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NZ POLITICS DAILY: Paula Bennett, super-star solo mother


Did she have things a little too good to fit National's narrative? PLUS: The Auckland waterfront strike - Twyford goes where Shearer fears to tread.

Bryce Edwards
Thu, 01 Mar 2012

Along with John Key’s ‘state house kid’ background, National has made much of Paula Bennett’s experience as a solo mum in the 80s and 90s.

While these experiences can be used to show that National hasn’t lost touch with the struggles of ordinary New Zealanders, it can sometimes be a liability – especially when they are seen to deny people the same advantages they received from the state.

Bennett has been forced to respond to claims she is a ‘bloody hypocrite’ by Mana Party leader Hone Harawira who pointed to a quote from Bennett in the Herald in 2008 relating how she had to give up part time work while on the DPB because she was ‘exhausted’ – see: Amelia Romanos’ Bennett rejects 'hypocrite' claims).

The obvious comparison is with the requirement announced on Monday that DPB recipients will be forced to seek part and full-time work. Bennett was also able to buy a house thanks to a cheap state loan, which are no longer available and, of course, was able to study while on the DPB thanks to the Training Incentive Allowance that she herself cut last term.

John Key is also being criticised for saying there are plenty of jobs available. Keith Ng looks at the figures in his blogpost 195,508 people can't be that lazy and concludes ‘If John Key has found all the jobs, 195,508 people would like to know’. See also Tova O’Brien’s Beneficiaries to Govt: Show us the jobs.
 
There are editorials today in the Press, Dominion Post and Herald that give cautious support to the welfare reforms. But they all conclude that their success really depends on the availability of jobs. Brian Rudman asks Is this policy or just punishment?
 
The rising cost of local body rates in recent years is attracting central government attention, as outlined in a comprehensive article by Jane Clifton: Tackling our rising rates. There seems to be consensus that the increases well above inflation are a problem but, as you might expect, the finger of blame is being pointed both ways – at local councils themselves and at the requirements forced on them by central government. Clifton’s article is supplemented by this week’s Listener editorial, Rethinking local government.
 
Eliminating the regional council layer of local government and further amalgamations look to be likely outcomes, something that former Waitakere mayor Bob Harvey enthusiastically endorses, particularly for Wellington – see: Super-city? Absolutely
 
The local authority under most pressure at the moment is, of course, Christchurch and John McCrone has a must-read backgrounder (see: Double acts in the city) on how the council became the dysfunctional organisation many residents see it as.
 
McCrone goes back over previous Mayoral-CEO partnerships and identifies the reforms made by ‘change manager’ Lesley McTurk as Chief Executive in 2003 when Parker’s predecessor Garry Moore was mayor. The result was a more hierarchical organisation with an exodus of experienced managers to be replaced by a smaller number of close-knit senior managers.
 
The number of councillors was halved and their involvement in council operations was severely restricted. This will all sound familiar because it closely follows the restructuring that many government departments had already been through. McTurk came to Christchurch from the health sector and currently heads up Housing New Zealand, which is in the process of cutting back community based offices. (McCrone has written another important article – CEO convinced city needs him). 
 
Of course it’s one thing to do it to others, but quite another to have it done to yourself, as Bob Parker is finding out in Christchurch. He expresses concern over the loss of control by the Council to the Government  – see Jarrod Booker’s State control of rebuild scary, says mayor
 
Andrew Geddis has an extensive and recommended blog post (see: On exactitude in democracy) on what will surely become the main issue of the MMP review: the 5% threshold and associated ‘electorate lifeline’. Geddis argues for abolishing the lifeline, and reducing the threshold to 2.5%. He cautions against reducing the threshold further, saying that one-person parties can complicate stable government formation and struggle to operate effectively in Parliament. 
 
The other electoral issue of great interest is the very low turnout at the last election, and today Martyn Bradbury makes the case for reforms, specifically increasing lowering the voting age, giving prisoners back the vote, making it easier for people to enroll and making election day more of a celebration of democracy – see: The Universal Suffrage Project 2014
 
Labour MP Phil Twyford dares to tread where his leader won’t go so far, by calling on Auckland Mayor Len Brown to take decisive action to resolve the Ports of Auckland dispute – see his Red Alert blog post, The mayor, the port, and the wharfies. Mfat scores an own-goal with revelations they are planning to spend nearly $1 million upgrading an indoor swimming pool for embassy staff in Tokyo – see: $1m for embassy pool, despite MFAT job cuts.
 
Other important articles today include Bryan Gould’s Austerity proven as wrong answer to recession, the Taranaki Daily News editorial An inconvenient truth: We need protesters, Tim Dare’s Why we need public healthcare, Mike Coleman’s Red-zoners stressed to breaking point, and the NZ Law Commission’s blog post, Who are the news media?.
 
Finally, Stuff reports on UMR research that shows ‘politically left-wing people outnumbered those to the firm right - 44 per cent and 35 per cent respectively with 18 per cent in the centre, but those on the right were more strongly associated with happiness’ – see: What makes Kiwis happy?
 
Bryce Edwards, NZPD Editor (bryce.edwards@nzpoliticsdaily.co.nz

Today’s content:
 
Welfare reform
Amelia Romanos (Herald): Bennett rejects 'hypocrite' claims
Keith Ng (Public Address): 195,508 people can't be that lazy
Kate Chapman and Danya Levy (Stuff): Key: Mums of one-year-olds better working
Press: Editorial - Benefit reform [Not currently online]
Eric Crampton (Offsetting behaviour): Welfare reform
David Farrar (Stuff): When should work testing apply?
Brian Rudman (Herald): Is this policy or just punishment?
 
Industrial disputes
Hana Garrett-Walker (Herald): Hundreds of meat workers locked out
Andrea Fox (Stuff): Lockout at Affco plants
Robert Winter (Idle Thoughts): The Affco Lock-out: management as bully
Nicholas Jones (Herald): Union condemns ads for Aussie stevedores
Phil Twyford (Red Alert): The mayor, the port, and the wharfies
Robert Winter (Idle Thoughts): Peter Cullen on the Ports
 
Local government
John McCrone (Press): Double acts in the city
John McCrone (Press): CEO convinced city needs him
Bryce Edwards (liberation): The revival of local government politics
Jane Clifton (Listener): Tackling our rising rates
Bob Harvey (Dom Post): Super-city? Absolutely
Gordon Brown (Taranaki Daily News): The 'palace' is turning us into paupers
Tim Shadbolt (Southland Times): We have done quite well
Tim Shadbolt (Southland Times): Ironies will arise when Govt launches attack on councils [Not currently online]
 
Parliament
Morgan Godfery (Maui Street): Shearer reaches out to Mana
Andrew Geddis (Pundit): On exactitude in democracy
 
MFAT
Paul G. Buchanan (Herald): NZ's dilemma of trade and security
 
Labour market
Danyl Mclauchlan (Dim Post): It’s the labour market, stupid
 
Media
NZ Law Commission (Public Address): Who are the news media?
Morgan Godfery (Maui Street): Funding cuts for Maori TV....
 
Other
Tim Dare (Herald): Why we need public healthcare
Cameron Slater (Whaleoil): Maryan should ask Cunners
Ele Luddman (Home paddock): More late referrals from Electoral Commission
Martyn Bradbury (Tumeke): The Universal Suffrage Project 2014
James Weir (Stuff): The facts behind Arctic drilling
Denis Welch (Opposable thumb): Much unobliged, thanks
Kate Wilkinson (Herald): New bill cuts red tape for safe food
Lyn Humphreys (Stuff): Sex abuse case spurs call for change
Fran O’Sullivan (Herald): A jail term won’t help those who lost all
Dianne Bardsley (Dom Post): New Zealand politics and life infused with tea terms [Not currently online]
Ian Anderson and Rosie Jimson-Healey (Dom Post): Underlying attitude mocks transgender people

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Bryce Edwards
Thu, 01 Mar 2012
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NZ POLITICS DAILY: Paula Bennett, super-star solo mother
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