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TDB Summer Contributions Drive plus 2017 Election Media Crowdfunding

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Brothers and sisters, Comrades – before we launch our 2017 crowdfunding for media coverage of the 2017 election next month, we still have to pay the bills over January and Summer.

While other sites complain about the new media landscape, we actually go out and just do it.

If you are in a position to contribute – please do so here.

Platforms like The Daily Blog are now more crucial than ever before in the NZ media landscape, if you haven’t donated before, but read us regularly, we could do with your support.

Kindest of regards – The Daily Blog Team. 

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TOPs environmental policy shows how dangerous to the status quo Gareth Morgan is

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And it begins. TOP have released their environmental policy and it’s far more radical than what the Greens and Labour are suggesting…

Economic growth must not come at the expense of the environment
New Zealand’s natural environment is our #1 asset; it attracts tourists and skilled migrants, and earns an export premium. It is also a massive part of the Kiwi way of life.

However, our precious environment is only in such good shape thanks to our low population. Establishment party governments have been running down our natural assets, thanks to a strategy of economic growth at any cost, and pursuit of volume over value. Growth that comes at the expense of our rivers, lakes, oceans, soils or unique native wildlife is dirty, dubious and downright dumb. We can and must get smarter. If we want to keep and capitalise on our clean green image, we need to start investing in our environment.

TOP’s position is that we should leave the environment for our descendants in no worse shape than we inherited it – and preferably in better shape. We will protect and enhance our natural environment, not just because we love it, but because it makes good business sense.
We want true prosperity – growth that improves our well-being including our environment, our social harmony and our health. To achieve the harmony between the economy and environment, our approach is for polluters to pay to clean up their mess. We do not subscribe to the view that it’s appropriate to degrade our environment or for taxpayers to pick up the tab.

Land based industries are the backbone of New Zealand’s exports, and they also have the largest impact on our environment. In the past clearing hill country of forest led to massive erosion issues, and more recently intensive agriculture has added more nutrients to our waterways.

In many cases we have hit the limit for how much we can produce on our land. We have been using more fertiliser, more water and importing more palm kernel to feed ever more cows, which has led to further decline in the quality of our rivers and lakes in areas of intensive agriculture. Continuing to push for increased volume is not good for our land, our water, our wildlife, the cows or even our farmers. It is time to focus on profit growth from improving the value of our exports rather than increasing the volume of them.

Yet the Government is intent on doubling agricultural exports and increasing irrigation while leaving the taxpayer to foot the bill for cleaning up our rivers and lakes. The only reason increasing volume is viable is because the industry is not paying for the environmental damage it’s inflicting. TOP will ensure that polluters do pay for the damage they cause.

Our land-based industries face many risks; changes in consumer preferences, an increased demand for food with environmental integrity, and new technology. New Zealand agriculture can innovate to meet these challenges, as we have in the past and some small companies still do, but we have to think ahead and start preparing. Some farmers have already shown they can improve their environmental outcomes without hurting their bottom line. Charging polluters for their pollution will help prepare our businesses for the future and direct research funding away from the quest for volume to adding value.

New Zealand could be the world leader in producing high quality, sustainable food

We need businesses to provide income and jobs; enterprise and risk must be rewarded via profits as long as they are making us better off overall. Good regulation should support this by rewarding the environmentally best businesses and penalising the worst. Many farmers and other businesses care about their environmental impact and are already doing the right thing. But the time has come to lift the performance of many more of these businesses. The appropriate way is to ensure they pay for making good any environmental damage they cause.

TOP’s Plan for making growth Clean and Clever

The overarching issue is governance. Local authorities are making variable progress on environmental issues and there is a need for more independent coordination and oversight without resorting to legal action.

Swimmable rivers and lakes, sustainable farming. TOP’s default goal is for swimmable rivers, unless local communities decide otherwise. We want intensification of land use to cease unless the impacts can be offset. TOP will invest in monitoring, research, improving water quality and resolving Treaty claims. This will be paid for by a levy on commercial water users and polluters, paid into regional Nature Investment Funds (NIFs).
Protect and restore our oceans. TOP will use spatial planning to ensure all ocean users have fair access to the resources in our Exclusive Economic Zone. This would also ensure that at least 10% of all ecosystems is set aside as no-take reserves, with compensation for existing users where appropriate. This process would be funded by a resource rental on all commercial ocean resource users.
Enhancing our natural assets. TOP will impose a $20 levy on all tourists entering the country. This revenue will be used to improve local infrastructure and placed in an independently managed fund that can be invested with partners to get the best biodiversity return (which may include the Regional Council NIFs).
Resource Management – Less paperwork, more protection. TOP will ensure that development which delivers no net loss of natural capital can proceed in a timely fashion. Any use of biodiversity offsets will be quality assured. RMA fines will be directed to restoring the damage caused by the breach.

…this has always been the danger of Morgan. Labour and the Greens are so frightened of being seen as left wing they have done all they can to drag themselves to the middle and cloak themselves in the water down political language of the centre.

Gareth Morgan doesn’t give a toss about being seen as a centrist or not on the issues that most are passionate about so his policy comes across as far more radical than the Greens or Labour. I think many are underestimating the impact he will have in this election.

Educated male voters who feel unwelcome in the Greens and Labour and vote for National as a default position will rally to TOP. I don’t see Morgan robbing Labour of votes (too many cat lovers in Labour), I see him taking from the Greens (but they’ll make that up from an increased millennial vote) but I see him taking most from National’s urban vote and his strategy for the election to only run on the Party vote makes that an easy decision by those voters.

Labour and Green strategists must be praying to Gaia that Gareth Morgan doesn’t step into the Mt Albert by-election.

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All that is wrong with NZ politics in one simple devastating chart – Part 2

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My blog on comparing Superannuation with the pittance paid out to the vulnerable via the neoliberal welfare state provoked the usual ‘don’t be mean to boomers, we worked hard’ mantra from our beloved boomer comrades.

Some even suggested that I was falling for a right wing scam to privatise or lower Superannuation, which if you read my column on Superannuation, seems ridiculous.

Cameron Slater went as far as to suggest that because the word ‘riot’ was in the headline, then I must be pushing for violent revolution.

Being lectured by a hate speech merchant like Cameron Slater for figuratively using the word ‘riot’ in a blog is like being lectured by Donal Trump on gender equality and nuclear disarmament.

Beyond the anger of the intergenerational theft and its impact on the political landscape that continues to prop up a corrupt Government to keep the property bubble inflated, what do we do?

I don’t look at this chart…

…and think, ‘we need to cut back on Super’. Let’s be clear about that first of all. I don’t believe for one second that Super should be cut, I would in fact argue that it might need to go up.

My issue is that we look after the voting old while gutting everyone else and that this leads to a terrible political imbalance where the old land owning class determine all domestic policy. This chart from the 2014 election is terrifying…

The solution? Not to gut the benefits for the old, but to give everyone else the same level of state subsidised support that those who are benefitting most from enjoy.

How do we do that?

It’s obvious.

A Universal Basic Income.

If everyone received a set income from the Government they would all have skin in the game. This would radically change the elections because people under 39 would then see a reason to participate.

We know the future of work is going to see many job loses, we know a UBI would solve many of those social tensions from those job losses. We have a Labour Party and Green Party that have tepidly acknowledged UBI but won’t implement it and even Gareth Morgan from TOP who argued for a UBI in his book ‘The Big Kahuna’ seems too frightened and politically timid to implement it.

For all those beneficiaries who have to grovel on their bellies at WINZ and MoD each month to get the pittance to pay for their day to day costs, no longer would they have to tolerate ‘Carol from WINZ’ destroying their self esteem. No more would they worry that Tolley is throwing them off welfare and forcing them to do menial jobs that might be counter productive for them, and no more would we see the young avoid the ballot box.

How could we afford this? A Financial Transaction Tax, a Robin Hood Tax and legalisation of cannabis would provide all the money to do this  and  as well respected economist Keith Rankin points out, we could implement an immediate UBI right now.

We need to give everyone within Society the harvest Boomers have enjoyed if that social contract is to mean anything. This is the strength of our democracy, not its weakness and we need to expand this franchise and autonomy of citizenship if this democracy is to withstand the turmoil of our future.

 

 

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Political Caption Competition

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Daily Blog Guerrilla Radio – Prison Song – SOAD

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TDB Top 5 International Stories: Friday 20th January 2017

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5: Turkey’s parliament set to approve sweeping new powers for president

A sweeping bill that will alter the Turkish constitution and grant broad powers to the president, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, is on track to pass in parliament, paving the way for a historic spring referendum that could transform the country’s politics and strengthen the ruling party.

The parliament passed amendments to seven articles in the constitution in a second round of voting in the early hours of Thursday, and is expected to continue voting on the remaining articles on Friday.

The Guardian 

 

4: On Final Day of Obama Presidency, a Look at His Mixed Legacy & the Rise of Neo-Fascism in Washington

Today marks President Obama’s last full day in office. On Friday at noon, Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts will swear in Donald Trump as the country’s 45th president. On Wednesday, in his last press conference as president, Obama defended his decision to commute the sentence of Army whistleblower Chelsea Manning, and condemned the Israeli occupation. He also warned Trump that he will not stay silent if he sees what he called the nation’s core values at risk. To look back at Obama’s legacy and what lies ahead with the new administration, we speak to Eddie Glaude, chair of the Department of African American Studies at Princeton University. He is author of several books, most recently, “Democracy in Black: How Race Still Enslaves the American Soul.”

Democracy Now

 

3: Read Obama’s Thank You Note to America

“You made me a better President, and you made me a better man.”

Well, the day is here—Thursday marks President Obama’s final day in office before passing the keys to the White House (and the country) off to Donald Trump.

But before he and his family leave 1600 Pennsylvania Ave, Obama wrote a few parting words directly to the American people on the White House website. The letter echoes some of the same sentiments he carried through his final farewell address earlier this month, reiterating the importance of upholding democratic ideals.

“And when the arc of progress seems slow, remember: America is not the project of any one person,” Obama writes. “The single most powerful word in our democracy is the word ‘We.'”

Vice News

2: Who’s Paying for Inauguration Parties? Companies and Lobbyists With a Lot at Stake

CORPORATE INTERESTS THAT were largely reluctant to embrace Donald Trump during the presidential campaign last year are finally opening their checkbooks to underwrite the festivities sweeping Washington, D.C., to welcome his incoming administration.

Firms with a great deal riding on the major policy agenda items of the next four years have lined up to sponsor the endless parade of hors d’oeuvres and open bars at parties across the city.

Topping the list are firms with interests in pharmaceuticals, oil, and defense contracting — highly regulated industries that have much at stake with ongoing policy discussions over drug pricing, environmental regulations, and the defense sequester.

Several events list ride-sharing companies Lyft or Uber as special transportation partners. Both firms face regulatory hurdles to accessing municipal markets and in terms of gaining approval for the next generation self-driving car technologies.

The Intercept

1: US air raids ‘kill scores of ISIL fighters’ in Libya

More than 80 ISIL fighters have been killed in United States air raids on camps operated by the armed group inside Libya, according to US officials.

The Pentagon said on Thursday that B-2 bombers and US drones had targeted overnight two camps southwest of the city of Sirte, a former bastion of ISIL in the North African country.

Ash Carter, the US defense secretary, said on Thursday that some of the ISIL fighters were believed to be actively planning attacks against targets in Europe, without offering any details.

Aljazeera

 

 

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The Daily Blog Open Mic – Friday 20th January 2017

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openmike

 

Announce protest actions, general chit chat or give your opinion on issues we haven’t covered for the day.

Moderation rules are more lenient for this section, but try and play nicely.

 

 

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Fringe Festival – SILO 6 BECOMES HIDEAWAY FOR DEAD BOY, BLUE.

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“Dead Boys Are Blue is a semi-autobiographical work, developed in Launceston, Tasmania and Bay of Islands, New Zealand. It features a transgender character, homosexual love and Old Hollywood as core components, experienced at personal levels by us, the artists.” – Nelson Blake, Writer / Director / Producer.

Dido St. Claire was established by Nelson Blake at the Tasmanian College of the Arts, University of Tasmania and has become a Cross-Tasman Collaborative.

Cedric Richards-McCord featured in the chorus of NZ Opera’s The Flying Dutchman (2013) and has worked with Marina Abramović in Private Archaeology at MONA (Hobart).

Nelson Blake’s previous work includes Seneca’s Oedipus (Fawkes Theatre Company) and Medeaplays (Powerhouse Gallery, Launceston, Tasmania).

Blue (played by a mannequin) stirs haunting memories for a long-forgotten actress, two old sole survivors and the rightful heir to Atlantis, et al.

Post-dramatic Germanic theatre is a major inspiration for the visual aesthetic of the production.

A major character, Irma Braithwaite (the faded Hollywood actress, played by Cedric Richard-McCord) would make a great radio interview.

Sauce is an old man of the sea, deemed crazy by the courts, his wit has never been sharper.

Irma Braithwaite is a faded silver screen legend, but not as mysterious as her life before Hollywood.

Pat and Jim live their life in fear of Sister Mary Agnes, but their son has been suffering more.

Presented as part of Auckland Fringe festival from 21st February – 12th March 2017.

For the full programme visit www.aucklandfringe.co.nz

Dead Boys Are Blue plays
Dates: 21-23, 25 + 27-28 February and 1-2 March 2017
Venue: SILO 6, SILO Park, Auckland.
Tickets: $10
Bookings: www.aucklandfringe.co.nz

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GUEST BLOG: Maire Leadbeater – Indonesian Military Sensitivity revealing

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Earlier this month, the touchy Indonesian military commander in chief, Gatot Nurmantyo, set off a mini diplomatic storm with Australia. He took offence at teaching materials in use at a Perth military base where some of his officers were being trained. One item involved a satirical rendering of Pancasila, Indonesia’s five point state ideology. For instance in this alternative ‘Pancagila’ , or five ‘crazy’ principles, ‘just and civilised humanity’ becomes ‘corruption that is fair and equitable’. The joke has been circulating on Indonesian social media for some time. Then there were references to West Papua which did not please the General. He was outraged by an assertion that West Papuans wanted independence as a Melanesian nation, although that would be considered a statement of fact by independent observers. And he did not like an article referring to the 1969 “Act of Free Choice’ which cemented Indonesia’s control over the territory.

It wasn’t respectful enough to the then military commander Sarwo Edhie Wibowo. Again the documented facts are plain: in 1969 less than one percent of the population took part in a ‘vote’. The military helped to ensure the unanimous backing for Indonesia by means of intimidation, coercion, and in the case of rebellious tribes with the help of air strikes and paratroopers.

The outcome of the spat looked like being a full suspension of Indonesia’s military ties with Australia, which would have been a cause for celebration for West Papuan people and their supporters around the world. Regrettably the Australian brass apologised and removed the ‘offensive ’ material, so now the fallout seems limited to a suspension of the language training for Indonesian officers.

In New Zealand, as in Australia, we hear a lot about the good relationship we have with Indonesia. But it comes at a high price – turning a blind eye to the repressive nature of the Indonesian military. Australia and New Zealand are both in the business of training Indonesian officers to be more efficient and effective. This is deeply problematic because the military’s major role is suppressing internal dissent, and it targets those with political aspirations for self-determination and freedom. We don’t have a good influence on the Indonesian soldiers as is sometimes claimed, instead we cave in to Indonesian sensitivity even when it means trampling on free speech and the rights of the West Papuan people.

Indonesia has made democratic progress since the end of the Suharto regime, but the military remains largely untouched, in part because of its independent sources of income from legal and illegal enterprises. In West Papua it benefits from ‘protecting’ the resource extraction of gold, copper and timber. Nationalist hardliners like Nurmantyo are in the ascendancy. Retired General Wiranto was recently appointed as Indonesia’s top security minister. He was in command of the military when East Timor was in flames and has been charged by a UN sponsored court with crimes against humanity: murder, deportation and persecution of those believed to be supporters of independence. Like all the other Indonesian perpetrators of violence in East Timor, he has never been brought to trial.

Indonesia’s Defense Minister is Ryamizard Ryacudu, an uncompromising nationalist who is infamous for his defence of the special forces soldiers who killed Chief Theys Eluay (charismatic chairperson of the Papuan Presidium Council) in November 2001: ‘people say they did wrong, they broke the law … But for me, they are heroes because the person they killed was a rebel leader.’

17 years ago when horrific violence engulfed East Timor, New Zealand and other western governments were impelled to suspend defence ties with Indonesia. To its discredit New Zealand quietly resumed defence training ties with Indonesia in 2007. These days it is the people of West Papua who are in the line of fire from the police and military, even though their struggle is a peaceful one. They risk arrest and torture every time they stage a demonstration especially if they dare to display an image of the Morning Star flag. Last November even a prayer gathering in Sorong was deemed a ‘separatist’ activity, so it was forcibly dispersed and 106 people were arrested.

Over the half century that Indonesia has been in charge in West Papua the loss of life is so high that it is described by academics and human rights advocates as a ‘slow genocide’. This term encompasses not only killings and the routine practice of torture, but also the multiple impacts of a brutal colonial rule on health and the environment.

New Zealand’s defence ties are significant even though small in scale. Selected Indonesian officers regularly attend the six month New Zealand Defence Force Advanced Command and Staff Course. Indonesian officers come here to attend bilateral defence talks, workshops, and meetings. New Zealand officers visit Indonesia to take part in study tours, conferences, and ceremonies. In 2011 we hosted an officer from the notorious Kopassus special forces and an enquiry under the Official Information Act confirmed that no questions were asked about his human rights record.

Our political leaders are so obsessed with keeping on side with Indonesia that they routinely chant the mantra that they support the ‘territorial integrity’ of Indonesia. Our representatives raise human rights concerns from time to time, but always politely and ineffectively. General Nurmantyo knows this game well and he has won this round, but the debate he provoked draws new attention to the true agenda of Indonesia’s unreformed and unrepentant military.

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How Jacinda Arden loses the Mt Albert by-election

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The more I think about the Greens decision to stand against Labour in the Mt Albert by-election, the more convinced I am that it is a stupendous political blunder.

Great New Zealander and human rights legend Keith Locke has argued that the contest between Greens and Labour in Mt Albert is actually a positive thing and that the Labour Party wouldn’t respond negatively if Julie Anne Genter won. 

Now I won’t speak against Keith because I truly hope he is right, but the level of positivity the Labour Party of NZ would need to be at to not be angry at Jacinda losing to the Greens suggests a level of MDMA that I just don’t think is available outside of Sydney Mardi Gras.

I’ve argued that this is a terrible blunder and my only hope is that whoever is running strategy has managed to look beyond the next 2 moves and seen Labour being checkmated here and have decided to announce at the Joint State of the Nation that Genter will step aside so that the two parties can focus on the general election.

That’s my hope. My guess is they’ll say it’s going to be a positive thing and how Jacinda and Julie Anne will be singing Kumbaya together.

Comrade Trotter has already pointed out how the fog of war tends to throw those grand ideals out the moment the election starts and I’ve also pointed out that Green and Labour activists online and flown into the electorate are the kind of people who hold these values with all the humour of  Vegan CrossFitters and it’s highly likely those outburst will dominate media coverage.

And what happens if it starts looking like it’s close? How much more heightened will the passions of those involved start to get then?

No one is going to remember that they had a nice and friendly debate if Genter wins and no one is going to think that if Jacinda wins. All the wider electorate will remember is they were competing against each other when the electorate want to see a Government in waiting.

So how does Jacinda lose?

In 2014, The Greens had 8005 party votes, Labour 10 823 and National 14 359.

What happens if Bill English tells National Party voters that they could damage Labour’s election chances if Jacinda lost and they vote for Julie Anne Genter instead?

What if he was more subtle and says, ‘National could work with the Greens, you should vote for Julie Anne Genter”.

Suddenly those 14 359 National Party votes all have somewhere to go.

The blue green Auckland Transport Blog and blue green lite entertainment blog TheSpin will of course come out and endorse Genter, the standard will suddenly wake up and endorse Jacinda (not that any one will care) and momentum dangerously flips to the Greens.

How Labour haven’t seen this coming is distressing.

But it could get worse.

What if Gareth Morgan throws his hat into the ring at the last possible moment on February the first and stands as a candidate?

There are so many ways this can go wrong. So. Many. Ways.

Remember, this was supposed to be a simple box ticking exercise with Jacinda winning and momentum building for the general election. Now there’s the possibility National play games or Gareth Morgan steps in, if that occurs, this blunder will have turned what should have been a basic building of support into a possible threat to a Labour-Green Government forming.

But I could be wrong. I was horrifically wrong in 2014. I believed the Greens and Labour and MANA/Internet could form a majority. I believed NZers would turn away in revulsion at the dirty politics revelations and mass surveillance lies.

I was wrong.

NZers rushed out to vote to ensure their property speculation that Key had nurtured wouldn’t be hurt while those so disillusioned by poverty turned the 2014 election into the second lowest voter turn out since women fought and won the right to vote a hundred years earlier.

I’ve spent a lot more time since 2014 listening to the anger of those who don’t vote progressively or don’t vote at all. They’re ilk are the ones who supported Brexit and Trump which is why those wins didn’t surprise me at all last year.

Folks, if you think the Left dislike each other, you should see how the Right view us.

The only way you beat the Right is by working together, which is why I think Mt Albert has all the ingredients of a spectacular cluster fuck. If the Greens and Labour have wandered into this minefield thinking that because National weren’t standing that meant they could have a playful game of policy catch and kiss, they are horrifically mistaken.

Watch where Bill English mischievously places his support for those 14 359 party votes to go to.

I say all this as someone who desperately wants to see Labour as the backbone of any new Government and Andrew Little as the Prime Minister with a very Green Cabinet, but there are some terrible political blunders being made and the ramifications could be a Fourth National Government.

 

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Government must prove their dodgy claims – Stand With Pike

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If the Government wants to keep claiming it’s unsafe to re-enter the Pike River drift it should show some real proof and let it be properly tested, say families of the miners who died there.

Anna Osborne, who lost her husband Milton in the disaster, says “Once again Nick Smith has trotted out safety as an excuse to avoid doing the right thing. If he really believes that the mine can’t be re-entered he should present his evidence to be tested by experts.

“For four years, the Government and Solid Energy told us the drift could be re-entered and there was a plan to do just that. Now, suddenly, it’s too dangerous – even though nothing has changed.

“We’ve put our money where our mouth is, we’ve got two of the most respected mines experts in the world to assess the mine including the Vice Chair of the United Nations Group of Experts on Coal Mine Methane. They’ve been to Pike, and they’ve been clear that the drift can be safely entered.

“We’ve got three other international experts, two of whom have personal experience with this mine and a third who is a preeminent authority on mine rescue, who advised on the rescue of the Chilean miners in 2010. All three have looked at our plan and endorsed it.

“We’ve got New Zealand’s former Chief Inspector of Mines not just saying it’s safe to enter but that he’d be proud to lead the team to do it, and most of the mines rescue experts in New Zealand wanting to be part of that team.

“How much more proof does Dr Smith expect before he even starts to question the bad advice Solid Energy has given his government? What more are we expected to do to show it is safe?

“The Government’s behaviour is sickening. Not just because it’s denying us the chance to get our loved ones back, but because it stops us finding out what actually happened down that awful hole and being able to stop it happening elsewhere to someone else’s husband or son.

“This isn’t a safety issue. If Andrew Little’s bill gets backing, it’s in no way a legal issue. It’s a political issue – because our government failed to keep our men safe, failed to hold anyone accountable for their deaths, and failed to keep its promises to get them out. Nick Smith should just come out and admit that rather than hiding behind pretend concerns about safety.”

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Emergency food grants rocketing under National – Labour Party

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More and more Kiwis are going hungry under National with hardship grants for food jumping 14 per cent in the last year alone, says Labour Leader Andrew Little.

“That’s a damning indictment of how Bill English’s government has let things get worse for those most vulnerable in our society.

“Hardship Assistance Grants for food are given to Kiwis on the very lowest incomes who have no money left after paying for the basics like rent. They soared by nearly 14,000 in the year to last December to 112,000.

“In the past four years, Work and Income has dished out an additional $2.8 million in grants.

“That’s a sad commentary of the Government’s handling of the economy and how it prioritises the well-being of the poorest in New Zealand. Kiwis are doing it tougher and this government has no plan to help.

“Over the Christmas period we heard stories of foodbanks around the country experiencing unprecedented levels of demand. Foodbanks are often a last resort for people who can’t even get assistance from Work and Income. No family in New Zealand should be going without food in the 21st century.

“The basic needs of any family are shelter, food and warmth, but under this government inequality is growing as the Oxfam report this week showed. Families are being forced to live in garages and cars, and children are living in cold, damp houses because their families are unable to heat their home.

“National can’t even get these basics right – a Labour-led government will tackle rising inequality in New Zealand, by getting more people into jobs through schemes like Ready for Work, making it easier for people to upskill for higher paying jobs and restoring the Kiwi dream of owning your own home through KiwiBuild.

“It’s clear that it’s time to change the government,” says Andrew Little.

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The madness of Tolley’s neoliberal welfare cuts

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This has got to be the most disingenuous press release ever released in NZ…

Social Development Minister Anne Tolley says the number of people receiving a benefit is continuing to decline year on year, with sole parents driving the biggest reduction in numbers.

“The number of people receiving a main benefit has fallen by 4,339 or 1.4 per cent in the last 12 months. This puts the proportion of the population (10.3 per cent) receiving a main benefit at the lowest it’s been in a December quarter since before the Global Financial Crisis,” says Mrs Tolley.

“Sole parents continue to show a willingness to move into independence, with 3,410 (5 per cent) fewer people now receiving Sole Parent Support compared to the same time last year.

“All regions saw a fall in this benefit type compared to December 2015, with the strongest reductions in Bay of Plenty and Auckland, down 9 per cent and 6.4 per cent respectively.

“By investing in intensive support and training as well providing ongoing help with study and childcare, we’ve made it easier for sole parents to find and stay in work.

“We know that children who grow up in benefit dependent homes are less likely to achieve NCEA Level 2, more likely to be notified to Child, Youth and Family, and more likely to end up on a benefit themselves.

“Supporting parents into employment or study not only increases their incomes, but also sets a strong example for their children and helps break the cycle of intergenerational welfare dependence.

“It’s great to see more families now living independently – we know that it’s good for parents and much better for their children.”

…folks, here’s the problem with these types of farcical statements. Tolley is telling us that this drop in benefit numbers is somehow a good thing. What she isn’t telling you is how Tolley and these neoliberal welfare stormtroopers have gone about getting that reduction.

The MoD are well know for their draconian take on welfare. They find every excuse under the sun to disqualify a person from welfare.

Miss a phone call from any neoliberal welfare agency? Have your welfare cut.

Refuse a job even if it’s unsuitable? Have your welfare cut.

Look like you are in a  relationship on your social media account? Have your welfare cut.

The draconian measures adopted by the neoliberal welfare state under National find any excuse possible to disqualify the needy from welfare. Tolley has no idea at all where any of these beneficiaries have gone.

These numbers are nothing to celebrate, they have come about not because of retraining or better jobs, they have come about because the neoliberal welfare state does everything possible to cut peoples welfare.

Look at the other end of this,

Emergency food grants rocketing under National

More and more Kiwis are going hungry under National with hardship grants for food jumping 14 per cent in the last year alone, says Labour Leader Andrew Little.

“That’s a damning indictment of how Bill English’s government has let things get worse for those most vulnerable in our society.

“Hardship Assistance Grants for food are given to Kiwis on the very lowest incomes who have no money left after paying for the basics like rent. They soared by nearly 14,000 in the year to last December to 112,000.

“In the past four years, Work and Income has dished out an additional $2.8 million in grants.

…this explosion in food grants is occurring because National and Tolley have simply kicked people off welfare rather than find them appropriate work for their skill set or upskill them for better employment.

It’s madness and it’s doing nothing to help with poverty or inequality.

The only reason National get away with these empty press statements is because the mainstream media don’t challenge them on it.

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In To Win: Responding to Keith Locke’s Post on the Mt Albert By-Election.

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KEITH LOCKE has mounted a robust defence of the Greens’ decision to field a candidate in the Mt Albert by-election. His argument divides neatly into three parts. His first contention is that, by standing, Julie Anne Genter will be able to demonstrate practically the merits of the Labour-Green Memorandum of Understanding (MoU). His second is that a rogue result in Mt Albert would not significantly alter the relationship between Labour and the Greens. And his third contention is that The Daily Blog Editor’s misgivings concerning Mt Albert arise out of a profound misunderstanding of the way the Green Party works.

But what if all three of Keith’s contentions are wrong?

Keith is by no means alone in arguing that the by-election constitutes a welcome opportunity to display the merits of the MoU. He sums up the case succinctly in just two sentences:

“The MOU was between ‘two separate parties’, able to run their own campaigns, but who would ‘articulate [their] differences in a respectful and collegial manner’. This was in a context where ‘many of our policies are compatible’ and the two parties would be ‘working cooperatively’ to achieve a ‘progressive alternative government’.”

In the best of all possible worlds this would be true. In a political environment driven more and more by sensationalism, conflict and “fake news”, however, how realistic is the hope that what takes place on the hustings in Mt Albert will be represented in the news media as “respectful and collegial”?

Is it not far more likely that “respectful and collegial” will be dismissed by news editors as “boring”, and that reporters will be told to expose and highlight the differences between the Labour and Green candidates? Are Keith and his party comrades really unable to imagine just how quickly an impression of conflict can be manufactured by political journalists under orders to make the contest more exciting?

Generals talk about the “fog of war” rendering the best-laid plans of the best military brains inoperative after just a few seconds of actual fighting. Political campaigning is no different. Jacinda Ardern and Julie Anne Genter may go into the contest determined to remain “respectful and collegial”, but the chances of them emerging from the smoke and fire of electoral combat unblackened and unburned are, sadly, remote.

This inability to control the evolution of battle leads us to Keith’s second contention: that a rogue result in Mt Albert would leave the Labour-Green relationship undamaged. This delusion is easily dispelled. Let’s consider just two possible scenarios.

The first involves the National Party letting it be known that if its supporters are interested in inflicting the maximum damage on Labour, then they should hold their noses and vote for Julie Anne Genter.

As a strategy for inflicting maximum political disruption this has much to commend it. After all, the National Party won the Party Vote in Mt Albert at the last general election with 14,359 votes. Combine these with the Greens’ 8,005 votes and David Shearer’s Electorate Vote tally of 20,970 begins to look a lot less unassailable. Given the prospect of inflicting a serious wound on Labour, how realistic is it to expect National voters to simply sit this by-election out?

And what about TOP – The Opportunities Party? The Daily Blog Editor, Martyn Bradbury, is quite right to raise the possibility of TOP’s founder, Gareth Morgan, seizing the Mt Albert by-election as a heaven-sent opportunity to field-test the voter appeal of his party’s core policies.

Morgan’s aggressive style would blow the Ardern-Genter sororal seminar that Labour and Green strategists are attempting to organise clean out of the water. “Respectful and collegial” fall well short as accurate descriptions of TOP’s top-dog. Worse still, Morgan possesses the financial and communications heft to ensure TOP’s policy aggression becomes the defining element of the entire by-election campaign.

Either one of these scenarios is capable of producing a rogue result. Assuming the normal by-election turnout of around 40 percent, Genter could defeat Ardern with as few as 7,500 votes. In a spirited three-way contest, Morgan could take the seat with just 5,000 votes.

Keith argues that Martyn “does a disservice to Labour in portraying the party as vindictive if it didn’t do well in a democratic contest. All the evidence so far is that Labour figures, from Andrew Little down, are relaxed about the Greens running in Mt Albert.”

If Keith truly believes this, then Keith doesn’t know the Labour Party at all.

After Michael Wood’s runaway victory in Mt Roskill, anything other than a straightforward walkover in Mt Albert will be very bad news for Labour. Were Labour to lose, the party would be crucified in the news media and Andrew Little would come under renewed pressure to step aside. Labour’s caucus and the party membership would be beside themselves with fury at the Greens for costing them not only the Mt Albert seat, but in all probability the general election as well.

Keith’s ignorance of the Labour Party’s true feelings towards the Greens raises doubts about the accuracy of his third contention that: “The decision to run a Green candidate was made through the party’s normal democratic processes, with members like myself advocating for it. To portray it as the brainchild of some staffer in Wellington, as Martyn does, shows a lack of understanding of the internal workings of the Green Party.”

Or, does it?

The Greens make a fetish of their ultra-democratic credentials, but appearances can be deceptive. As is the case with all political parties, the Greens are actually governed by a self-selecting and self-replicating oligarchy. The party’s rules make it extremely difficult to over-rule this oligarchy. Partly this is due to the Greens’ consensus-based decision-making process – a system which allows a handful of hidden manipulators to thwart the will of the majority. The oligarchy’s ability to weed-out candidates whose green credentials are deemed to be inadequate before formal selection is also important.

About the only time a genuine majority of the Green Party membership gets to call the shots is when they are asked to choose a new co-leader. The last occasion for such a demonstration was when the party was required to replace Russel Norman. The congenial and highly-qualified Kevin Hague was expected to be elected Male Co-Leader, but to the audible surprise of many of the voting delegates present, the post went to James Shaw.

The election of Shaw spoke volumes about the direction in which a majority of the Greens would like their party to go. Keith ends his post by detailing the lack of support for the politically ecumenical Vernon Tava. What he neglected to say, however, was that by opting decisively for Shaw, the membership had no need of Tava.

Labour’s strategists should have had little difficulty in decoding the message delivered by the Green Party membership when it chose Shaw over Hague. Decoding the message wrapped up in Genter’s candidacy is equally straightforward. “Respectful and collegial” though the Greens’ pursuit of power may be, power is what they seek.

They are in the electoral game to win. With Labour, if possible. Without them, if necessary.

TDB Recommends NewzEngine.com

Shalom.Kiwi threatens The Daily Blog with legal action over Kiwiblog/Shalom.Kiwi hack

25

Shalom.Kiwi, the hard right wing Israeli lobby blog in NZ, contacted The Daily Blog yesterday demanding that material they claimed had been hacked from Kiwiblog and Shalom.Kiwi be removed and that they had launched legal action against us with the privacy Commission, the NZ Police and ‘other agencies’. Christ only knows who the ‘other agencies are’

I have zero interest in doing what a hard right wing Israeli lobby group has to say and even less interest if Kiwiblog also want it.

I have no evidence that the information posted on TDB has been hacked, and until I have the Police banging on my door, I have no interest in removing any material, especially if that information paints KiwiBlog and  Shalom.Kiwi in a bad light.

The material in question was posted to the comments section of TDB and seemed to show Kiwiblog and Shalom.Kiwi  log in accounts.

The Office of the Privacy Commission has said this…

…and the Police have been contacted, but they haven’t replied to any requests as to whether or not they are investigating this.

If Shalom.Kiwi wish to censor The Daily Blog, they clearly need a new tactic to do so because this one looks pretty desperate.

TDB Recommends NewzEngine.com

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