Red Alert

Archive for the ‘Labour Party’ Category

Goff Profile

Posted by Grant Robertson on August 13th, 2011

goff620

Today the Herald did part one of a two part story on Phil Goff. Today’s is a biographical piece and some interesting photos. Well worth a read. Lots of stuff I didn’t know, and some great input from Phil’s Dad, pictured above. He is going on 90 and is a real character.

The article sums up the views of the 40 people spoken to for the article this way

We have talked to a range of people about Goff and common themes have emerged. People say he is honest and has integrity, that he is a loyal friend and a loving family man.

Next week the focus of the story is his political life.


Horror and sorrow

Posted by Clare Curran on July 23rd, 2011

It’s hard to know what to say about what’s happened in Norway.

At least 87 people killed. 80 at a Labour Party summer camp. Our thoughts are with the Norwegians. It’s a small, stable country much like ours.

Events are still unfolding.

That’s for the police and others to comment on. For now, the people of Norway need to know that we are shocked and horrified and standing with them in whatever way we can.

Norway is a peaceful nation. Phil Goff and Maryan Street have sent their condolences today.

Norway hosted and worked hard to negotiate the Oslo Accords in an attempt to resolve the ongoing Israel-Palestine conflict and made a huge effort in its work to find peace in war embattled Sri Lanka, Phil said.

It’s a country much like ours in many respects and we in the Labour Party have many personal contacts with Norwegian politicians, Maryan said.

I know we are all thinking about Norway today as they face the aftermath of this tragedy.


The Standard on tax policy

Posted by Trevor Mallard on July 7th, 2011

I’m in a weird position. I know what is in next week’s package. But I can’t confirm or deny either the big planks or the details.

But watching the debate is fascinating. R0b at the Standard has done summary of media views and has some opinions of his own.

Very tempted to use a classic Yes Minister quote but will resist and do an unusual thing and quote the whole post :-

Notice how a single announcement (not even officially made) from the opposition Labour Party has generated more interest, excitement and reaction than the last (Sub-Zero) budget? More excitement, in fact, than anything the National government has done in the last three wasted years?

The Herald editorial heaps praise on Goff for a policy that is says is courageous and “not only would a capital gains tax be hugely beneficial to the economy but the time for its introduction is right.”

Press gallery leader Guyon Espiner says “most New Zealanders do not have an investment property and if Labour can argue this properly they should be able to carry this argument”.

Fellow press gallery heavyweight John Armstrong reckons that “Goff goes for broke with huge gamble”. Got that right. But – what – you thought Labour was just going to sleepwalk to defeat? Hell no.

Poor John Key reckons that a capital gains tax will send NZ “screaming backwards”. He’s quite the expert on that I guess. In the same piece Key predicts that the CGT will raise only “$700 million a year, after 15 years”. Unfortunately for the PM the recent Tax Working Group report put the figure at more than $4 billion a year (the 2009 report from the Victoria University of Wellington Tax Working Group agrees). Perhaps Nice Mr Key should check his sums. Or even wait a week and see precisely what form Labour’s policy will take.

Danyl at DimPost nails it with characteristic economy – “National wants to finance the rebuilding of Christchurch via asset sales; Labour via a tax on property speculation”.

Everybody’s favourite Tory mouthpiece DPF was strangely muted in his criticism at Kiwiblog. Perhaps that’s because he recalls saying, just last year that “… I think the time is right to now take a serious look at capital gains tax”.

For a take out of left field, Rob Carr at Political Dumpground argues that even if the CGT causes a property market implosion, that might be a Good Thing.

John Hartevelt at Stuff reckons that that this is “Labour’s big policy play”. Key’s good buddy Duncan Garner reckons the CGT is a “bold and courageous move”. And so on, and so on.

Labour have started setting out a bold, fair and plausible policy framework for the election. No asset sales. A tax system for the many not the few. $15 minimum wage. Children at the centre of social policy. R&D tax credits. Keep ACC and Pharmac. GST off fresh food. Strengthen KiwiSaver and the Cullen fund. All good stuff!

And the Nats? A budget almost universally panned as lacking in vision, they are simply recycling meaningless promises from one budget to the next. And news yesterday that the government’s “new” $17 billion infrastructure plan in fact contains no new plans at all, just re-announcements of old ones (which were mostly Labour’s anyway).

In short, Labour has a plan, National has a record of three wasted years. Labour have taken hold of the political agenda. Now they have to keep it for the next 5 months.


pay back debt, don’t sell the SoEs, grow the economy, switch tax

Posted by Trevor Mallard on July 6th, 2011

Key’s reaction to the confirmation the Labour will announce a tax package next week has been almost incredible.

Pulls possible policies from the air. Makes up figures. Puts lines out for testing. Looks awful.

Captain panic pants clearly running the show.

There will be a choice between Labour’s bold plan to pay back debt, grow the economy and ease the burden on middle and low income earners and National’s scheme to sell our assets.


Poll warning Te Tai Tokerau

Posted by Trevor Mallard on June 13th, 2011

Poll warning again. Native Affairs poll has Hone and Kelvin within 1%.

Sample only 500, done by landline. Maori electorates notoriously difficult to poll.

It is clear that the race is close and the Maori Party is collapsing (actually nationally as well as up north).

But as Kelvin pointed out it is who gets more votes not who answers their phone that counts and therefore organisation will be vital.

Fairly soon the Maori Party will informally throw in the towel because they want Hone to lose more than they hate Labour winning.


Toe in the water

Posted by Darien Fenton on June 5th, 2011

Never thought I would find myself agreeing with Bill Ralston – or at least hardly ever, but his column in this week’s Listener, where he says that ‘most of what Human Resources departments do is ludicrous” caught my eye.

Ralston says that

HR people are the new corporate shamans, weaving their spells to improve business outputs to the detriment of any real humantity

He describes some  HR tools – psychometric testing for new employees, the setting of KPIs, the annual employee engagement survey, and most insultingly of all – the “exit interview” – even where a worker has been sacked.

I don’t want to denigrate HR people. It’s important to have competent and capable Employment Relations practitioners among firms and unions.

But the worst mistake HR people make is thinking that they are the voice for their employees.  They’re not and that’s where I think this whole fad has gone horribly wrong.

Someone I met recently observed that he had just attended a conference with 1200 employment lawyers and HR specialists. This intrigued me.

When I first started working as a rookie union organiser in the late 1980’s, disputes were negotiated between hands-on lay people. It would have been hard to find 120 employment law specialists and HR people, let alone the thousands that are out there today.

Ironically, the National Government’s Employment Contracts Act (ECA), which lasted a decade in the 1990’s, was designed to bring so-called freedom and individual choice to the workplace contributed to this.  It spawned a whole new growth industry.

It promoted individualism over collectivism and a “contractual relationship”; it was regulation-lite with words like “freedom” and “choice” prominent in the ideological language of the time (sound familiar?). What regulation there was shifted from collective to individual workplace relationships and a deliberate undermining of unions as representatives of working people.
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Young Labour at Labour Congress 2011

Posted by Trevor Mallard on May 23rd, 2011


Facebook – Live Chat with Phil Goff today

Posted by Trevor Mallard on May 23rd, 2011


Phil’s Conference Speech

Posted by Grant Robertson on May 23rd, 2011

I think this is the best speech I have seen Phil give at a conference. Confident, relaxed, but determined. Gave the delegates a real lift, and the reaction at the end was genuine and spontaneous. For those without broadband, you can find the text of the speech here.


More R&D to build a smart economy

Posted by David Shearer on May 23rd, 2011

Bringing in tax credits for R&D is the first part of Labour’s package to put NZ back on the path of growing the economy. Its key aim is to incentivise our exporting companies to invest more in new research, lift skills and build the clean, green and clever society.

National’s decision to axe the R&D tax credits in 2008 to pay for personal tax cuts, when the scheme was already in operation, was incredibly shortsighted. It highlighted Bill English as a bookeeper not a leader of the economy. But it ignored what is seen as international best practice. Only a handful of OECD countries don’t offer their private sector tax credits on R&D.

Ironically, Australia has lifted our tax credit policy brought in by the Labour Government and is currently passing through their Senate now.

Tax credits incentivise business to do more R&D. They boost our private sector R&D spend – currently languishing at about one-third of the OECD average. And, at 12.5%  if the full budgeted amount exempted tax is reached, the R&D spend by our companies will lift to more than $2 billion.

All the literature shows that increased R&D translates into greater productivity and lifts economic performance.

The grants and vouchers announced by Mapp last year – after a wait of two years after axing the tax credits – are effectively handouts from government. They lift government R&D spend slightly, but encourage business to put out their hand for a hand out.

And who gets a grant is decided by a Wellington bureaucrat not an entrepreneur. Only 40%  of those applying for grants were successful. Those who missed out are the innovative entrepreneurs with smart ideas and need that lift.

 It’s a first step to increase our productivity, but don’t underestimate the importance of pushing R&D.


Walking and Chewing Gum

Posted by Grant Robertson on May 10th, 2011

One of the great joys of being interested in politics is the debate over strategy and tactics.  Everyone has an opinion.   All parties, and people within parties have these debates.   Personally I don’t always agree with every tactical decision made by my own party, as I am sure that is the case for most politicians.

But one thing that fascinates me is when people decide that a party can only focus on one thing at a time.  Case in point.  In the last few days Labour has been raising issues to do with spending by National on the Diplomatic Protection Squad and on painting Premier House. The pretty simple idea here is to show a party that tells New Zealanders to tighten their belts, but is happily overspending, and has its priorities wrong.

Now I expect our political opponents to adopt some kind of diversionary response.  On these issues it has taken National a while to get something, but it has arrived, complete with NZ Herald editorial to back it up.  Labour is focusing on the small issues, they should be focused on the big policy issues.

Ok, that is a political response, but let’s not give it too much credit. Just because Labour is raising these issues does not mean that we are not raising other issues. I am sure it will not have escaped readers of Red Alert that we have a major campaign on stopping asset sales. The New Zealand Herald who are criticising Labour’s approach today attended the launch of the asset sales billboards put up by Labour last  weekend, but chose not to cover it.  So much for the focus on the big issues.

The truth is there has been more media coverage in last few days of the DPS and Premier House stories.  The media have run with them. In the meantime Phil has done a major speech on asset sales and cost of living to Grey Power, and other spokespeople have raised issues on broadband, savings, unemployment, water etc. They got some coverage too, but not as much. That is not our choice, it is the media’s.  Should we ignore the so-called small issues in the hope that this will somehow make the media cover the “big issues”?  We might be a long time waiting.

There is much to focus on in terms of the Budget, and we are, and will continue to do it, but it is possible to, in a political sense, walk and chew gum at the same time.


The terrible twos

Posted by Clare Curran on May 5th, 2011

2

Today Red Alert turns two.

It’s funny but we seem older. Not sure about wiser. But we are a credible and established force in the New Zealand political blogosphere.

Most Labour MPs blog . Most of us are active on facebook. Many of us are on Twitter. These are our real voices. We don’t always agree with each other, but we do share common values.

We’re focussed, we’re pretty tough and we have hearts. We also have ideas.

Most importantly we say what we think so we can talk to you; our readers, commenters, critics and supporters. Tell us what you’re thinking about us and don’t hold back (within reason).

What do you like about us, what do you want from us?

PS: And I promise the edit function on the comments is coming

Some facts:

  • 3,545 posts
  • 81,191 comments
  • Most posts: well who do you think? Trevor Mallard 1020
  • Next most posts: me on 519 (I’m a bit behind)
  • Newest poster: Annette King
  • Interesting new regular posts: Play of the Day, Tweet of the Week

PS: I forgot to thank my fellow moderators. Trevor, Grant and Chippie (Mr Hipkins). We work well together. We have occasional intense discussions, but we exercise our responsibility fairly and without prejudice (as long as you don’t cross the line). For those who disagree our moderation policy is here.


Website hits explode – thanks Whale

Posted by Trevor Mallard on May 4th, 2011

The new billboard generator site had over 100k page views in under 24 hours. Over 5k unique viewers. If you haven’t looked yet go here for fun.

The stats show the three top referral sources as unknown, Facebook and Whaleoil.

To contribute to this or the new exciting next stage click here.


Make your own Labour billboard

Posted by Trevor Mallard on May 2nd, 2011

As part of our online campaign to stop asset sales we’ve launched a site where you can make your own billboards.

There’s a competition component too – our favourite will be produced as a ‘real world’ billboard to run mid-month.

Here’s one from Geoff in Auckland:

bb-demo

Website is: makeyourownbillboard.co.nz


Farrar not on Labour payroll

Posted by Grant Robertson on April 22nd, 2011

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There are those on the far right who have a view that David Farrar is in fact in the words of one “a pinko”. Personally I have always felt that was undeserved. David has been actively involved in the National Party for decades, worked for various Nat leaders, managed the campaign of a National candidate in Wellington Central (ok, on that one looked like he was our plant) and so it goes on.

But his role in the furore over Labour’s Stop Asset Sales Campaign will fuel speculation again. The boost in interest in the campaign has been great. More people are wanting the signs, are asking about the issue, and voicing their disapproval of National’s plan to sell off the assets built up by past generations.

To be absolutely clear the signs are authorised and are able to be used for campaigning, taking into account all the relevant rules and avoiding anything that might confuse a reasonable person as to whether it was a traffic control device.

Will be sure to run the next campaign material past David.


Why Are We Labour?

Posted by Iain Lees-Galloway on April 16th, 2011

Like Trevor I’m enjoying the candidates conference in Wellington. The weather is a bit arse but hey, locked inside all day so no complaint.

Trevor mentioned the fact that half the conference have been members for less than ten years. Another interesting statistic cropped up: When asked how we came to join the party, we were given four options: Family; Friend(s); Union/Church; Epiphany.

All groups were fairly even but noticeably smallest was Union/Church. Guess we don’t always live up to the stereotype.


Candidates conference

Posted by Trevor Mallard on April 16th, 2011

At candidates and managers conference. Good day.

Over half the people here party members for less than ten years.

And at least half the caucus in December 2011 won’t have been in the caucus in October 2008.

Renewal.


Labour list

Posted by Grant Robertson on April 11th, 2011

Scott over at Imperator Fish has managed to sum up the criticism of the Labour list.

The release of the Labour Party list has been met with scorn and derision by political commentators, bloggers and newspaper editors. The full list of 70 was released over the weekend, but it has drawn an immediately negative response.

The first 30 on the list are:

Jesus Christ
Elizabeth I
Alexander the Great
Jane Austen
Albert Einstein
Mohandas Gandhi
Mohamed
Florence Nightingale
Marie Curie
Sir Edmund Hillary
Mother TeresaAbraham Lincoln
Aung San Suu Kyi
Sir Ernest Shackleton
Queen Victoria
Elizabeth Blackwell
Joan of Arc
Nelson Mandela
Jodie Foster
Pericles
Sir Winston Churchill
Rosa Parks
Amelia Earhart
Captain Chesley Sullenberger
Queen Elizabeth II
William Shakespeare
Alfred Hitchcock
Helen Mirren
Audrey Hepburn
Martin Luther King

Love it. Even better are the quotes ascribed to some almost familiar figures. Blogger “Campbell Slug” says

“seventy tired and useless losers”, while the New Zealand Herald editorial said the list was “unimaginative, uninspiring and elderly. There is no freshness in what Labour has to offer.”

Political commentator “Martin Hooterson ” compares the Labour list with National’s that includes Justin Beiber an Richard Nixon and says

Jesus Christ may be well-meaning, but his earnest do-good brand of socialism has no show when compared with the hard-nosed realism and business nous of Judas Iscariot

Honestly its just pure gold. I had an actual LOL moment at the mention of TVNZ Political Editor “Gary Escargot”. Thanks Scott, made my day.


Its bigger than all of us

Posted by Grant Robertson on April 10th, 2011

Labour’s list for the 2011 election has been finalised. It is a great mix of current MPs and new faces. Labour takes seriously its constitutional commitment to produce a list that gives representation to women, Maori, Pacific Island and ethnic minority groupings. A number of journalists have commented after recent Labour Party conferences that the attendees “look like” New Zealand, and that is what we try to do with the list.

There will be people who feel disappointed with their position on the list. That is inevitable in a competitive process such as this one, as it would be in any political party. When I look at the list there are people who may not make into Parliament who I very much would like to see in there.

But the point we all know is that the values of the Party, and the goals we have for New Zealand are bigger than any of us individually. I joined the Labour Party in the late 1990s because I saw a country that was becoming more and more unfair, where prosperity and opportunity were becoming the preserve of the privileged. In the Labour Party I saw a history of standing up for ordinary people, giving everyone a fair go at success, being independent on the world stage and a belief that the government did have a job to give all its citizens security, opportunity and above all hope.

Today with the current National government we see New Zealand again heading further down a path of unfairness, where the economy works not for ordinary Kiwis but for those who have the most and where people are falling through cracks in our social fabric. Labour has a great team, enduring values and modern policies (some announced, many more to come) that will make the difference to establishing a better, fairer more prosperous New Zealand.

I know that from time to time supporters can be frustrated or disappointed by things that are done or not done but to me supporting Labour is about the values and the ideas. Those things are bigger than any one person’s ambition or position. They are beyond the modern media driven politics of scandal and celebrity. They are beyond any poll or focus group. They are about what kind of country you want to live in, and you want your kids and grandkids to grow up in.

Forget the side-shows, forget the beat-ups. Remember the values, retain the hope.


An unfashionable media perspective

Posted by Trevor Mallard on March 30th, 2011

Simon Cunnliffe in today’s ODT has taken a look at Phil Goff’s response to the Hughes issue.

He starts :-

Pardon me for swimming against the tide, for presuming to contradict the commentariat’s bellowing consensus, but the whole Darren Hughes-Labour debacle, as it has been claimed to impact on the leadership of Phil Goff, is not quite as clear cut we would be led to believe.

And he concludes :-

Outside the beltway, Mr Goff might have received a better hearing had anyone heard what he had to say: he maintained he put the interests of “justice” and “fairness” before politics.

Insiders would say this is unconscionably naive.

Others, who are neither students of politics nor blooded on the mere whiff of scandal, might say: actually, that’s honourable.

Worth a read. Moderation will be tight.