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Talley’s penalty after crewman decapitation “an insult” – E Tu

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Talley’s penalty after crewman decapitation “an insult to all workers”

The union E tū says that it’s disappointed with the attitude of Talley’s Group Ltd and the light penalty it received following the decapitation of a crewman aboard one of its fishing vessels.

24-year-old Leighton Muir died aboard the Capt. MJ Souza, off Kiribati in July 2014, after a broken rope snapped back as he helped haul in a net of tuna.

It was revealed in court yesterday that crew wanted to replace the broken rope which killed Mr Muir but Prosecutor Dale La Hood told the court the ship’s bosun “reacted badly and scared the others off.”

E tū food industry representative Neville Donaldson says this is a clear example of a work culture that puts workers at serious risk.

“The company can blame the skipper and bosun all they want. The fact is, the crew will undertake their role strictly in line with what they believe would be expected by their employer.

“It seems from the prosecutor’s comments that the company placed crew in a dangerous and ultimately fatal environment.

“With the prosecutor identifying systemic failures, not just the failures of people on-board, much of the blame obviously lies with Talley’s Group Ltd itself.

“Sir Peter Talley’s knighthood was for services to business – but this is a business that has killed Kiwis.”

Neville says that the legal process and penalties are not nearly enough to deter companies like Talley’s from compromising the safety of their workers like this again.

“The penalty is an insult to all workers. $73,520 – what message does that send to employers? That they can risk the lives of good people, and when tragedy strikes, as happened here, they’ll get away with what we see as a slap on the wrist.

“Health and safety systems and penalties for transgressions must be significant enough that a worker’s death should be virtually impossible. If the penalties are not sufficiently severe, then employers will see them as the cost of doing business.”

Neville added that it was no coincidence that health and safety catastrophes followed Talley’s companies around.

“Someone died two years earlier on the very same boat, falling through an open hatch. Earlier this year a cleaner was suspended by his head on a meat hook in a Talley’s plant. All this from a business that John Key thinks are worthy of the nation’s highest accolades.

“We are furious. The company has blood on its hands.”

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Public health services worse off than in 2009/10 – CTU

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For the seventh year in a row the Government’s health budget is well short of what is needed to cover increasing costs, demographic changes and new policy initiatives. A detailed analysis of the 2016 health budget by the Council of Trade Unions and the Association of Salaried Medical Specialists estimates an operational funding shortfall this year of $248 million. The District Health Boards (DHBs) have a $152 million shortfall.

“This follows six years of underfunding, which we estimate has accumulated to $1.2 billion in 2016/17 compared to 2009/10,” says CTU economist Bill Rosenberg.

“We firmly disagree with the recently released Ministry of Health figures released by the Minister of Health claiming health funding has more than kept pace with population and cost pressures. We have analysed their figures and our analysis explains how they are flawed and inconsistent with previous Ministry estimates that do identify shortfalls,

“Despite being poorly funded relative to comparable countries, international evidence shows our public health system is efficient and of high quality. New Zealand is lagging behind when it comes to people being able to access the health care they need however, and it is getting worse,

“Even access to the government’s priority areas such as elective surgery compare poorly internationally. Some services further down the pecking order, such as mental health care, are now in crisis mode – and we already have the worst youth suicide rates in the OECD, along with a range of other poor health statistics,

“The Government cannot continue to claim that the shortfalls are not negatively impacting on the lives of New Zealanders,” says Rosenberg.

A summary of key points of our analysis:

This analysis compares the 2016 Budget with the analysis of the Health Vote which the CTU carried out prior to the Budget. It estimated the additional funding required to maintain current levels of services.

– The Health Vote in the 2016 Budget is an estimated $248 million behind what is needed to cover announced new services, increasing costs, population growth and the effects of an ageing population. This is after $197,000 of “reprioritised savings” identified in the Budget.

– While the Budget listed services that will receive more funding, and new initiatives costing $117 million, these will need to be paid for by reductions in other services.

– We conservatively estimate the funding shortfall in core government health expenditure for 2016/17 compared to 2009/10 is $1.2 billion. This shortfall has steadily grown over those years.

– The Health Vote is forecast to fall as a proportion of Gross Domestic Product (GDP). If it had maintained the proportion of GDP it had in 2009/10, it would be $0.95 billion higher in 2016/17.

– District Health Boards are underfunded by an estimated $152 million to cover increased costs and demographic changes, and to fund $55 million worth of new initiatives and $45 million of expenses shifted from central funding.

– Centrally managed national services such as National Disability Support Services, National Elective Services, and Public Health services received $79 million below what they needed to cover cost increases and demographic changes, and are $90 million short when $56 million in additional services are included after taking account of $45 million in shifting expenses to DHBs and “reprioritisation”.

– The Ministry of Health itself was underfunded by $5.5 million.

– Our estimates are consistent with estimates made by the Ministry of Health and Treasury prior to Budget-setting in previous years. We have checked the recent release by the Minister of Health to Fairfax providing figures purporting to show that the Government’s Health Votes had “covered population growth, ageing and inflation”[1]. These figures are flawed and do not support the Minister’s claim.

[1] Stacey Kirk, “Government returns fire over health funding: figures show new funding keeping up”, 7 June 2016,http://i.stuff.co.nz/national/politics/80794791/government-returns-fire-over-health-funding-figures-show-new-funding-keeping-up
Full report: http://union.org.nz/sites/union.org.nz/files/Did-the-Budget-provide-enough-for-Health-2016.pdf

Spreadsheet: http://union.org.nz/sites/union.org.nz/files/Health-vote-2016-post-Budget.xlsx

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Women have waited too long for equal pay – Govt needs to hurry up

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New Zealand is on the verge of making history by recognising the true value of women’s work – so the Cabinet should urgently make it a reality, the Public Service Association says.

Ministers have received the recommendations of the Pay Equity Joint Working Group and are currently considering them.

The PSA has written to all Cabinet ministers to urge them to accept the recommendations in full – so New Zealand can regain its place as a trailblazer for gender equality.

PSA National Secretary Erin Polaczuk has also asked to arrange meetings for Cabinet ministers with home care workers – to learn first-hand about the work they do, and the hardships they face.

“The recommendations of the Working Group acknowledge that it’s time equal pay claims were taken seriously and that all women are Worth 100%,” she says

“The PSA has been fighting for equal pay for 102 years.

“Thousands of our members are employed in ‘women’s work’ jobs like administration and clerical staff, social workers and home care.

“I hope Cabinet ministers will accept my offer to meet some of them.”

Once the recommendations are accepted, any employee can begin a claim with their employer if they believe they’ve been underpaid because their work is predominantly done by women.

But Ms Polaczuk warns the fight isn’t over, and financial commitments need to be made.

“Paying women 100% will cost money.

“Employers must be ready to deliver on equal pay urgently, because women have already waited far too long.”

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Came a crooked woman on a crooked path: Hillary Clinton and the 2016 Democratic rig

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I am not excited by Hillary Clinton becoming the Democratic Candidate. She is a friend of Wall street, a paid up member  of the military industrial complex and will see no real momentum on social justice or reigning in America’s war machine.

A vote for Hillary is a vote for the same elites and powerful who already run the establishment. Yes she’s a woman and yes that’s great the glass ceiling has been cracked but at this stage I’m more concerned about the flying shards of glass that will rain down upon everyone else in the world as collateral damage for Hillary’s CV.

The problem for Clinton is that Bernie Sander supporters see her as a prime example of everything that is wrong in American politics, not a solution to it.

I doubt very much, after a rigged contest where the Democrats Super Delegates have played such a hand in giving the win to Hillary that those spurned Sander supporters will do anything to help Clinton get elected, even if it means allowing Trump to trash the country for 4 years.

The Super Delegates were created by the Democratic Party so that no grass roots candidate promising actual progressive reform to America was ever in a position to win the candidacy and that’s what they did to end Bernie Sander’s mathematical chance of winning.

This isn’t a win for women, it’s a win for the same corporate elites who always own American politics.

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Latest Internal Polling – National in trouble

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The impact of the Memorandum of Understanding has triggered something deep in the electorate if the latest internal polling is anything to go by.

Obliging the mainstream media to change the way they report politics from a first by the post perspective to an MMP one changes the way voters see the Opposition.

That change seems to be happening at an alarming pace. The sudden attention by the media of Government Departments failing those they are supposed to care for and the naked self interest in growing the property bubble are now obvious to everyone not benefiting from them that it’s galvanised a resistance.

The latest internal polling has National free falling to 44%, Labour at 31% and Greens at 12%.

That means the Labour-Green bloc is at 43% and National is on 44% – that’s a mere 1 percent lead and the speed of the turn around suggests something has snapped in terms of voter apathy.

If these internals are repeated in the next wave of  Polls, the sense of momentum will step up.

Poor David Farrar will be working triple time trying to help calm the nervous National Party.

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Liars, thieves and cheats

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It has been revealed that the government agency responsible for enforcing employment rights tried to cover up the widespread abuse of the Holiday Act by employers in this country.

Documents released to the Council of Trade Unions by the Ministry of Business, Industry,

Employment (MBIE) show that they were aware of widespread failure by employers and payroll providers to comply with the Holiday’s Act. They estimated this has cost workers up to $2 billion dollars over the six-year period that workers can claim back pay for.

MBIE then colluded with the Minister responsible, Michael Woodhouse, to keep this information secret and together they proposed a law change to the government in April last year that employers have been demanding that would have effectively legalised this theft.

Woodhouse recommended that annual leave be calculated using hours rather than days or weeks.

This has been the practice of fast food employers which Unite has been challenging on this issue over the past year. It effectively means that employers do not have to do a calculation to pay the “higher of” someone’s ordinary weekly pay or their average weekly pay. The ordinary weekly pay for someone who has increased the number of hours worked each week from 20 to 30, for example, should be paid out at the 30 hours a week rate not an average of the two.

Thankfully, the law change proposal failed to get Cabinet approval.

The public exposure of these documents and the possible multi-billion dollar liability owed to workers has forced Woodhouse to confirm to the media again on June 9 that there will be no change to the Holidays Act that reduces entitlement.

By trying to hide the evidence of the employers theft from the public, MBIE has contributed to at least an 18-month delay in workers being able to submit claims for the theft to be stopped.

Unite first wrote to the main employers in the fast food industry at the beginning of 2015. We were met by deliberate lies and obfuscation. They denied that they had a problem. We began the long, slow process of preparing a legal case against them. We were just about to file a case in the Employment Authority when MBIE admitted there was a problem after we went public with the issue early this year. That delay could have, and should have, been avoided.

MBIE says that any workers who have variable hours of work can be affected. They estimated this could be up to 763,000 workers being owed on average between $250 and $500 a year. One company they audited owed their staff $1800 each.

CTU president Richard Wagstaff declared that the CTU had lost confidence in the alleged impartiality of MBIE on the issue in a speech this week to the Plenary Session of the International Labour Congress

“The Inspectorate and the Government kept it secret for 18 months at least, and even when asked directly, did not come clean about the information they had gathered”, said Richard Wagstaff.
“Government policy is bent so far towards being ‘business facing’ that it is unbalanced and blind to the interests of working people,” he said.

There is actually a simple fix for most workers. MBIE says that they have consulted 22 payroll providers who represent approximately 95 percent of employers in New Zealand who use payroll software. Privately they admitted to MBIE that they were generally not compliant. Tell them and the employers they act for that they will all be prosecuted unless they fix the problem. I would like to see the day when there were a few bosses in jail for wage fraud and theft!

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Political Marriage? Green, Red, Brown, Black and Blue

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Last week’s memorandum of understanding between the Labour and Green Parties will prove to be a wise move if it helps the combined Labour-Green vote to reach 48% or more. It seems a hard ask though, even in the event that the economy tanks next year.

In 1931, after the economy tanked big-time late in 1930, a conservative government nevertheless was returned; it took five years of the Great Depression for voters to dislodge the conservatives (who had been in power for 23 years from 1912 to 1935). Even in 1935, it was disunity on the right that handed victory to Labour, with the new right-wing Democrat Party splintering the vote as a protest against Finance Minister Gordon Coates’ centrist pragmatism.

There is a tendency – in both New Zealand and in the United Kingdom – for voters to turn against parties which allegedly “prop-up” bigger parties. In New Zealand the Maori Party – which has never propped-up National – has suffered nevertheless because of the prop-up taint. (The Maori Party has always joined a government to make a difference, to make that government a better government than it otherwise would have been; it has never played a clinching role in the formation of a government. It has never been the median party, despite having been close in 2008, 2011 and 2014.) Pity the Liberal Democrats in the United Kingdom, who had no real choice in 2010 but to form a government with the Conservatives. As a result, Lib‑Dem voters turned on their party, directly causing their worst nightmare, the coalition government to be replaced by a Tory-only government. They just didn’t get the maths.

In New Zealand in 2011-14 and from 2015 (after Northland), puny United-Future has been the median (“king-maker”) party. In 2017 the odds are that, under the present configuration of parties, either New Zealand First or the Maori Party will be the median Party. The politics of 2017 will become very interesting if Green-Labour-Maori have enough seats to put together a government. (Indeed the most effective possible electoral accommodation Labour could do might be to campaign for the party vote only in the Maori electorates.)

Unlike the Greens, the Maori Party have a strategy of being a part of government, whether centre-left or centre-right. At risk of being misunderstood, they are a party of Government, not a party of Opposition. (Indeed I voted Maori last time with the very specific aim of helping to elect a Maori Party list MP; I take my share of the credit for bringing Marama Fox into Parliament.) I would rate it about a 25 percent chance that we get a Green-Red-Brown government next year.

If the Green-Labour bloc cannot get a majority in Parliament with the help of the Maori Party, then Green-Labour will need the Black party; Winston Peters’ New Zealand First. The issue becomes what Winston will ask for, and what Green-Labour is willing to concede. In 2005 Labour conceded to Winston by sidelining the Greens who had positioned themselves into a position of strategic weakness, agreeing unconditionally to support Labour on confidence and supply.

A repeat of 2005 seems a very likely possibility in 2017. And, if Green-Labour does not make sufficient concessions to Winston, then a repeat of 1996 becomes the next most likely outcome. Either way, Winston Peters will probably press very hard to become Treasurer or Prime Minister. (Actually, when he was Treasurer, he was for the most part a very good Treasurer.)

If the election makes New Zealand First the median party regardless of whether the Maori Party positions itself to the left or to the right of New Zealand First, then there will be only one way to break a 1996-style impasse (I am assuming that Red-Brown-Black could not make it to 50%). It would be for Green to reposition itself into the median position; to redefine itself as a strategic centre Party. It could be quite a messy divorce from Labour, and with the risk of a 2020 anti-Green backlash (like the anti-Lib-Dem backlash in the United Kingdom).The possible outcome would be a Green-Blue government, which many people – including National Party people – may prefer over a Black-Blue government.

I want to see the Green Party spelling out what it would do in the event that the party vote split is similar to that of 1996; quite a likely possibility. The Greens should make it clear that, if at all possible, they will form a governing partnership with Labour (and hopefully, Maori) after the 2017 election. That would be Plan A. They should make it equally clear that, if such a government is not possible, then they will commit to contesting the centre ground, meaning that a Green-National government becomes a possibility. If the Greens explain this ‘Plan B’ properly, they will minimise the ‘messy-divorce’ version of Plan B; facilitating a strategic amical divorce instead.

While unconditional love may underpin a good marriage, it makes for weak politics.

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#BlackGreen or Black And Blue – A Response To One News’ Corin Dann’s NZ First Political Prognostications

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As we move closer and closer to the climactic events of the 2017 General Election, an ever-increasing (if not outright bewildering) array of political journalists, talkback radio hosts, and errant blubbery bloggers will mysteriously transmogrify themselves into ungainly combinations of soothsayer-entrail-readers spliced with Buzzfeed-grade clickbait provisioners.

The target of their churnalistic political-tarot-card-reading bravado? Many things, but in the main New Zealand First and our upcoming (and much vaunted) role in one or more potential governing coalitions.

On a certain level, it’s natural and understandable that there’d be this level of interest in what we’re going to do. The political terrain has aligned in such a way that New Zealand First is vital to just about ANY Government from EITHER side of the Aisle forming. Perhaps more importantly, NZF is one of the most intriguing Parties and phalanxes of personalities for political observers, academics and newshounds to follow – so given we’ve been so successful at capturing the popular imagination of the voting public recently, it should come as no surprise that our good name is to be used in order to inspire readership by the big television and news-media networks.

The trouble, though, is it seems a not insignificant number of journalists aren’t actually particularly interested in reporting the truth. Or even the likely truth. Instead, they go for attention-grabbing headlines (‘clickbait’ it might be called), which are designed to sensationalize out of all proportion, meaning and semblance of realism, things about New Zealand First and Winston Peters in pursuit of eyeballs.

We saw it over the weekend when Stuff completely manufactured a quote from Winston to suggest an Islamophobic attitude on his behalf. What he said was that there was quite a diversity of views within the Muslim world as to the treatment of women. The headline which showed up all over my social media feed was “‘Muslim’s [sic] don’t respect woman’: Peters”. See what I mean? The press is quite happy to engage in lies, spin and distortion in pursuit of that precious, precious advertising revenue-stream.

So it was with One News’ Political Editor Corin Dann’s bizarre and almost completely unsubstantiated prediction that “Winston Peters more likely to go with National”.

Despite acknowledging the potential for NZ First to play a crucial role in a Labour-Greens Government post-2017, Dann nevertheless insists that we’ll side with National purely on the strength of analysis that “National[‘s got] 48 [percent”.

It is, needless to say, a bit risky to base anything of substance concerning future predictions for NZ First on something as vicissitudinal and unreliable as New Zealand media opinion polls.

Having said that, the reference in Dann’s piece to the alleged difficulties of NZ First working with The Greens do deserve examination. And yes – it’s true. Even despite both NZ First and The Green Party providing Confidence & Supply to a Labour-led Government during Helen Clark’s last term as Prime Minister … our relationship has historically been a bit fraught. I’ve detailed the precise points of skirmishing many times in previous blog-posts, but suffice to say a certain generation of Greens didn’t like Winston (there’s a small flurry of Greens press releases dated circa 2004 which criticize him as some form of Nazi), and Winston appears to have had a certain degree of political animosity towards Russel Norman for shenanigans which eventuated as a result of the latter’s role on the Parliamentary Privileges Committee in 2008.

I’ve also detailed in several articles how the relationship between New Zealand First and The Greens has considerably improved in recent years (especially following the election of James Shaw to the Greens’ co-leadership position; and most recently with the elevation of Deborah Morris-Travers, a former NZ First *Cabinet Minister* to the position of the Green Party’s Chief of Staff, done with Winston’s blessing) … but there does remain one obvious sticking point, as cited by Winston himself.

In his view, the Greens are a party whose position on Treaty affairs, biculturalism, or whatever you may wish to call it, is one of racial division rather than unitary nationalism. Whether he’s right or wrong about this, New Zealand First’s strong and continuing support within Maoridom means that it’s difficult to write this sort of sentiment off as mere conservative white person redneckery. (I would also add that the fact we comprehensively beat the Green Party at the last Election for party vote in all but two of the Maori electorates may potentially suggest that our vision is found rather more compelling than The Greens’ own amongst New Zealanders who’ve consciously chosen, for electoral purposes at least, to identify as Maori)

But what interests me about this particular patu-in-the-works is not how it applies to the Green Party. I believe those differences between them and us are, to some degree, surmountable. Instead, it’s the fact that this very issue – so important to Winston that he made it one of our Coalition bottom lines at the last Election – is also something he regularly and rigorously criticizes the National Party over.

In other words, and to speak plainly – the only salient reason Winston can articulate for keeping the Greens at arms’ length … is exactly the same thing that’s wrong with National.

So surely, by that reason alone coalition with National ought to be regarded as at least as equidistantly unappealing as working with The Greens.

But then we factor in other things. The more centrally important issues of economic management and policy upon which New Zealand First and The Greens share so incredibly much common ground. On everything from opposing asset sales and the TPPA to seeking to clean up NZ’s status as a tax haven, and reforming the Reserve Bank Act, the Green Party and New Zealand First fundamentally agree a whole helluvalot more than National and NZF do. In fact, the Black and Blue visions for New Zealand and its future couldn’t be more different if they were outright diametrically opposed.

Another core area which Winston-watchers frequently neglect is the importance of what you might term ‘personal loyalties’ and ‘grudge-bearing’ to the man. He’s got strong and enduring linkages to the Labour Party both from his time as their Foreign Affairs minister between 2005-2008, and previous. In a column published late last month, he was incredibly quick to point out how well he related to prominent Labour figures such as David Parker. I somehow don’t see him writing defences for New Zealand National Party Ministers with anything like the same vigor.

More to the point, the chips on Winston’s shoulders as applies National are so bifurcatingly large that he’d have to walk sideways in order to even think about entering a National Party caucus room.

Deep down, he’s never forgiven them for the way they treated him in the early-90s when he railed against Ruthanasia and found himself on National’s outer pending eventual expulsion. Forcing them to rely upon him for C&S in 1996 was some measure of revenge – as Deputy Prime Minister he suddenly outranked so very many of those craven individuals who’d dared to attempt to lay him low. But ultimately, it proved unsatisfying, as he still effectively served at National’s pleasure (as demonstrated by the manner and form of the coalition’s dissolution), and found himself maneuvered into a bit of a corner (not to mention a sticky situation) in consequence. This, in many ways, simply lead to further loathing and recriminations. A situation which was only exacerbated when John Key stuck a knife into Winston repeatedly over the whole 2008-2013 period.

So I think it’s fair to state that Winston still bears a fairly large grudge against both National in general, and specifically its present Leadership. It’s thus highly unlikely, while John Key still presides over National, that Winston would seek a governing arrangement with them.

Meanwhile, while it’s definitely true that there’s been some ‘grudgery’ directed towards The Greens in the past, it would appear on the face of it that this antipathy has increasingly become just that. A thing of the past. James Shaw appearing on Q&A over the weekend could confidently point towards improved relations with NZF, and even cite a personal closeness between Metiria Turei and Winston as evidence that we’re able to bridge the divide.

Thus, as an associate put it: “While it’s true he has a grudge against the Greens, I’d argue that with Russel Norman out of the picture (the main target of his dislike), his grudge against National outweighs his grudge against the Greens.”

It was also pointed out by the same associate that it’s the somewhat reciprocal ties of loyalty between Winston and certain elements within Labour that will likely form the bedrock of any presumptive NZ First-Labour-Greens coalition, with antipathies towards the Greens being something of a more remote secondary consideration.

Although it does also behoove me to point out that there are a range of possible alternate arrangements for NZ First in 2017 beyond working with Labour and the Greens – or even coalition with National. We’ve done quite a competent job from the Cross-Benches and Opposition in the past – and as The Greens’ own Memorandum of Understanding with the National Party which was in force from 2011 to 204 proves, it’s perfectly possible to work with the governing parties of the day on areas of shared interest without necessarily selling one’s political soul.

But all things considered, I’m yet to see any serious evidence from either journalists or hacktivists which might serve to convince me that New Zealand First aligning with National is either a probability or the most likely possibility. Instead, despite the ongoing baying of certain attention-seeking figures to the contrary, the two paths which appear open for NZF at this present point of time are remaining in Opposition (perhaps in perpetuity) or reaching some form of accord with the Labour-Greens bloc.

I am sure that as the months wind down on the ever-closening approaching to 2017, the headlines and the bylines will become ever more shrill and discordant as they seek to paint New Zealand First as the fantastical – and fantasy-strewn – perfect partner for all manner of disparate, diverse and deleterious governing combinations.

But remember: It’s the People that decide what the government looks like. Not the Pundits and the News Publishers.

[Note: Thanks to Alex for being that associate]

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Waatea 5th Estate – Sir Graham Latimer

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Sir Graham Latimer from Te Tai Tokerau Northland aged 90 passed away this week.

Sir Graham was a tireless campaigner for Maori Land rights………broadcasting rights……..fishing and forestry rights. Today we enjoy much of his hard work……..Maori Television………..Crown Forestry Rental Trust……….Maori Fisheries Commission

His passing raises the issue of Maori leadership as we battle for economic independence, social prosperity and the survival of our language.

Here to talk about Sir Graham Latimer the man………Maori Leadership in the future…….and the fight for our language:

In studio: Former Labour Minister, John Tamihere…………..Principal Advisor with NZ Treasurer, Te Atatwhai Tibble……….on skype Broadcaster and Maori Language Expert from the North Waihoroi Shortland………from Rarotonga Broadcaster and Political Commentator Derek Fox……..we’ll also be joined throughout the programme with Maori Leaders currently attending Sir Graham Latimer’s tangi up North.  

 

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National’s policy statement offers pittance to the homeless at Te Puea Marae – CPAG

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Child Poverty Action Group says that the policy statement released last week by National is a truly meagre response to New Zealand’s increasingly dramatic housing crisis.

It was heralded as a national housing policy, some visionary blueprint as to how the multi-tiered housing crisis was to be tackled. The nation held its breath in anticipation, but the newly proposed policy did nothing but deflate the hopes of many.The pronouncement amounted to just a further jawboning of Auckland City Council for apparently allowing section prices to skyrocket to a point where even the housing needs of the sons and daughters of those in our leafy suburbs have become a problem of crisis proportions.

Frank Hogan, CPAG’s spokesperson for housing, asks, “What does the statement offer the homeless?”

The following are fair questions:

– What does the National Housing Policy offer those tens of thousands of our most vulnerable for whom home-ownership is now as attainable as them living on a different planet?

– Particularly what does it offer our citizens, including the young couple with their two-week-old baby who came to the Te Puea Marae last week?

Plainly the answer to each question is pittance – the policy will barely register for those who are in the greatest of need.

It is time immediate relief is offered to our most vulnerable citizens.

It is time the Minister of Building and Housing and his colleagues got real about the crisis, and stepped up with substantial investment into building additional state houses.

True leadership was shown at Te Puea Marae. That is what is required of central Government – not more vistas of a planet called “Never never land”.

CPAG’s in-depth analysis of the 2016 Budget explains clearly where it falls short in terms of addressing the greatest immediate needs of New Zealand’s most vulnerable in terms of housing and incomes.

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Political Caption Competition

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The Daily Blog Open Mic – Friday – 10th June 2016

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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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Dear TPPA Activists – Why we must protest the visiting US warship

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Dear TPPA Activists

How are you? I know, frustrated and angry. Watching Key with the aid of Phil Goff ram the TPPA through before the Auckland Mayoralty Elections remove him from Parliament is enraging. Thankfully the TPPA is so toxic and so against any Government’s interests, not even Trump wants it.

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It’s hard to see this as a blessing though.

The sudden domestic shockwave against neoliberalism is a reminder of how much suffering is occurring from the economy outside the beltway.

That’s why it’s an obligation to continue and re-energise the shockwave.

Some will argue that we should welcome the US Warship because it won’t likely have a nuclear weapon on board. They would say this shows a success of policy, they would frame any opposition as just ‘anti-americanism’.

I call several shades of bullshit on that.

This isn’t about a 4 decade old nuclear free policy that helped define us as an independent people, this is about the here and the now and whether we have the same courage displayed in 1987.

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Right now the US are trying to force us into a forced trade deal. The TPPA robs NZ of our political and economic sovereignty – we can not, must not allow easy passage for this abomination. We can’t willingly allow this far right Government to sell our actual democracy over to Corporate Overlords who have the ability to sue us if we threaten their profit margin!

This isn’t a fucking free trade deal, it’s a mugging. It is stand over tactics, it’s the constant threat that Corporations will sue us for any domestic law they don’t like. It weakens our democracy, it gives that power to Trans-Nationals whose immorality and malevolence are well documented.

It’s like handing the car keys over to Zombie Vultures on Meth.

Let’s not forget what the visit of a US Warship will mean to the wider geopolitical cold war chess match being played out by America and China in the Pacific.  China and the US are locked into a cold war for dominance of the Pacific to decide who is the Super Power. The TPPA is an economic national security leash locking us in step with US interests as a direct challenge to Chinese power.

A US warship being floated into a NZ harbour while that nation is currently attempting to steal our economic and political sovereignty must be protested against with every fibre of our ability.

We can not let the history books claim NZers welcomed a US Warship as it attempted to steal our democracy.

That would be a stain on our honour and a level of cowardice previous generations of anti-nuclear protesters, environmental protestors and Springbok Tour protestors would be ashamed of.

Every person who sees the TPPA for the threat to our country that it is, for every Maori rights activist, for every anti-GCSB and 5 Eyes protestor, for every Unionist, for every Environmentalist, for every former Anti-Aparthied activist, for every social justice fighter, for every anti-nuclear protestor – we should collectively rage against this machine of war because its presence while it attempts to throttle our Parliament can not pass without us showing our contempt.

It’s time to come off the fence and show America that we won’t allow our sovereignty to be stolen like this. If we can bring together the same numbers we did at the last TPPA protest, we can shut the city and harbour down and send a message to the entire watching global media that we won’t take the TPPA lying down.

TDB will be holding a meeting in Auckland in July for interested organisations and protest groups to start building resistance.

I urge you all to attend and get the word out. We can’t let this pass on our watch.

Kia Kaha.

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Strange local silence over shocking PNG shooting of peaceful student protesters

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A wounded student being carried into Port Moresby General Hospital by emergency department staff yesterday. Image: Asia Pacific Report/Martyn Namorong/Tagali Hillside Darkhorse FB

David Robie also blogs at Cafe Pacific

Curious how there has been a largely muted local media response to the outrageous events in Papua New Guinea yesterday. Armed police opened fire on peaceful protesters on their own Waigani campus at the University of Papua New Guinea. There are conflicting reports about casualties, but Port Moresby General Hospital authorities say that only eight people were treated for gunshot wounds, four critically, but nobody died. Other sources insist the casualties are worse than what has been admitted. Students across Papua New Guinea have been waging peaceful protests and class boycotts for almost two months. They have been consistently and persistently calling for Prime Minister Peter O’Neill’s resignation pending a police investigation into corruption allegations.

The picture posted on this blog is from the Pacific Media Centre’s Asia Pacific Report. Now read on with this statement today from Amnesty International:

AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL PROTESTS OVER ‘DISGRACEFUL SHOOTINGS’ OF PNG STUDENTS

The scene at Port Moresby General Hospital yesterday as wounded students were brought in for treatment after the shootings. Image: Asia Pacific Report/Amnesty International
The scene at Port Moresby General Hospital yesterday as wounded students were brought in for treatment after the shootings. Image: Asia Pacific Report/Amnesty International

The shooting of students peacefully protesting in Port Moresby yesterday is a disgraceful attack on the rights to freedom of peaceful assembly and expression, says Amnesty International.

The organisation has received information that there are 38 people injured, including four in critical condition. Three people are still being assessed in emergency.

The front page of today's The National, one of PNG's two national daily newspapers.
The front page of today’s The National, one of PNG’s two national daily newspapers.

“The shooting of students peacefully protesting is reminiscent of the worst excesses of repressive regimes in the region,” said Rafendi Djamin, Amnesty International’s director for South East Asia and the Pacific.

“Papua New Guinea’s authorities must establish a prompt, impartial and independent investigation to determine who is responsible for the unnecessary and excessive use of force.”

The Papua New Guinea police opened fire yesterday on a group of students at the University of Papua New Guinea (UPNG) who were peacefully protesting against the alleged corruption of Prime Minister Peter O’Neill.

Several eye-witnesses have come forward to say they saw students beaten and shot at, including one case where a student was shot in the head.

In a statement, Prime Minister O’Neill blamed the violence on the students who had set out from their university for a peaceful protest at Parliament.

‘Warning shots’
Before any investigation has taken place, he has denied that the police targeted the students, claiming that their only response was the use of tear-gas and “warning shots”.

“Prime Minister O’Neill’s reaction has been completely inadequate. He should ensure an investigation worthy of its name takes place into reports of excessive use of force. Instead, he has prejudged the outcome, blamed the students for what happened to them, and sought to evade accountability,” said Rafendi Djamin.

Prime Minister O’Neill told Parliament that an investigation into the shootings at UPNG would take place. It is not clear who will carry out the investigation, when it happen, or whether it will be independent of any government or police interference.

“It is not good enough for the authorities to investigate themselves,” said Rafendi Djamin. “The Papua New Guinea government is trying to absolve the police of all responsibility for the unlawful use of force.”

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The PNG Post-Courier’s front page today.

Claims by the Papua New Guinea authorities directly contradict several first-hand accounts reported of the violence.

Outside Port Moresby General Hospital, families and friends of students who were attacked were peacefully protesting the shootings. Hospital officials have said that they had heard shooting outside the hospital.

“The police must exercise restraint and respect the right to peaceful protest. Firearms must only be used when strictly unavoidable in order to protect life,” said Rafendi Djamin.

Background
Since May, Prime Minister O’Neill’s government has been the focus of sustained student protests over allegations of corruption.

O’Neill is accused by PNG’s Taskforce Sweep of allegedly authorising payments for fraudulent legal bills amounting to A$30 million.

The students have used peaceful methods, including protests and a boycott of classes.

Prime Minister O’Neill has lashed out at the students for taking part in the peaceful protests, deriding them as poor performing students and warning that they will have to “face the consequences” in terms of their academic prospects.

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Waatea 5th Estate  – US Elections & latest Colmar Brunton Poll 

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Joining us tonight to discuss todays US election results and the first Colmar Brunton poll after the Labour Green Memorandum of Understanding…

In studio, Auckland University Political Scientist – Professor Jennifer Curtin

On Skype, the Green Party Spokesperson on Foreign Affairs, Kennedy Graham

And on the phone – Labour Party MP, former Foreign Affairs Minister and soon to become the next Mayor of Auckland –  Phil Goff and surprise guest – Sir Michael Cullen

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