] NEWSLETTER: Key Notes No. 17 - Rt Hon John Key
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24 August 2007
NEWSLETTER: Key Notes No. 17

Electoral finance

On Wednesday, I made a really important speech to the National Press Club.

I spoke about our democracy, how precious it is, and how the democratic rights New Zealanders enjoy will be seriously eroded by Labour's Electoral Finance Bill.

The bill is a huge threat to freedom of expression. It is deeply flawed and anti-democratic. It should be ripped up and thrown in the bin.

Read and comment on my speech , or watch my video diary on the Electoral Finance Bill.

You can get more information on the bill here. If you are as concerned as I am about the bill's assault on your democratic rights, please make a submission to the select committee considering this bill. You can do this online.

The deadline for submissions is 7 September 2007.

Make a submission and be heard. Our democracy depends on you.

Home affordability

At the National Party annual conference, I outlined our approach to Home Affordability. And last Monday, I spoke in more depth about this to the Auckland branch of the Contractors Federation.

It's clear that we have a big home affordability problem in New Zealand. And it's got to the point where this is having a big impact on the lives of young New Zealanders.

Just look at a first-home buyer on the average wage buying a median-priced house. In 1999 it took 42% of their pay to service their mortgage. It now takes around 81%. And that's after they've somehow managed to save up a 20% deposit in the first place. That's a crippling increase.

The good news is that we can turn this situation around. We can deal with the fundamental issues driving the home affordability crisis. Not just with rinky-dink schemes, but with sound long-term solutions.

That's what National's approach to home affordability is focused on, and we'll be rolling out more details over the next year.

To read and comment on my speech to the Contractors Federation, click here.

Coromandel and Hamilton visit

Last week I spent some time with National MP Sandra Goudie in the Coromandel. I visited Paeroa College and the Goldfields Special School, the Paeroa PPCS meatworks, and the Waihi Mine. The next day I was joined by David Bennett MP and we went to Rototuna Primary school, which is doing some very impressive work, and dropped in on the Hilda Ross Retirement Village and Waikato Hospital.

I also had the great pleasure of being interviewed by 12-year-olds Logan West and Mathew Bridle of Ngatea Primary School for their show on Pukeko Podcasting. You can listen to their interview here.

Rolling with the punches

While Labour's top ministers trawl through the inane details of my past, they're not doing their jobs. They're not governing the country. And if ever we needed Ministers focused on their responsibilities, it's now.

Our health system is falling apart. We have ballooning waiting lists, and patients being treated on trolleys in corridors because they can't get into a ward.

Our education system is churning out one in four teenagers without a qualification, while our teachers are on the verge of strike action.

We have gangs doing drug deals from prison, a State Services Commissioner who can't remember what he has been told, and a Recognised Seasonal Employer scheme that could choke our horticultural industry .

Every day that Labour's Ministers and their state-funded researchers spend building up dossiers on me is another day our country blunders on without direction.

Last Tuesday in the House, in the middle of a global credit crisis, Dr Cullen spent eight minutes in the Estimates Debate attacking me, and only two minutes talking about the economy.

That's eight minutes he should have spent addressing our high interest rates, failing finance companies, our over-stretched infrastructure, the more than 700 people who leave for Australia every week, and the massive over-taxation that prevents hard-working New Zealanders getting ahead under their own steam.

That's not good government by anyone's standards.

Watch and comment on my reply to Dr Cullen's speech here .

 

John Key MP
National Party Leader

Join the conversation: www.johnkey.co.nz


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#1 - Steve Hope 2007-08-24 18:13 - (Reply)

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#1.1 - Patrick Deady 2007-08-24 19:43 - (Reply)

Steve, Democracy died in New Zealand when the anti-smacking bill was railroaded into law. I'm surprised you weren't aware of that. Pat Deady Waikouaiti East Otago.

#2 - Andrew Atkin 2007-08-24 19:47 - (Reply)

Hello John Key, Like you have said - Labour is a desperate and dying government. They don't have much choice but to take 'desperate action' otherwise they can't possibly win in 2008 - I would expect more of this "anti-democratic" stuff, and probably worse. The reality is, as I see it, it's not really possible for them to do what needs to be done for the countries sake, because they have too many bad decisions that they have to admit to, to make things move forward. I think it is literally politically impossible for them to do what needs to be done. We urgenty need a change of government. National, unlike Labour, has the power to look at things freshly and take serious new action - and we really need that.

#3 - Pete Fowler 2007-08-24 20:31 - (Reply)

Dear Mr. Key, the Electoral Finance Bill will prevent NZ ending up like the US or its South American client states such as Guyana, where any crazy cult can do what they like. The Exclusives are against voting and the democratic process but they are not above buying votes. Nutty religious cults usually have plenty of money because their gullible followers often sign over all their wealth. America is not a democracy; elections there are a money contest. Do we really want to go there? Pete Fowler, Tuatapere, Southland. (03)2266-710.

#4 - Ross Calverley 2007-08-24 21:00 - (Reply)

Hi John, I'd guess that you just have to shrug off the accusations that the Labour ministers are making. It has been noticed by the public that they are spending more time attacking you than governing the country, but I personally think they don't have a sound idea left. Good luck with the ongoing attacks, the current ones dont have a solid fact in them. I hope you get the chance to implement your very good policy ideas. Ross Calverley

#5 - Doug McLean 2007-08-25 10:56 - (Reply)

If New Zealanders don't see through the labour members smear campaign this time then there is no hope for any of us. You stick to your guns John. We have needed someone who ignores this sort of muck raking; who gets on with the job; for years

#6 - Andrew 2007-08-25 12:08 - (Reply)

Hello, Another comment I thought I'd throw in: Health: I notice Tony Ryall shows National has a lot of interest in the development in Clinical Networks. This is something that I would have thought could be developed primarily by the government - a *totally* universal and standardised integrative system? The thing is, by my reasoning, the private sector can't realistically do this like the government can, because they just don't have the power or personal incentive to do so. The result, by my reasoning, may be unnecessary sub-system fragmentation, which would reduce 'macro' health-system efficiency. I like the idea of a privatised model underpinned by major national-standardisation, as I just suggested, with aggressively streamlined communication/documentation over the internet, using the internet as the main universal communication-base. This kind of streamlining should open up more room for automation (not constantly decoding and recoding information from incompatible systems) and surely reduce room for human error.

#7 - Mike Brown 2007-08-26 15:06 - (Reply)

With all the waffling that is going on in Parliament its about time something was done about this. I wonder how it would go down if a suggestion was made to CUT the number of members of Parliament down to say 66 good hard-working business men who would consider running Parliament as their own business and see how much waffling would be heard then!!!!!!!! Other than that at this stage I have no further comment except to say good for you Mr Keys keep up the good work and all the best for the next election

#7.1 - Dean Grooby 2007-08-27 12:24 - (Reply)

I agree with Mike, what happened to the basics of running this country, don't come down to Labors level, be the next leader NZ can be proud of and get back to the basics. This kiwi is sick of the crap.

#8 - Allen Savage 2007-08-29 15:07 - (Reply)

sir i don't judge a person on there past.about affording a home some help would be good for existing home owners on low incomes


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