Pages
▼
Sunday, June 30, 2013
Mike Butler: No-vote and Maori seats relevance
Preliminary results of the Ikaroa-Rawhiti by-election are unsurprising with Labour candidate Meka Whaitiri taking nearly double the votes of the runner-up in a poll on a sunny day marked by low voter turnout. The big Maori no-vote could be seen as a message that the sun is setting on separate Maori seats.
Reuben Chapple: Immigration Concretes
Current
immigration debate refers to immigrants in general as if they were abstract
people in an abstract world. But concrete differences between immigrants from
different countries allow us to make a fair stab at determining whether their
coming here is good or bad for New Zealand.
Monday, June 24, 2013
Karl du Fresne: The ubiquitous idiot Dad - a television stereotype
Anyone who watches much television is familiar with that stereotypical character, the idiot Dad. It’s hard to pinpoint his exact origins, but the chief suspect would have to be Archie Bunker from All in the Family.
Think back for a moment. Prior to AITF, television fathers were generally presented sympathetically.
Thursday, June 20, 2013
Mike Butler: Extra time for constitution scrap
You now have to the end of next month to tell the Constitutional Review Panel whether you agree/disagree/ don’t care whether New Zealand entrenches a system of government that could split the country into “Maori” and “the rest”. The panel this week extended the closing day for submissions, from July 1 to July 31.
Phil McDermott: Just Another Stake in the Sand - Planning, Demographics, and Uncertainty
Another million or another myth?
The Mayor, Len Brown, reiterated the Council view that Auckland is facing an increase of around one million people over the next 30 years, and that planning for this level of growth is the prudent thing to do. I cannot be so sure.
The Mayor is pretty bullish about growth, though. He even claimed that “our actual rate of population growth has been well above the highest projection” since 1999.
Tuesday, June 18, 2013
Ron Smith: Syria and President Obama - why intervene now?
Monday, June 17, 2013
Rob Paterson: Constitutional Change in New Zealand
Introduction: New Zealand is reviewing its constitution but the panel
set up to do this review is comprised, not of constitutional experts or representatives
of a fair cross-section of the people of New Zealand, but an appreciable number
of Maori studies academics, some with strident anti-colonialist views. Discreet
and separate Maori and non-Maori consultation is a feature of this review. It
is the second constitutional review in seven years and is being undertaken in
the absence of a constitutional crisis. The review is being driven at the
behest of the Maori Party, a political party that captured just 1.4 percent of
the party vote in the 2011 general election.
Sunday, June 16, 2013
Michael Coote: Submission on the Auckland Unitary Plan
May 2013
Draft Auckland Unitary Plan Feedback from an Auckland
Ratepayer and Resident
To whom it may concern,
I write concerning the Draft Auckland Unitary Plan
(“D-AUP”) as it relates to policy concerning Maori and Mana Whenua [The people
of the land who have mana or customary authority – their historical, cultural
and genealogical heritage are attached to the land and sea].
Friday, June 14, 2013
Mike Butler: Treaty try-on forces farmer to sell
Allan Titford did not know what he had stepped into when he bought land 40km north of Dargaville that he intended to farm and subdivide. That was nearly 27 years ago. Within seven years, he was one of several farmers forced off their land as a result of trumped-up treaty claim and a farcical Waitangi Tribunal inquiry.
The Te Roroa claim is not the only “grievance” that started out as an opportunistic try-on that gained a kind of standing by repeated petitions to parliament.
Thursday, June 13, 2013
Ron Smith: Security and trust
I
have regularly argued (or sometimes simply assumed) that it is reasonable to
accept some degree of state intrusion into the private dealings of its
citizens, in the interests of national or individual security (see, for
instance, ‘Spying and the public interest’, November 2011). Of course, I also accept that it is
permissible to spy on individuals who may not be citizens but who may represent
a threat to those who are. Indeed, quite
recently, I have criticised US security authorities for failing to be
sufficiently proactive in the matter of the Boston bombers (‘Loosers’, April,
this year).
Monday, June 10, 2013
Mike Butler: Tuhoe deal just? You decide
Were Tuhoe innocent victims of crafty colonisers or did their 19th century leaders make a series of bad choices that exposed their people to the sharp edge of the British Empire? This article compares some Office of Treaty Settlements rhetoric that alleges “Crown behaviour made a harmonious relationship with Tuhoe impossible” with historical fact.
Sunday, June 9, 2013
Lindsay Mitchell: Getting to grips with 'child poverty'
A recently-released Ministerial Committee on Poverty report contains information familiar to me but presented in new and revealing ways. For instance, the chart below shows that of the 270,000 children deemed to be living 'in poverty' (i.e. in households below 60 percent of the median equivalised after housing costs) more than half are not experiencing hardship. That's because income is arguably less important than outgoings, or budgetary prioritising:
Friday, June 7, 2013
Mike Butler: Young Maori wooed for eighth seat
The Maori roll is more appealing to new voters, according to an Electoral Commission progress report, while the number of seasoned Maori voters moving to the Maori roll is roughly the same as those who leave it. The progress reports are part of the 2013 Maori Electoral Option which enables Maori voters to choose whether they want to be on the general or Maori rolls.
Frank Newman: Insurance shake-up
The Canterbury earthquakes are having huge consequences. Not
only are the lives of residents in the area directly affected, but it is
causing seismic changes to the insurance industry and that affects every
property owner in New Zealand. You need to be aware of those changes – your
house may depend upon it.
Thursday, June 6, 2013
Ron Smith: Terrorism, propaganda and war
Terrorism
has long been described as ‘the propaganda of the deed’; I noted this last August (‘Terrorism, Murder
and Madness’). It is a description that
comes from Nineteenth Century Russian theorists of political violence, who were
persistently intent on bringing down the Czarist regime. Since then, it has provided a potent method
of getting the message across for a wide range of activist groups, down to the
present time, and there is every reason to think that it will continue into the
indefinite future.
Wednesday, June 5, 2013
Reuben Chapple: All ideas have a pedigree
Dr
Elizabeth Rata’s recent article (“Democracy and Diversity”) makes some
excellent points about why equality in citizenship and one law for all must
always trump identity politics in the public square. However, she seems to have
skated somewhat lightly over how it is that “liberals of both the Left and
the Right embraced biculturalism with such religious-like commitment.” All
ideas have a pedigree.
Monday, June 3, 2013
Karl du Fresne: Who's Norman trying to kid?
Russel Norman’s speech to the annual conference of the Greens, in which he compared John Key with Robert Muldoon, rated a 10 for desperation and a zero for credibility. I’m no cheerleader for Key, but even to mention him in the same breath as Muldoon is laughable. Norman arrived in New Zealand from Australia in 1997, and on the basis of his speech I would guess that’s about as far back as his knowledge of our political history extends.
Sunday, June 2, 2013
Mike Butler: De-knighting treaty sugar daddy
While Prime Minister John Key is agonising over whether former National Cabinet Minister Sir Douglas Graham should be stripped of his knighthood, here are a few aspects of the beleaguered knight’s record on treaty settlements, often quoted as his saving grace. Graham, who went down in the 2008 collapse of the Lombard finance company along with Bill Jeffries, Lawrence Bryant, and Michael Reeves, had appeals against their sentences for their roles in the failure rejected on Thursday, and were told that their sentences were “manifestly inadequate”.