The Daily Blog Open Mic – Tuesday 25th July 2017
Announce protest actions, general chit chat or give your opinion on issues we haven’t covered for the day.
Announce protest actions, general chit chat or give your opinion on issues we haven’t covered for the day.
There has been some media speculation about The Opportunities Party’s approach to the Epsom electorate. The Party has had…
Child Poverty Action Group (CPAG) endorses the petition by the Medical Students for Global Awareness (MSGA), calling on Members of…
Bill English’s comments that he doesn’t know why people are complaining about the blowout in the number of homeless families…
Dear Mayor & Councillors, The Living Wage Keep Our Assets Canterbury (KOA) is pleased the Council has finally released one…
The disuse of existing rail infrastructure in growing North West Auckland was labelled ‘a bloody shambles’ by members of the…
Conservative voters in the regions are much more willing to tolerate foreigners prepared to work their land for low wages, than they are indigenous New Zealanders preparing to reclaim their patrimony. As Bill English noted of National’s and NZ First sudden shifts: “the policy direction is going to be driven by the strength of the economy”.
The grim truth about National’s latest lie on housing is just how utterly hollow the plan really is.
Last week we watched the worst angles of our nature focus viciously on Metiria’s brave admission of being forced to cheat the system to feed her family, while a far larger story about our homelessness passed by without half the attention spent bashing her.
Gareth Morgan’s Opportunities Party is working to appear a radical departure from the status quo. Proposals for a dramatic change to taxation policy and the partial roll out of a Universal Basic Income are a welcome political development. It’s good to have a political party seriously calling for the rich to pay more tax. But despite this, the policy package of The Opportunities Party (TOP) would hurt working people. Behind attention grabbing rhetoric TOP maintains a deep commitment to establishment economics and neo-liberalism.