future?

Curran responds to the criticism:

I think at seven (it may be eight) that most kids know the difference between right and wrong.

You right wingers can write as much venom as you like. The fact is that many many kids know when their family is poor and their mums and dads are struggling. And they can see the difference between their family and other families which are well off.

This sums up to me what is all so common in Labour. I do not think those who support policies of the left are evil or wrong. I just think their policies generally won’t achieve what they want, because they have too much confidence in the Government making better decisions than individuals. But to Clare and many in Labour, politics is good vs evil and right vs wrong. She thinks that Labour’s policies are so obviously good and National’s so obviously wrong that a seven year old can judge.

A letter commenter points out:

Clare, knowing that it’s wrong to kill or steal doesn’t mean that 7 or 8 year olds have anything interesting ir worthwhile to say on the subject of economic policy. For you to suggest that asset sales are as straightforward a moral problem as murder, for instance, is every bit as infantile as the drawing by your 7-year-old acolyte.

and another:

Clare, a 7 or 8 year old can probably see the difference between their own poor family, and another better off family. But that child definitely is not capable of forming their own opinions around the main causes of that, much less identify policies (and promoters thereof) that either improve or worsen their situation.

This is digusting.

This is why Labour will have no hesitation about running a much dirtier campaign than other parties. Because if you truly truly think that your opponents are evil and wrong, then the ends justifies the means.

Finally I love this comment by Matthew Hooton:

But Clare, “Gracia” – if she exists and hasn’t been dreamed up by you as a PR exercise – doesn’t write and draw about poverty and issues of social equity, but about asset sales.

And it is very difficult to believe that, at 7, someone could have developed an informed opinion about that. Phil Goff, for example, says that he didn’t reach the correct conclusion about that topic until he was in his 40s and 50s, having participated in asset sales in his late 30s.

Heh. Yes a youthful Phil Goff from age 31 to 37 was a fervent fan of asset sales. He changed his mind he says in the 1990s yet Goff at 49 voted to sell 25% of Air New Zealand to Qantas. Goodness knows what his policy will be in his 60s.

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Caption Contest

Tuesday, November 22nd, 2011 at 12:18 pm

This is from this morning as the PM visited a manufacturer. I’m not sure what caused the grimace but I am told it led to much hilarity.

Anyway makes a good caption contest. As always they should be funny, not nasty.

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More on the worm

Tuesday, November 22nd, 2011 at 12:07 pm

This was a comment made in the thread on the worm, but I think is worth making a post for more to see.

Earlier this year, my colleagues and I published a paper in the open access journal PLoS One that reported an experiment we conducted during the 2010 UK election debates. We showed that the worm has a very powerful influence on voters’ perceptions of televised election debates, and even on their voting intentions. We cautioned that this was a significant cause for concern, particularly given the unreliability of a worm poll based on such a small (and probably unrepresentative) sample.

The worm may be good entertainment, but it’s not good for democracy. Broadcasting a debate with the worm shortly before the election raises very serious concerns about the potential for biasing voters. This matter is too important to be left solely to media organisations to determine.

I made several attempts to contact journalists and politicians prior to the debate. Other than a polite letter from the Minister for Broadcasting, I received no response. I hope that those commenting here who are concerned about the use of the worm will take a look at our research and consider appealing to broadcasters (or their MPs) to try to prevent the reappearance of the worm.
You can read our paper here:

http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0018154

Here’s another link that may be of interest:

http://www.thenakedscientists.com/HTML/content/interviews/interview/1606/

Colin Davis

Professor Davis is a Professor of Cognitive Science at Royal Holloway University of London.

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Selling Air New Zealand

Tuesday, November 22nd, 2011 at 10:20 am

Labour’s position on Air New Zealand is that having the state own 76% of it is exactly the right number and how it will be a disaster to reduce the Government shareholding to 51%. They have never explained why, if the mixed ownership model is so bad, they are not buying up 100% of Air New Zealand.

But that is not the point of my post. It is to remind people of the hypocrisy of their stance on Air New Zealand. For Phil Goff was part of a Cabinet that voted to sell 20% of Air New Zealand.

No, not the Cabinet of the 1980s, but the Cabinet of 2002. In 2002 Labour voted to sell 22.5% of Air New Zealand to Qantas. Phil Goff was in that Cabinet that voted for that.

Thankfully competition authorities intervened and stopped the alliance, which would have destroyed competition and pushed up prices massively.

But here is the difference. Phil Goff and Labour in 2002 voted to sell 22.5% of Air NZ to its biggest competitor Qantas – into foreign hands.

National in 2011 is seeking public support (unlike Labour) to sell 25% of Air New Zealand to (mainly) New Zealand investors – something which Labour is now saying they are totally against.

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Cartoon – John Stringer

Tuesday, November 22nd, 2011 at 10:00 am

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Making your vote count

Tuesday, November 22nd, 2011 at 9:36 am

I’ve done a little table which may help people who want a Key-led Government or a Goff-led Government to decide how to vote, or more specifically how to make sure your vote is not wasted.

There are two ways a vote can be “wasted”. By this I don’t mean it isn’t counted, but that it doesn’t help a party gain extra seats in Parliament.Ineffective might be a better name for it.

The first way is if a party does not make the threshold of 5% or one electorate seat. People may wish to still vote for these parties because of a strong belief in their policies, but other people might want to make sure their vote helps decide who will be Prime Minister – Key or Goff.

The other way a party vote can be ineffective is if you vote for a party that gains no list mps on top of their electorate seats. For example the Maori Party won five electorate seats last election, and their party vote was just 2.4% and they needed 4.6% of the vote to gain a list MP on top of their electorate MPs. So all those party votes didn’t help the Maori Party gain extra MPs.

Party Vote needed for a party vote to not be “wasted” Likely vote in Parliament
National 33% To make John Key PM
Labour 18% To make Phil Goff PM
Greens 5% To make Phil Goff PM
ACT 1.2% if Banks wins Epsom, otherwise 5% To make John Key PM
United Future 1.2% if Dunne wins Ohariu, otherwise 5% To make John Key PM
Maori Party 3.6% (assumes they hold all 4 seats) Could vote either way
Mana Party 1.2% if Harawira wins Te Tai Tokerau To make Phil Goff PM
NZ First 5% To make Phil Goff PM
or force new election
Conservative 5% Could vote either way

So what does this mean. Here’s what it means if you want John Key to remain Prime Minister:

  • Only a vote for National is guaranteed to help Key remain Prime Minister
  • A vote for United Future or ACT will only help Key remain PM if they win an electorate seat and their party vote is at least 1.2%.
  • A vote for any other party is unlikely to help Key remain Prime Minister

If you want Phil Goff to become Prime Minister:

  • A vote for Labour is guaranteed to help Goff become Prime Minister
  • A vote for the Greens is exceptionally likely to help Goff become Prime Minister
  • A vote for the Mana Party helps Phil Goff become PM if Harawira retains Te Tai Tokerau and they get at least 1.2% party vote
  • A vote for NZ First helps Phil Goff become PM, or will lead to a new election if they refuse confidence and supply to both parties

If you want your party to decide after the election between Key and Goff, there is not much to choose from

  • A vote for the Maori Party will only help them gain MPs if they exceed 3.6%
  • A vote for the Conservative Party will only help them gain MPs if they exceed 5.0%

Now this post is not telling people how to vote. It is informing people how to make sure your vote is most effective in determining the Prime Minister and Government, if that is what matters to you. It doesn’t for some people, but it does for others.

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Threatening to kill the PM

Tuesday, November 22nd, 2011 at 8:22 am

Stuff reports:

A Palmerston North man was serious when he spoke of becoming a suicide bomber in order to assassinate the prime minister and his wife in a Lower Hutt steak house, a court has ruled.

Keith William Mabey, 22, was found guilty in Palmerston North District Court yesterday of threatening to kill John Key after explaining his assassination plot to a Corrections Department psychologist. …

“He said John Key was not running the country properly and … was attempting to poison everyone, so he needed to kill him to stop it.”

Mr Colhoun said Mabey told him he had researched bomb-making on the internet and had successfully tested some homemade gun powder and a detonator.

He planned to modify a stab-proof vest with pockets of dynamite.

I wonder if Mabey was also an “undecided” worm panelists for the debate last night :-)

In May, Police Minister Judith Collins said “serious threats” had been made against Mr Key after it was revealed the Diplomatic Protection Squad had blown its budget by $800,000 in 2009-10.

Labour claimed Mr Key was using a squad entourage to make him look important.

One of the many things they’ll never apologise for.

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Grey Power against Asians

Tuesday, November 22nd, 2011 at 8:08 am

Craig Ranapia blogs this item from Radio New Zealand:

Grey Power is being criticised for calling on Auckland Council to review the number of Asian immigrants in the city.

As part of a submission for Auckland Council’s 30-year plan, the lobby group asked for a forum to look at the changing face of Auckland and the impact of different cultures.

Grey Power’s submission is based on population forecasts which suggest the Asian community will be the dominant ethnic group in Auckland by 2040.

Auckland regional director Bill Rayner says the proposal is not meant to offend anyone, but many of its members want the country’s population to remain Pacific-based and not have such a large Asian component.

How sad that a group which purports to seek a fair go for older New Zealanders, exposes itself as having a racist agenda.

Immigration should be colour-blind. Individuals should be assessed against criteria such as education, skills, wealth and ability to settle and assimilate in New Zealand. When a group like Grey Power says they want fewer Asians immigrating to New Zealand, what they are saying is that no matter what their individual qualities, prospective immigrants should be ruled out on the basis of their race or ethnicity.

There are legitimate debates about the pace of immigration, as excessive immigration can strain infrastructure. But that debate should be about the overall level of immigration to NZ, not about keeping one ethnicity out or down.

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General Debate 22 November 2011

Tuesday, November 22nd, 2011 at 8:00 am
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So much for a panel of undecided voters

Monday, November 21st, 2011 at 8:04 pm

The panel/studio worm has been pretty consistent all night. If Phil Goff says anything it goes up. I joked on Twitter that Goff could confess to the Crewe murders and the panel worm would go up.

I wondered why, as this was meant to be a panel of undecided voters.

Then I saw this tweet from John Kingi, about being a worm panelist. A couple of friends of his seem to be there also.

Now John Kingi is a vocal Labour Party activist. He is about as undecided a voter as Phil Goff is.

TV3 have had their panel infiltrated by one or more Labour activists. Either TV3 failed to ask people if they were genuinely undecided voters, or they were lied to. I hope the media investigate this thorougly before reporting on the results of the worm.

UPDATE: And looks like a second panelist is a Labour voter – see here.

UPDATE2: I have a report of a third panel member (and remember there were only 65 and they are meant to all be undecided) who tutors at Auck Uni politics and has publicly declared she is a Green voter and supporter.

UPDATE3: And we have a third Labour person identified. There may be a fourth.

So also Nive Sharat there, and if we check her out.

This is a major credibility blow to the panel/studio worm.

UPDATE: John Kingi phoned and e-mailed me to say that he in no way misrepresented himself to those selecting the panel, and I take him at his word. His e-mail:

In regards to your post on Kiwiblog, it is implied that myself, amongst others, somehow “inflitrated” the TV3 panel. This is simply not true. I have not been a Labour Party member for some time, and the page you linked from Grassroots Labour was one I haven’t seen or used in over two years. The picture you paint is not an accurate reflection of my current political position. The questions raised in the selection of the panel included:

Who did you vote for at the last election? My answer: Labour

Who do you plan to vote for at this election? My answer: Undecided, but definitely on the centre left. 

Amongst other gender/age/electorate questions. I at no point lied about my political positions or intentions and I gave Key and Goff equal treatment in my response to the debate. In fact I even voted that Key actually won the debate in my view at the end! I hope that with the full facts established, you can clarify on your blog.

I chatted with John and he also confirmed to me that he was not undecided between a centre-right and centre-left party, but between parties of the centre-left. I do not believe this is how the panel was sold. As I said before the debate even begun they would have been better to use “swinging” voters, ie those who have previously voted both CL and CR.

I understand Clint Woolly has also said he is undecided, however it is his own tweet where he describes himself as a Labour voter.

Back to John, I stand my my point that I don’t think someone who was so passionate about their political beliefs that until recently they were an activist for political party, is suitable to be a panelists of “undecided voters”. Take the photo below of John:

This is obviously taken since the last election, and I suspect since Jacinda moved to Auckland which makes it even more recent. I don’t think having once been a political activist for a political party means you can never be seen as “undecided”, even decades later. But at a minimum I don’t regard such activism (and membership) within the same parliamentary term as being compatible with being on a panel which is portrayed to the public as “undecided voters”. I once voted Labour, but that doesn’t make me a swinging voter.

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Aladdin

Monday, November 21st, 2011 at 4:30 pm

Went to Aladdin, a pantomime by Roger Hall, at Circa on Sunday afternoon with Auckland Girl.

It is very very hard not to enjoy a good pantomime and very hard not to enjoy a Roger Hall play so when you get the two of them combined, the outcome is no surprise -it was a rollicking good time.

Once again the star of the show is Gavin Rutherford, who seems to specialise in dressing up as sex starved middle aged woman, and yes that is a compliment. He excelled as Widow Twankey who runs a laundrey with Hanky and Panky. her son is Aladdin.

Aladdin wants to marry Princess Jasmine, but the evil Abanazar also covets her, and it is a crime for anyone to view her unless they marry her, and to marry her you need to be very wealthy.

Nick Dunbar makes a marvelous villain as Abanazar and also doubles as the Sultan. His sidekick is the demon Kebab.

Photo by Stephan A’Court

Jessica Robinson fits the role of the beautiful Princess Jasmine, and has a wonderfully strong singing voice.

A surprise highlight though was the genie, played by Lyndee-Jane Rutherford. She is basically a Jewish genie, and it is comic genius. The accent is wonderful.

As usual, Michael Nicholas-Williams provides excellent music, and the fourth wall to him is broken a couple of times to good comic effect.

The play was non-stop laughs, and great audience interaction. Sit in the front row at your peril. And no matter where you sit, you’ll be helping chant “Oh yes it is”. And the kiddies get to go up on stage for one of the routines. It’s all great fun for people of any age.

Two minor issues. The total time at 2 hours 10 may be a bit challenging for very young kids. Personally I was fine with it, as there was plenty of laughs and action, but with the interval allow two and a half hours. The second issue was that at first it reminded me a bit too much of last year’s panty – Robin Hood. I guess this was natural with many of the cast the same, and the same director. To be fair, the similarities were just in the initial stages, and as it developed it formed its own special feel.

Definitely highly recommended as a fun show, for old and young.

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Labour behind in Te Tai Tonga

Monday, November 21st, 2011 at 4:00 pm

Te Karere have just released their Te Tai Tonga poll, which I have blogged in full at Curiablog.

Many had been picking it as a seat that Labour may win with Rino Tirikatene standing for then. However this poll of 400 voters has him 11% behind Rahui Katene.

The Maori seats are difficult to poll, so this poll is not gospel, but it will be a big blow for Labour if they fail to win this seat. On the plus side it means one of their List MPs will survive if they do lose it.

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A second Labour smear campaign

Monday, November 21st, 2011 at 3:43 pm

Oh my God. Labour are repeating their 2005 smear campaign to state housing tenants. Is there any depth they won’t stoop to?

State Housing Brochure

The reality under National is has increased the housing stock, with the only sales (a few dozen) being to existing tenants, and the capital used to buy more houses. In fact the total number of state houses has increased by more than 1,000 under National. National has also renovated or upgraded 50,000 state houses.

It is an absolute lie to say National is reviewing all state house tenancies. The policy clearly says only *new* tenancies will be placed on periodic review.

So Labour are putting out material saying Vote Labour to save your family home and vote Labour if you want to be around to see your kid’s first birthday. This is what happens when you place Trevor Mallard in charge of your campaign. It shows they are totally unchanged from the bunch that got kicked out in 2008 – in fact I think they have got worse.

UPDATE: Inventory at Keeping Stock blogs the problems caused by Labour’s fake eviction notices in 2005, according to the State Services Commissioner:

Eviction notices

The last issue I wish to raise is the unintended and complex consequences for State servants of actions taken during political campaigns. In this election period, the Labour Party sent fake “eviction notices” to several thousand individual State house tenants as part of a housing policy promotion. This action had two consequences for the State Services. Firstly, it raised trust issues as tenants were suspicious that a government agency had given their private information to a political party, and, secondly, Housing New Zealand staff had to manage calls from worried and scared tenants.

Housing New Zealand confirms that it did not release its tenants’ mailing list. Labour Party president Mike Williams stated the party “constructed its own list” from publicly available information (New Zealand Herald, 10 September 2005). However, the outcome of this communication meant that Housing New Zealand call centre staff were placed in the potentially difficult predicament of managing calls from concerned tenants. Call centre staff were given guidance that they must remain neutral and not get into the position where they are discussing the pros and cons of various party policies on housing with tenants.

Labour have sent these not just to state house tenants, but also to non state house tenants who may be conned into thinking somehow National may evict them also.

Do you know why Labour are distributing these now, and not later this week? If you put out a false pamphlet up until Wednesday, then there is no sanction for Labour, even if say the ASA finds it false. However if they put out a false pamphlet on Thursday and Friday, then it is a criminal offence under the Electoral Act and those responsible can be prosecuted and jailed for a corrupt practice. So the timing is no coincidence.

If anyone at all receives either of the smear pamphlets on Thursday or Friday, please let me know and retain a copy of it.

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Imperator Fish at Epsom

Monday, November 21st, 2011 at 3:00 pm

Scott Yorke at Imperator Fish has hit gold with this one:

National Party candidate for Epsom Paul Goldsmith last night told a business gathering in Newmarket that he was once a mercenary for former Libyan dictator Muammar Gaddafi.

The revelation came after a television news poll showed Mr Goldsmith is well in front of ACT’s John Banks in the race for Epsom electorate. …

Mr Goldsmith told the Newmarket Business Association gathering last night that he had served with Gaddafi in Libya, but had been dismissed for gross cowardice and theft.

He also confirmed that he has dozens of convictions for fraud, arson, theft and sedition.

In addition, Mr Goldsmith confirmed he thought communism was an excellent political ideology and that, if elected as MP for Epsom, he would seek to confiscate all the finest houses in Epsom and turn much of the electorate into a gigantic collective farm.

He then proceeded to light a joint and smoke it slowly while saying “wow, man! Wooow!”

Heh.

Last night Goldsmith was interviewed by 3 News’ Patrick Gower and asked to explain whether he wanted to become the MP for Epsom.

Mr Goldsmith was unable to answer the question, because the flames of the church he was standing next to and had just set fire to forced him to seek shelter.

When asked to comment this morning on claims he was deliberately trying to lose the Epsom race, Goldsmith said he could not talk because he was late to a meeting with the Mongrel Mob about joining their gang.

Goldsmith later appeared on Broadway Newmarket wearing the Mongrel Mob’s colours and a gang patch, where he spoke to reporters.

When asked whether he was seeking to win the seat, Mr Goldsmith said “I’m too busy planning my next killing spree to focus on the electorate contest. Party vote National!”

Danyl has a challenger.

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Back Benches 23 November 2011

Monday, November 21st, 2011 at 2:16 pm

THIS WEEK ON BACK BENCHES—THE ELECTION PREVIEW: Watch Wallace Chapman, Damian Christie, the Back Benches Panel and special guests discuss the week’s hottest topics!

GOOD TIMES, BAD TIMES: The Campaign is less than a week away. What have been the highs & lows of this campaign? Who has been effective in getting their message across? Who has failed? What have been the big issues? How would you rate each of the campaigns? Which party has surprised you?

TEMPEST IN A TEACUP: There have been a few scandals in this campaign—with New Zealand even getting their own Tea Party. We will be discussing the scandals—the tea-gate? The damaged hoardings and the carpetbaggers. How much of an impact will they have on the results? And were the “scandals” really scandals?

Join us for a night of LIVE pub politics from the Backbencher Pub: Wednesday, 23RD of November. Our Panel: David Farrar of Kiwiblog.co.nz, Victoria University Lecturer Ana Gilling, Morgan Godfery of Mauistreet.blogspot.com, and Mark Unsworth of Saunders Unsworth.

Back Benches screens on Wednesdays at 9.05pm with encore screenings on Thursdays at 9.05am and 1.05pm, Saturdays at 10.05pm, Sundays at 10.05am and 2.05pm – TVNZ 7

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Salmond on poll projections

Monday, November 21st, 2011 at 2:00 pm

Rob Salmond at Pundit looks at the polls, and linear projection of where the parties may end up on election night, being:

  • National 50.8%
  • Labour 24.8%
  • Greens 14.6%
  • NZ First 3.8%

He comments further:

Using the analysis above, we project that New Zealand First will get 3.8% of the vote. We can also project with 95% confidence that the party will get between 2.3% and 5.2% of the vote. Importantly, we project that there is only a 4% probability New Zealand First will get more than five percent of the vote.

We project that National will get an absolute majority of the vote, but a pretty small one (50.8%). Based on this analysis, we think there is a 74% chance that National will get over 50% of the vote.

Of course this is all based on the trend of the last few weeks continuing in the last week, and it may not continue if events get in the way.

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Debt under a Labour-led Government

Monday, November 21st, 2011 at 1:00 pm

As readers will know there has been a lot of scrutiny about how much extra debt there would be under a Labour Goverment over the next four years. Labour says it would be around $4b, National says around $16b and my calculation has it at around $12b (of which half is the Goofynomics borrow to save strategy for the Super Fund).

Let’s go with my figure of $12b for now (which is in fact only $2b different from Labour’s $4b as they acknowledge that excludes borrowing for the Super Fund). Now that is what the extra debt would be for a Labour majority Government. If Labour got 50%, then they could implement their policies without compromise.

But if Labour does manage to put together a government, they will comprise (based on current polls) only around 55% of the Government. On the Roy Morgan poll they would in fact be just 50%.

This means that the parties they need to negotiate with to form a Government will have massive power, much more power than any other minority partner under MMP. Because the larger your proportion of the votes the Government needs, the more say you get. This is an issue that as far as I know, no media has seriously looked at – what would be the policy mix of a Government that had Labour on 25%, Greens on 15%, NZ First on 5% and the Maori and Mana parties on say 5% between them.

That $12b of debt would be just a start. Let us look at the policies NZ First will want included in a budget:

  • universal student allowances
  • match student loan repayments $1 for $1
  • Cut tax rate for new exporters to 20%
  • lower company tax rate to 27%
  • lower GST to 12.5%
  • tax free threshold of $100/week
  • turn TV One non-commercial
  • Increase Govt R&D spending from 0.3% of GDP to 2% – a 600% increase
  • Accelerated depreciation for specified industries
  • 10% off power prices for pensioners
  • Increased funding to decile 3- 10 schools
  • reduce class sizes for lower decile schools
  • increase health expenditure to 10% of GDP
  • Increase defence spending to 2% of GDP
  • abolish GST on rates
  • abolish income tax on secondary jobs
  • abolish tax on savings
  • cap tuition fees, eventually reducing them to zero

There’s probably even more than this but I can spend only so long reading their manifesto. I can’t even begin to add them up but I’d say we are talking ten billions dollars a year in lost revenue and extra spending. Now let’s say he even gets 20% of his wishlist, and that is probably an extra $8 of borrowing over four years.

And bear in mind also that Winston is saying he would refuse any agreement in advance for how much extra spending will be needed to have him vote for the Government for three years. So every year Labour would have to feed him as much money as he can get, to keep their Government in office. This is not scare-mongering – this is exactly what Winston is promising to do, and there is no way Labour could govern without him.

But Winston is only the entree. Let us look at what the Greens want. At 15% they would have over half of Labour’s support, and be around one third of the Government. So they may get up to one third of their wishlist. That includes:

  • tax-free income threshold of $10,000/year
  • Write off all student debt, even for those not in paid employment
  • tax-deductible study costs for those with no allowance
  • A full universal student allowance for those aged 16+
  • Increased accommodation allowance for students
  • Reduce then abolish tertiary fees
  • Increase school operations grant by 10%
  • Maximum class size of 20 for schools
  • Increase benefit levels to “sufficient for all basic needs”
  • Increase public health spending to 10% of total health budget

There are again many more beyond that. And again the bill will run into the billions, and even the Greens can only come up with so many extra eco-taxes to plug the hole.

The two major parties are normally the ones who get the most intense scrutiny over the costings of their policies, and that is because they form the bulk of the Government. For example even if National reaches out again to ACT, United Future and Maori parties, National will be probably 90% of the Government. Hence, highly likely their debt track will hold up (especially as ACT ask for less spending not more).

But Labour is looking to be 50% to 55% of a Labour-led Government. This is vastly different to when they were last in power and they were over 80% of the Government. At 50% to 55% they will be comparatively weak, and the parties they will need to vote for their budget will have much more power and say than in the past – hence why it is important to also scrutinise their tax and spending plans.

I haven’t even looked at what spending one might have to agree to for the Mana and Maori parties, but it will not be nothing, and a Labour-led Government is only possible if Labour, Greens, Maori NZ First and Mana parties all vote for their budget.

So forget about $12b of extra debt. That is just the starting position. It is inevitable it would be significantly more than that.

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Leighton slays Goff

Monday, November 21st, 2011 at 12:38 pm

Phil Goff tried his lie about how it costs a family $500 a year more to be with Contact. Leighton reads out the figures from Consumer, and slays him.

Goff-Asset-Sales-Flaying by whaleoil

Goff should front up with this so called data from Fairfax which shows Contact currently costs more than $500 a year. I trust the Consumer NZ data. All I can find on the Stuff website is this story:

Marybank resident John Stark said Contact needed to try harder to retain customers.

“I emailed Contact Energy on June 3 after determining on the Power Switch website that I could save over $500 a year by changing from Contact Energy to Just Energy.

So unless there is some other story I can’t find on Stuff, the basis for Goff claiming the average family of four pays $500 a year more with Contact, is a story about one individual family in Nelson.

But Goff’s spin gets even worse. The $500 quoted in that story for that one family was comparing Contact Energy to Just Energy. Just Energy is owned by Pulse Utilities NZ Ltd, which is shock horror listed on the NZX!!! Fail!

Now some may argue that Contact used to charge more in the past, and they have lowered prices to keep customers. Well yes they have, and isn’t that a good thing.

As I posted earlier today power prices increased massively under Labour and they raked in $3b in dividends from the power SOEs.Goff is spreading desperate lies when he repeats his claim Contact costs an average family $500 more a year. They are the cheaper than the three SOEs in Auckland.

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What the Greens and Winston voted against

Monday, November 21st, 2011 at 12:00 pm

This is the annual trade deficit with China over the last decade. Both the Greens and Winston rail against imports and say we need to export more and reduce the trade deficit.

They also both voted against the China-NZ Free Trade Agreement in 2008. They both still maintain it was a mistake, and a bad thing to do.

The results speak for themselves. After the trade deficit rose from $1b to almost $4b, it has reduced to $1.5b in just three years.

The Greens, like all of us, care deeply about the environment. But on economic policy, they and Winston are consistently wrong. They are skilled at talking about problems, but their solutions are toxic.

Exports to China in the three years prior to the FTA were $5.7b. In the three years since, they have been $13.1b. Those exports have helped keep kiwis in jobs, have grown the economy and provided billions more in tax revenue to help pay for schools, hospitals and welfare. And if the Greens and Winston had their way, it would not have happened (unless you wish to argue the massive unprecedented growth in exports was a coincidence).

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Talking of lies, how about those on asset sales

Monday, November 21st, 2011 at 11:00 am

Phil Goff is going to spend most of his last week saying that voting Labour is the only way to stop “your assets” being sold for-ever, and that once gone you can never get them back. Media have not caught on to the contradiction that he then talks of how Labour, umm brought back two previously state owned companies. How is that gone for ever?

But even that misses the main point. The Government is not selling any assets. They are selling a minority stake of shares in companies that own assets, and there is the world of difference. The Government maintains at least 51% ownership and majority control. On Twitter last night there was a debate about what is the difference between the Government owning 51% of Air NZ and 76% (the status quo) or even 100%?

The Labour flunkies could come up with pretty much one thing only – the Government could no longer approve major transactions by itself. However when asked if any Government had ever had to approve a major transaction in the last 15 years, they could not provide an example. The reason for this is the threshold is huge – over 50% of the asset base of a company.

One flunkie then got all excited and started implying that secret instructions were given to SOEs via CCMAU. Now personally I regard such paranoia as akin to the being a birther or truther, but let’s say for a second he is correct. That Governments have been giving SOEs secret instructions on what to do.

Well by listing on the NZX, this would no longer be possible. Directors would face criminal sanctions if they took heed of such secret instructions. Anyone who believes in transparency would welcome this. And by chance, there is a good article by Hamish Rutherford at Stuff:

PROPONENTS of mixed ownership argue that having three large state-owned players in the electricity market leads to decisions being made that would not stack up in the private sector, because processes are less robust and more political.  …

One said that the complexity of investment decisions for power stations meant that a range of assumptions had to be made about factors such as future electricity prices, and the boards of directors and Treasury officials were not as well equipped as the market to question the thinking behind them.

“In a listed environment you’ve really got to explain yourself to shareholders and analysts, whereas in an SOE environment you don’t. There’s not anybody putting real pressure on you to justify and explain your actions and you’re not getting assessed day to day by your share price.

“It’s difficult to replicate those pressures when you’re state-owned.”

While the “discipline” would be at odds with political pressure not to raise electricity prices for customers, bad investment decisions meant higher prices than good ones.

“There’s no free lunch here. Either we’re benefiting through inefficient capital allocation into the SOEs, or we’re paying higher electricity prices, but either way, the populace pays.”

Being listed on the NZX significantly increases transparency and accountability.

Mighty River Power chairwoman Joan Withers said while the sharemarket could bring “positive discipline”, the company was not lacking in any of the skills needed to cope with life on the market.

The current structure had not been unduly restrictive, Withers said, with the Government allowing it to embark on a large geothermal project in Chile.

NZX chief executive Mark Weldon said while the energy companies should be looking for overseas opportunities, they faced the restriction of an indebted government in the current structure.

And this is another reason for the mixed ownership model. Being in business involves risk. Several of the SOEs think they can be more profitable (and earn money for NZ) by expanding overseas. But this may require increased capital or decreased dividends. Now I’m not wild about the idea of the Government deciding whether or not to invest $1b in say a Chile geothermal project rather than schools and hospitals. Now sure, the Chile project may actually turn out to be profitable, but it may not. These ventures involve risks. So sharing that risk with private sector investors is a good thing, and should lead to better decisions as when it is people’s own money at risk, they are more critical analysts.

Rod Oram in the SST weighs against the mixed ownership model. This is no surprise, but it is worth considering the points he raises:

National says it will spend much of the $5 billion to $7b of sale proceeds on the likes of schools and hospitals. But it’s bad financial management to sell productive assets to fund projects that could be financed more cheaply by debt.

This is a line Labour uses a lot also, that no one sells profitable or productive assets due to their dividend stream.

This is simply not the case. The best example I can use is Fairfax selling a minority stake in Trade Me. Trade Me is by far the most profitable aspect of the local Fairfax assets. Yet they are selling a minority stake, in order to reduce debt. And you know, when you have just had a credit downgrade is a good time to reduce debt.

Another line Labour uses is that when the dividends are gone, they are gone for ever. Well yes, but when the debt is reduced, the interest on that debt is also gone forever.

National says it is wiser to use cash from selling shares in SOEs rather than increasing debt. But in May’s Budget, Treasury said such a tactic would be close to cash neutral: it would avoid $400 million a year in interest but the government would forgo $300m a year in dividends and retained earnings.

In addition, National has conceded it might have to delay the sales if global market turmoil persists. Treasury said foreign investors are important to the sales to help maximise the return to the government. But the dividend outflow overseas will increase our growing current account deficit and very high net international liabilities, the two chronic NZ weaknesses which worry credit rating agencies the most.

I don’t regard $100m a year as nothing incidentially but even putting that aside, yes a portion of the shares and hence dividend may be overseas based (but I suspect not much as local demand will be very high I am sure), but 100% of the debt is overseas based, and reducing debt will reduce interest payments overseas.

“Mixed ownership” will improve the SOEs performance:

This one can be debated for ever. My view is simple. If you look globally, on average private sector companies significantly out-perform state owned companies. Now let’s us be very clear about this. This does not mean every single private sector company does better than every single state owned company. Of course not. It doesn’t mean that no private sector company never fails and it doesn’t mean that all state owned companies fail. It also doesn’t mean that private sector companies out-perform public sector companies every minute of every day.

But overall companies in private ownership, do better than companies in state ownership. The reason is simple, the directors are appointed by those whose actual money it at risk. Ministers do not lose money if an SOE does badly. Share-holders in private companies do.

Boost the stockmarket: If the NZX attracted more companies and investors, the greater depth and liquidity of the market might slightly lower the cost of capital in New Zealand. But liquidity is concentrated in a small group of big stocks. Thus, adding a handful of partial floats of large SOEs won’t help smaller stock much.

“We think the gains would be modest,” Treasury said.

Worse, the SOE floats would do little to improve investor choices.

The market is already over-represented in electricity stocks thanks to Contact, Transpower, Infratil and Vector. Even the simplest, most prudent portfolio strategy would argue against increasing exposure to the sector.

Umm, Transpower isn’t on the NZX.  Infratil is not just an owner of energy companies but also airports, public transport and property. Likewise Vector has businesses outside the energy sector.

Vector though is a good example of a mixed ownership model. 75.1% owned by AECT and 24.9% private shareholders.

Anyway in summary, here is a rebuttal to Labour’s lies:

  1. National is selling our assets – No they’re not, they are proposing to sell minority share-holdings in SOEs while retaining Government control
  2. Once an asset is sold it is gone for ever – Nonsense, the shares are openly traded on the NZX – one can buy whatever stake back you may want in future
  3. When the assets are gone, the dividends are gone for ever – Dividends will be reduced yes, but the interest on repaid debt will also be gone for ever, and it is likely the interest reduction will be greater than the reduced dividends
  4. Electricity prices will go up – This is not the view of the Consumers Institute who has said that NZX listing will not increase prices, and that mixed ownership model will make the SOEs more transparent as they will have to explain their actions to the public
  5. Electricity costs $500/year more from the privatised Contact than the SOEs – this is false. Consumer data shows that in most major centres Contact is cheaper than some or all of the SOEs.
  6. Power prices will be cheaper under Labour than National – Under Labour the state raked in $3b in dividends and power prices went up 64% or over 20% a term, compared with only 11% in National’s 1st term. Also Labour’s ETS policy will push power prices up quicker.
  7. The assets will end up foreign owned – no the Government keeps at least 51%, and no company will be able to own more than 10%. Also New Zealanders will have priority in the initial public offering.
  8. National’s policy is extreme – Actually NZ has been the only country in the OECD which has a ban on asset sales or part-sales. They are entirely conventional, and left-wing Governments the world over have done them, as well as right-wing Governments, National’s policy is minor and timid compared to most countries.

Labour would have the public believe that what National is proposing is what Goff and colleagues did in the 1980s. It is not. In the 1980s they sold entire companies to sole often foreign buyers. National’s policy is to sell a minority stake on the NZX.  One can have a truthful debate on the pros and cons of that policy, as Rod Oram has done. But Labour’s advertising is designed to con people into thinking that National is proposing to do what Phil Goff once did, and they are not.

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The worm

Monday, November 21st, 2011 at 10:00 am

The Herald reports:

Expect even more relentless repetition of upbeat language than usual from Prime Minister John Key and Labour leader Phil Goff as the worm returns for tonight’s leaders’ debate on TV3.

The debate will use the Roy Morgan Reactor, more commonly known as “the worm”, to measure the response of a studio audience of undecided voters selected for a balance of gender and age.

TV3 and Roy Morgan invite viewers who have an iPhone, Android mobile, iPad or tablet device to participate.

You can download the reactor or worm here.

Personally I think such things are gimmicks that distract people from the substance of the debate. My hope (a forlorn one probably) is that the media don’t make the worm the headline the next day, but actually you know listen to the debate themselves and form their own opinions as to the strengths and weaknesses of the the leaders arguments. The result of the worm should be a mention in the story, but not the core focus of it.

The fact that anyone can download the worm, means that the results may have nothing to do with the debate, and everything to do with people’s pre-extsing opinions. I really can’t see a lot of undecided voters caring enough to download the worm – the partisans will.

And even the studio audience of undecided voters can be less than balanced. They may be undecided between Labour and Greens, or between Maori and Mana. In my opinion they would be better to have the studio audience comprised of “swinging voters”, being voters who have voted (for example) for both a CR and a CL party in the last few elections. An undecided voter tends to be anti-Government because the Government is the known quantity, and they are deciding which of the alternatives to vote for.

So my point is, yes the worm may be a lot of fun. But please do not let the results of the worm be represented as a scientific poll, and do not let it replace your own judgement about the debate. Tune into TV3 and watch for yourself, rather than rely on second hand reports.

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Labour’s campaign hits full stride

Monday, November 21st, 2011 at 9:00 am

I thought Labour would never stoop lower than their 2005 campaign when they wrote to state house tenants and told them National would sell and evict them from their state houses. Never mind that National’s policy was that you can only sell a state house to its existing tenants.

But this really takes the cake. It is hugely insulting to the hundreds of thousands of mothers who are not on benefits and do work, because it is equating a work test obligation (which only applies if you are a sole parent who has a second child on the benefit) with not being around to celebrate a birthday.  How denigrating to working mothers. The second page has the slogan “Vote to keep families together, Vote Labour”. So Labour regards having working parents as child abandonment now.

Also the shock tactics where it looks like National’s policy is to kill off parents, with the phrase “you won’t be around to celebrate her first birthday”. It really is vile grubby stuff.

Whale has the full letter. The unanswered question is if Labour is sending these to parents of new borns, how did it get this info?

UPDATE: Stuff now has a story on these, with Grant Robertson defending them. Good to know Labour will resort to tactics like this to try and preserve a welfare system where someone can remain on the DPB for 20+ years and never face work testing.

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General Debate 21 November 2011

Monday, November 21st, 2011 at 8:00 am
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