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14 July 2011
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Volume 674, Week 79 - Thursday, 14 July 2011

[Sitting date: 14 July 2011. Volume:674;Page:20107. Text is incorporated into the Bound Volume.]

Thursday, 14 July 2011

Mr Speaker took the Chair at 2 p.m.

Prayers.

By-Election

Te Tai Tokerau

Mr SPEAKER: I have been advised by the Electoral Commissioner that, pursuant to section 185 of the Electoral Act 1993, the name of the member elected to the House of Representatives for the Te Tai Tokerau electoral district is Hone Pani Tamati Waka Nene Harawira.

Members Sworn

Mr SPEAKER: I understand that Hone Harawira is present and wishes to affirm. Would he please come forward to the chair on my right.

HONE HARAWIRA (Leader—Mana) : Ko ahau ko Hone Pani Tamati Waka Nene Harawira, ka ōati kia piripono me te tino āmene atu ki te Tiriti o Waitangi; kia pono, kia aro nui aku mahi kia ahu whakamua ai ngā tika o ngā iwi o Te Tai Tokerau; kia whakapaua e ahau aku kaha—

[I, Hone Pani Tamati Waka Nene Harawira, swear to be loyal to the Treaty of Waitangi and to concur with it; that my work be valid and highly focused on advancing the rights of the Northland tribes; that I expend my efforts—]

Mr SPEAKER: That is not the affirmation required by law. Hone Harawira will now leave the Chamber, and return to this Chamber on a sitting day when he is prepared to make his affirmation according to the law of this land. Hone Harawira will now leave the Chamber. [Interruption] The member will now leave the Chamber.

  • Hone Harawira withdrew from the Chamber.

Hon TREVOR MALLARD (Labour—Hutt South) : I raise a point of order, Mr Speaker.

Mr SPEAKER: I ask visitors, please, to respect this Parliament. I ask visitors, please, to respect this House.

Hon BILL ENGLISH (Deputy Prime Minister) : I raise a point of order, Mr Speaker. Sorry—does Trevor Mallard want to complete his point of order?

Hon TREVOR MALLARD: My point of order was to seek the leave of the House in order for Hone Harawira to make another attempt at taking the oath of the House, so that he could represent his people. It appears that that is not universally supported.

Mr SPEAKER: Does the Hon Bill English wish to speak?

Hon BILL ENGLISH (Deputy Prime Minister) : Just speaking to the point of order, the Chamber has the right to control its proceedings. You, Mr Speaker, are our representative. Changes in the proceedings are generally accepted by the Chamber when permission is granted, and I think it is important the Chamber support you in asserting your authority. If people choose to disregard your authority, then they lose the privilege of coming into this Chamber, which is representative of the people of New Zealand—a privilege not to be taken lightly.

Mr SPEAKER: I thank honourable members for their constructive points of order. Members, so that you are aware, what has taken place is Hone Harawira was advised prior to his taking the affirmation that the law of New Zealand, of this country, required the affirmation to be taken in a certain way. Our Standing Order 12(e) makes it clear that members must “take the oath or make the affirmation required by law”. The Oaths and Declarations Act of 1957 provides for the making of an affirmation in te reo Māori in a form set out in the regulations made pursuant to section 30A—the Oaths and Declarations (Māori Language) Regulations of 2004. So, members, I want you to be aware that, as Speaker, I did not make this decision lightly. There has been a tendency in recent times to abuse our law. It is not just a custom in this House; it is the law of this country. Hone Harawira was advised of the need to comply with the law. He chose not to.

CATHERINE DELAHUNTY (Green) : I raise a point of order, Mr Speaker. When I made my affirmation, I was asked to repeat it—I was given that opportunity—because I also had mentioned Te Tiriti o Waitangi. I am not sure why that was not allowed in this case.

Mr SPEAKER: The member raises a perfectly reasonable point of order. The practice that the member herself admits to doing is actually breaking the law. For members to set that kind of example in this place is unacceptable. We must all remember that we, as members, are not above the law. Had I not made it clear to Hone Harawira prior to his seeking to make his affirmation, I would not have taken this course of action. But the law was made very clear to Hone Harawira. He is welcome to come back, on the next sitting day of the House, when he is prepared to make his affirmation in accordance with the law.

Hon PETER DUNNE (Leader—United Future) : I raise a point of order, Mr Speaker. It is in relation to this afternoon’s events. I suspect that the relevant Standing Order is Standing Order 80(1): “The Speaker maintains order and decorum in the House.” During the events that have just occurred, you attempted on two occasions to control what was going on in the gallery. That interruption continued, and your interventions were ignored. I want to know what redress you now have, on behalf of the House, to ensure that this sort of activity does not continue. The reason I raise the point is that, in effect, what has occurred has been a defiance of your authority as Speaker, and a defiance, therefore, of the privileges of this Chamber. I do not think it is a good sign to allow that to go unremarked upon.

Hon TREVOR MALLARD (Labour—Hutt South) : If it is all right, I will make the comment that I was going to make otherwise, and that was that I did attempt to take the call in order to seek leave, in fact, for Mr Harawira to take the affirmation again now. That, of course, was interrupted, and in the circumstances I will not proceed with it today. I think it is also fair to say that I have more experience than any other member in what happens to people who interrupt the proceedings of Parliament from the gallery. I served time in Wellington Central Police Station, and spent time in the then Magistrate’s Court, I think, and the High Court of New Zealand, as a result of it. I do want to reinforce—on that particular occasion it was a matter of principle, as far as I was concerned—that the Speaker’s right to make instructions asking people not to interrupt the House is one that is clear in both the rules of this Parliament and the law of the land.

Dr RUSSEL NORMAN (Co-Leader—Green) : I seek leave for Mr Hone Harawira to be given another opportunity now to take the affirmation.

Mr SPEAKER: Leave is sought for that course of action. Is there any objection? There is objection.

I appreciate the point made by the Hon Peter Dunne. I appreciate it very much, because it is a very serious matter when members of the public disobey the orders of the Speaker in this place. The Speaker must be obeyed in this place. I regretted very much interrupting a waiata. A waiata is such a fundamental part of the culture of this country, and I regretted very much having to seek to interrupt a waiata, but, in the circumstances, abuse of the law of this country cannot be celebrated, either. That is why I sought to interrupt the waiata. Had the affirmation been taken correctly, I would not have interrupted that waiata, because it is also very much a core part of our country that I respect very much. I would just ask those who remain in the gallery now please to understand the importance of respecting the rules of this place. I know that it has been suggested that I should, but I will not ask for the visitors gallery on my right to be cleared, because I feel very bad that I did interrupt a waiata. But I just ask visitors please to respect the rules of this place. They are very important for the freedom of all New Zealanders.

Business Statement

Hon TONY RYALL (Minister of Health) on behalf of the Acting Leader of the House: When the House resumes on Tuesday, 2 August the Government intends to make further progress on the Misuse of Drugs Amendment Bill and on the Committee stage of the Appropriation (2011/12 Estimates) Bill, otherwise known as the estimates debate, which is an 8-hour debate.

Hon TREVOR MALLARD (Labour—Hutt South) : I am just checking with, I think, the acting Acting Leader of the House whether there are any plans for urgency in that first week back.

Hon TONY RYALL (Minister of Health): It is not the Government’s intention to take urgency in the next sitting week.

Questions to Ministers

Economy—Reports

1. SIMON BRIDGES (National—Tauranga) to the Minister of Finance: What reports has he received on the economy?

Hon BILL ENGLISH (Minister of Finance) : More good news: Statistics New Zealand confirmed today that the economy grew by 0.8 percent in the March 2011 quarter. This means that the economy has now grown in seven of the last eight quarters. GDP growth has been 1.5 percent in the year to 31 March, despite the devastating Canterbury earthquake. It is a tribute to the resilience of New Zealanders that through that difficult period they have nevertheless moved to increase the wealth of this country. Today’s figures show that the recovery is under way, and the pace of growth is picking up.

Simon Bridges: What factors drove today’s GDP figures?

Hon BILL ENGLISH: Quite surprisingly, manufacturing was up by 3.6 percent in the March quarter—the biggest single contributor. I have to say that this is very encouraging in a job-rich part of the economy that took a hammering under the previous Labour Government’s big-taxing, big-spending policies.

Simon Bridges: How is the Government’s economic programme supporting growth?

Hon BILL ENGLISH: The Government is backing aspirational and enterprising Kiwis in every possible way it can. The Government is getting its own house in order with a programme that gets us back to surplus, and it brought in a range of policies that rebalances the economy from the excessive consumption and property speculation under the previous Government to a focus on savings, investment, exports, and growth over the next 4 or 5 years.

Simon Bridges: What kinds of policies could put that positive growth outlook at risk?

Hon BILL ENGLISH: We know what kinds of policies put it at risk, because they are the policies that did so much damage to our economy in the last 10 years: increasing spending, increasing taxes, bad regulation, anti-enterprise, and growing government instead of growing the economy.

Cost of Living—Reports

2. Hon ANNETTE KING (Deputy Leader—Labour) to the Minister of Finance: What recent reports has he received on the cost of living?

Hon BILL ENGLISH (Minister of Finance) : I have seen a report showing that the true test for the cost of living is the rate at which wages, benefits, and superannuation are rising compared with prices. We do not know the situation of every New Zealander and their family, because everyone’s circumstances are different. However, the facts are that the main benefits increase each year by the same rate as prices. New Zealand superannuation has to increase each year by at least the same rate as prices, and over the last 3 years it has increased significantly faster than the cost of living. The after-tax average wage has increased 7.1 percent over the last year compared with inflation of 4.5 percent. So although many New Zealand families feel they are under pressure with rising prices, the outlook for them is reasonably positive.

Hon Annette King: In light of reports that prices are going up rapidly, what immediate relief is the Government providing for the rising costs of basic necessities—power, rent, phone, food—which have gone up, while according to Major Pam Waugh from the Salvation Army, who was speaking on the radio this morning, a lot of people’s incomes have stayed the same or reduced?

Hon BILL ENGLISH: The Government will continue to focus on protecting the vulnerable, particularly through the difficult times we have had, and on policies that will raise incomes. I agree with the major: I think the main pressure on families is that they have had relatively low income growth through the recessionary period. The fact has become clear today that the economy is beginning to grow and develop some momentum, and that gives hope that if we stick to the policies we have, people can expect to see higher incomes in the near future.

Hon Annette King: In light of the Minister’s answer about low income growth, is the Government now prepared to increase the minimum wage to $15 an hour?

Hon BILL ENGLISH: The National Government has increased the minimum wage in each of the last 2 years since it has been the Government. At the current rate of increase it will not be too long before the minimum wage is $15.

Hon Annette King: Why did the Government say on television last night that relief was being provided to hard-pressed New Zealanders because the average income earner is getting back around $3 a week in accident compensation levy reductions, when the reductions will not apply until April next year—9 months away? Relief is needed now.

Hon BILL ENGLISH: One of the reasons ordinary families have been under pressure is that the last Labour Government did such a shocking job of managing the accident compensation scheme that levies had to be put up. Many families will be looking forward to the $600 million reduction in accident compensation levies, from which they will all benefit.

Hon Annette King: Does he recall National in Opposition demanding that the then Labour Government do something to reduce petrol prices; if so, can he tell the House what National, now in Government, will do to reduce petrol prices now they have reached their highest level ever?

Hon BILL ENGLISH: The National Government did do something about high petrol prices: we halved the impact of the emissions trading system. I understand that Labour is promising to double that impact again, plus some. The decrease in accident compensation levies will also benefit people who are buying petrol. We are taking action to reduce the cost of living after 10 years when it grew relentlessly under the Labour Government.

Hon Annette King: Did he read the report in the Dominion Post today about a middle-income earner who said her weekly food bill is estimated to have increased by $100—that is, to buy the same food she was buying a year ago—and that this has definitely affected her family; if so, is the only response from National at this time that accident compensation levies will be reduced at some time in the future?

Hon BILL ENGLISH: No. I did see the story, and I admire the mother for the careful and focused way in which she is contributing to the community in bringing up those children. We really want to support her. In addition to the reduction in accident compensation levies, we have maintained interest rates at the lowest level in 45 years. That family has enjoyed the benefit of tax cuts, and we have put together economic policies that give her now some hope that she can look forward to a higher income over the next 3 or 4 years.

Rahui Katene: Is the Minister aware that in a recent Otago University study into food insecurity involving a survey of 19,000 people researchers found that people who are food insecure had a significant—90 percent—increase in risk of higher levels of distress; if so, in light of rising household and fuel costs, when will he implement positive policies that enhance food security for thousands of at-risk households, such as Māori Party policies to eliminate GST from healthy foods and to increase funding for Māra Kai?

Hon BILL ENGLISH: The Māori Party, in discussions with the Government, offers a range of fairly constructive suggestions about how to achieve the ends we all want to achieve, which is to protect the most vulnerable through tough times. As the economy lifts, the country will have more choices about how to spread the benefits of growth, but our immediate priority is to achieve a growing economy so that we have some of those choices. In countries where the Government’s books are not under control and debt is out of control, everyone is suffering from large income cuts.

Hon Annette King: In light of the reports from social agencies on hardship facing New Zealanders, will he now believe social agencies that are providing food parcels at record numbers when they say that many low-income New Zealanders cannot cope with the rising cost of living, which forces them to cut back on the food they eat or to seek handouts to be able to feed their families?

Hon BILL ENGLISH: We work closely with social agencies all the time. They have worked with the Government very constructively over, for instance, the Community Response Fund, in which we allocated tens of millions of dollars of extra funding in order to help those agencies with the growing demand caused by the recession. What they want and what we want, though, is to look forward to the opportunity for rising incomes for those families. Taxing more and spending more will not deliver to those families higher incomes.

Capital Gains Tax—Annual Revenue for Next 5 Years

3. Hon JOHN BOSCAWEN (Leader—ACT) to the Minister of Finance: How much money would a capital gains tax raise in each year for the next five years?

Hon BILL ENGLISH (Minister of Finance) : A capital gains tax will not raise money for each of the next 5 years, because, given its complexity, it probably cannot start until 1 April 2014. Based on Treasury’s modelling, a 15 percent capital gains tax that does not apply to existing assets would raise about $1.3 billion in total over 5 financial years. If the policy is applied to assets people already own, it might raise about $2.3 billion in total over 5 financial years—that is, by 2019.

Hon John Boscawen: How does the revenue from a capital gains tax compare with the cost of spending promises that have been bandied about, such as making the first $5,000 of income tax-free, removing GST from fresh fruit and vegetables, and restoring the research and development tax credit?

Hon Trevor Mallard: I raise a point of order, Mr Speaker. How does one hypothetical thing compare with something for which the Minister has no responsibility? It cannot possibly be a valid question.

Mr SPEAKER: I was thinking along very similar lines. The only thing that stopped me from interrupting the member is that he did not attribute policies to any particular party, and as long as the Minister, when answering, does not attribute policies to any other party, I am prepared to let it go. The Minister has heard what I have said, that he is not responsible for any other party’s policies, but he can comment on hypothetical situations regarding policies as long as he does attribute them to another political party.

Hon BILL ENGLISH: I understand that a $5,000 tax-free threshold would cost about $1.3 billion a year, and that is just one of the policies the member listed. But if we stick just to that one, a 15 percent capital gains tax would cover the cost of that particular policy by 2024. In the 12 years up until then the capital gains tax would not cover the cost of just that policy, let alone the others.

Hon Trevor Mallard: Does he stand by this statement: “The right thing to do would be to have a comprehensive capital gains tax.”, which was said by him this week?

Hon BILL ENGLISH: I was referring to the fact that any number of people who are putting forward a theoretically ideal tax position advocate a comprehensive capital gains tax. No one in New Zealand—not even Labour—has indicated that that is what they are going to do. In any case more taxing and more spending will grow the Government, but it will be bad for the economy.

Hon John Boscawen: Does he agree that the real problem is politicians promising to spend money they do not have, and inventing new taxes to pay for their promises?

Hon BILL ENGLISH: That might be a problem. I think the real issues for the economy are to get our people and our capital into productive investment, and the Government has over the last three Budgets taken some very big strides to improve the prospect that New Zealanders can have higher incomes. We have done that by controlling spending and reducing taxes, because increasing spending and increasing taxes got us into this trouble in the first place.

Hon Trevor Mallard: When the Minister said: “The right thing to do would be to have a comprehensive capital gains tax.”, did he mean that he thinks that that tax should include taxing the family home?

Hon BILL ENGLISH: No. The member is up to his usual tricks. Labour members have quoted the IMF, the OECD, and Treasury, and when those organisations advocate a capital gains tax they mean a comprehensive capital gains tax on all assets. I understand that no one in New Zealand is advocating actually doing that.

State-owned Assets, Sales—Ownership of Shares

Hon CLAYTON COSGROVE (Labour—Waimakariri) : My question is to the Prime Minister—

Mr SPEAKER: I say to the member’s own front-bench colleagues that I want to hear the Hon Clayton Cosgrove.

4. Hon CLAYTON COSGROVE (Labour—Waimakariri) to the Prime Minister: Further to his answer to Oral Question No 10 yesterday, what evidence does he have for disagreeing with Treasury’s finding that “significant participation by foreign investors will be essential to achieve the Government’s overall objectives” if the Government’s privatisation plan goes ahead?

Hon BILL ENGLISH (Deputy Prime Minister) on behalf of the Prime Minister: The evidence is the Government’s policy position, as has been clearly outlined—that is, that the Government will retain 51 percent ownership, and Kiwi mums and dads will be at the front of the queue. That member will know that often the Government does not take Treasury advice, and in this case we have not taken Treasury advice, because it has different objectives from those of the National Government.

Hon Clayton Cosgrove: What evidence does he have that so-called Kiwi mums and dads will be able to afford to buy shares in energy companies and Air New Zealand, not including shares purchased indirectly through the likes of KiwiSaver, ACC, and other entities?

Hon BILL ENGLISH: There is accumulating evidence for that. The fact is that Kiwis are saving more than they have for 20 years, so, clearly, they have decided they can save money. They are looking for something reasonable in which to invest those savings. The other piece of evidence is that the economy is growing surprisingly fast, and Kiwis have a better opportunity now than they once thought to look forward to higher incomes, which will give them the opportunity to boost their savings and invest where it will earn them a satisfactory return.

Hon Clayton Cosgrove: Can he provide the House with an estimate of the proportion of New Zealanders who will own shares in our energy companies should his planned privatisation go ahead?

Hon BILL ENGLISH: As the Government moves to the mixed-ownership model that is modelled on the Air New Zealand one, which was set up by the previous Labour Government, we expect that the same Kiwi mums and dads who currently own shares in Air New Zealand, as permitted by the previous Labour Government, might also like to own shares in a Government-owned energy company.

Chris Tremain: What indications has he seen that New Zealand investors are keen to participate in a mixed-ownership model?

Hon BILL ENGLISH: As we discussed in the House yesterday, there has been an indication from recent Grey Power meetings that the Prime Minister has attended, where people who lost $8.5 billion in finance company crashes—which the Opposition does not seem to care about—are showing real interest in being able to invest their savings in shares that will give them a reasonable return. Many New Zealanders will have a good opportunity, because interest rates are at a 45-year low, they have just had the benefit of lower taxes, and their savings rates are the highest in 20 years. That means an unprecedented level of interest from New Zealanders in investment.

Hon Clayton Cosgrove: Given that Treasury has said that the “NZX is already heavy in energy stocks”, what evidence does he have that the State-owned energy companies will be an attractive proposition for Kiwi mums and dads, given that weighting?

Hon BILL ENGLISH: Well, they will be an attractive proposition, because they will be 51 percent owned by the Government. Kiwis will be at the front of the queue with the best opportunity to buy these shares should it go ahead. The Government will be able to pay dividends to good, honest New Zealand mums and dads, rather than follow the Labour policy, which is to pay large interest bills to foreigners.

Hon Clayton Cosgrove: How can he be so confident of widespread New Zealand ownership when a spokesperson for his Minister of Finance said yesterday that work on maximising Kiwi ownership of State-owned enterprises is still at an early stage, and will he halt the sale of State-owned assets if he is not certain of, and cannot confirm, widespread Kiwi ownership?

Hon BILL ENGLISH: The Opposition cannot have it both ways. On one day those members criticise the Government for going too fast on mixed-ownership models—

Hon Clayton Cosgrove: I raise a point of order, Mr Speaker. The issue is self-evident. I ask the Minister to address the question.

Mr SPEAKER: A point of order has been raised, and members should not add their contributions just from the sidelines. It is never helpful to start answering a question by climbing into the questioner, unless the question is absolutely highly provocative. I am not sure I would put that question in that particular category. I invite the Hon Clayton Cosgrove to repeat his question, because it is not a good approach to start answering a question by talking about problems with another political party.

Hon Clayton Cosgrove: How can he be so confident of widespread New Zealand ownership, when a spokesperson for his Minister of Finance said yesterday that work on maximising Kiwi ownership of State-owned enterprises is still at an early stage, and will he halt the sale of State assets if he is not certain of widespread Kiwi ownership?

Hon BILL ENGLISH: We are confident because New Zealanders have put behind them a wasted decade of debt and property speculation. They are now looking forward to higher savings, bigger exports, a more productive economy, and good income growth. We believe that that is an environment where they will view this kind of investment opportunity positively.

Energy Companies, Greenhouse Gas Emissions—Lignite

5. Dr KENNEDY GRAHAM (Green) to the Acting Minister of Energy and Resources: Does she agree with the Prime Minister, who said “companies like Solid Energy are growth companies and we want them to expand in areas like lignite conversion”?

Hon Dr NICK SMITH (Minister for the Environment) on behalf of the Acting Minister of Energy and Resources: Yes, but also she agrees with the statement by the Prime Minister that Solid Energy would need to comply with the environmental controls of both the Resource Management Act and the Climate Change Response Act.

Dr Kennedy Graham: So when Ministers Smith and Carter expect the Advisory Group on Green Growth to advise how we can transition to a low-carbon economy, does she regard Solid Energy’s estimated annual carbon emissions of 10 million to 20 million tonnes from the lignite project—on top of our current 70 million tonnes—to be an opportunity or a threat to such a transition?

Hon Dr NICK SMITH: The first thing is that the Solid Energy proposal is for quite a small briquette plant. If we put that briquette plant into context, we see that over the last year, 14,000 megawatts of new renewable energy capacity has been consented. The briquette plant in energy terms is about one-thirtieth of that.

Dr Kennedy Graham: Is the Acting Minister aware of her mistake during question time on 18 May, when she said that coalmining was not eligible for free emissions trading scheme credits, and does she now recognise that downstream processing of lignite into other products is eligible, so extracting coal would be indirectly subsidised by free credits?

Hon Dr NICK SMITH: The Climate Change Response Act provides for an allocation for particular industries that are competitiveness-exposed. I in my role as the Minister for the Environment—not the Acting Minister—would have to make a decision as to whether those tests would be met. There is currently no application, so it is quite premature to be speculating on whether they would be eligible.

Dr Kennedy Graham: How does the Acting Minister reconcile the statement made by Minister English that the Government would look favourably at helping fund Solid Energy’s multimillion-dollar lignite projects in Southland as long as they were commercially and environmentally robust, with the statement made by Minister Smith that “the world spends hundreds of billions of dollars a year subsidising fossil fuels and pollution. If we are serious about addressing climate change in the most efficient way, we need to be discussing a phase out of such support.”?

Hon Dr NICK SMITH: The member takes the Minister of Finance’s comments quite out of context. They were not in the form of any subsidy for Solid Energy but, rather, to people’s making a choice to invest in that company. In terms of the broader question of New Zealand’s “clean, green” brand and the use of lignite, I draw to the attention of the House that New Zealand’s use of lignite per capita is less than one-fiftieth of Australia’s, less than one thirty-sixth of Germany’s, and less than one-sixteenth of Canada’s—that is, New Zealand’s use of lignite resource is very small, even on a per capita basis.

Dr Kennedy Graham: Even if it is one-fiftieth per capita of Australia’s, to which of the following national interests, none the less, does she think the 3 billion or so cubic metres of overburden—which the lignite project will bequeath to Southland scenery above ground—will contribute the most: our tourist industry, our agricultural land, our “clean, green” brand export leverage, or our UN reputation as a fast follower?

Hon Dr NICK SMITH: The briquette plant that is being proposed in Southland for the use of lignite is a substantially more efficient way of using that lignite resource than what is currently taking place, where generally the lignite is being quite inefficiently burnt in a number of industrial establishments. I think where the Government differs from the Green Party is that the Green Party takes a view that New Zealand has to be purer than pure, and that we will not take any advantage of New Zealand’s energy resources. It would simply much rather import over 5 billion litres a year of fossil fuels from offshore than use some of our own resources.

Dr Kennedy Graham: Will the Acting Minister ascertain from the Minister for Economic Development whether the Ministry of Economic Development is, as reported, an associate member of the Coal Association, and if it is, whether the Ministry of Economic Development will either withdraw or join the Wind Energy Association, the Solar Industries Association, the Aotearoa Wave and Tidal Association, and the Bioenergy Association?

Hon Dr NICK SMITH: I am not sure it is the responsibility of the Government which energy associations particular people or organisations are members of. I think we are a society that values freedom of association and values people being members of the organisations that they choose.

Dr Kennedy Graham: I raise a point of order, Mr Speaker. The question related to the associate membership not of individuals or organisations, but of a Government department.

Mr SPEAKER: I invite the member to repeat his question.

Dr Kennedy Graham: Will the Acting Minister ascertain from the Minister for Economic Development, who is responsible for the ministry, whether the Ministry of Economic Development is, as reported, an associate member of the Coal Association, and if it is, whether his ministry—the Ministry of Economic Development—will either withdraw or join the Wind Energy Association, the Solar Industries Association, the Aotearoa Wave and Tidal Association, and the Bioenergy Association?

Hon Dr NICK SMITH: Speaking as one who is standing in for the Acting Minister, I am sure that she would be happy to have a discussion with the Minister for Economic Development, but I really emphasise that organisations should be free to associate with those they choose.

Dr Kennedy Graham: Given that the Ministry of Economic Development is paying the Coal Association to lobby the Ministry for the Environment on the emissions trading scheme, should the Ministry for the Environment, in balancing economic opportunity with environmental responsibility, pay the Wind Energy Association and Bioenergy Association to lobby the Ministry of Economic Development?

Hon Dr NICK SMITH: I ask the member to note that the Government funds quite extensively the Energy Efficiency and Conservation Authority, and it has views on such issues. There is a wide range of views. Wearing my other hat, as Minister responsible for the Climate Change Response Act and also climate policy, I have had absolutely no lobbying from the Coal Association in the last 12 months about any aspect of climate change policy.

Dr Kennedy Graham: I seek leave to table a document pertaining to an exchange of correspondence between the Parliamentary Commissioner for the Environment and the Acting Minister on the issue of emissions trading scheme credits and coalmining, which makes it clear that downstream indirect what we would call subsidising can take place.

Mr SPEAKER: Leave is sought to table those documents. Is there any objection? There is no objection.

  • Documents, by leave, laid on the Table of the House.

Trans-Pacific Partnership Negotiations—Pharmac

6. Hon MARYAN STREET (Labour) to the Minister of Trade: What parts or functions of Pharmac does he consider to be tradable in the Trans-Pacific Partnership negotiations?

Hon PETER DUNNE (Minister of Revenue) on behalf of the Minister of Trade: I note that in a recent speech the Minister of Trade said explicitly that we are not about to negotiate our public health system in any trade negotiation. The fundamentals of Pharmac are not up for negotiation in the Trans-Pacific Partnership.

Hon Maryan Street: How does he intend to protect the interests of sick New Zealanders against the demands of pharmaceutical companies in the Trans-Pacific Partnership negotiations?

Hon PETER DUNNE: The Government’s position is quite clear: the fundamentals are not up for negotiation. The Government accepts that the role of Pharmac has been a constructive one—I think there is bipartisan agreement about that—and we are not seeking any changes to the Pharmac model in these negotiations or in any other discussions.

Hon Maryan Street: In light of that answer, what risks are currently presented to Pharmac and its structures and functions by the Trans-Pacific Partnership negotiations?

Hon PETER DUNNE: I am not in a position to give the member a categorical answer on that because I am answering on behalf of the Minister, but the point is that the New Zealand Government’s position is that it is not about to enter into any diminution of the fundamentals of the Pharmac model—

Hon Members: Take it off the table.

Hon PETER DUNNE: —in any discussions that are taking place. If I can respond to the interjection, there is a negotiating process under way. The negotiators actually carry out the negotiation; one does not put things on or off the table before the process even starts.

Mr SPEAKER: The Hon Maryan Street. [Interruption] I want to hear the Hon Maryan Street.

Hon Maryan Street: Does he consider the concessions that Australia made in the Australia - United States Free Trade Agreement to allow representatives of the pharmaceutical industry more say over domestic decisions and processes to be an acceptable trade-off in the case of Pharmac?

Hon PETER DUNNE: What I said was that the Government’s position is that the fundamental aspects of the Pharmac model are not up for negotiation. I think that is the best answer to the member’s question.

Hon Maryan Street: How can New Zealanders believe his statement on 3 July that “the public health system is not up for negotiation” if he is not prepared to take Pharmac off the negotiating table?

Hon PETER DUNNE: As I said, there is a negotiating process under way, the Minister is an extremely experienced negotiator, and he has been through this on many, many occasions. The best way of doing these things is to actually let the negotiations take their course, bearing in mind the Government’s fundamental position that Pharmac is not up for trade.

Crime, Organised—Police Operations Targeting Drugs

7. PAUL QUINN (National) to the Minister of Police: What reports has she received of efforts by the Police to combat organised crime and drug dealing?

Hon JUDITH COLLINS (Minister of Police) : I am very pleased to report to the House that the police have successfully executed another major operation that targeted organised criminals and the drug trade. As a result of a year-long operation called Operation Hunter, 25 people are facing more than 180 charges for drug dealing and related criminal activity in the lower North Island. Police have also recovered $130,000 worth of cash, and six vehicles that are together valued at around $150,000. A separate multi-agency operation in the Western Bay of Plenty has also netted 25 arrests for drug and firearms offences and stolen property. Disrupting the trade in misery and drugs is a big priority for this Government, and I commend the police for demonstrating that crime does not pay.

Paul Quinn: What updates has she received on the value of criminal assets that have been confiscated by the police?

Hon JUDITH COLLINS: The latest figures show that at the end of June the police held restraining orders over an estimated $38.5 million worth of ill-gotten assets. Since this Government passed the Criminal Proceeds (Recovery) Act in December 2009, the police have confiscated thousands of dollars worth of cash, property, cars, motorbikes, boats, and other luxury items. The police are also holding a further $8.5 million worth of assets that have been seized under other legislation. The message to criminals is very clear: the Government and the police will use every tool at their disposal to prevent criminals profiting from their trade in misery.

Health Care—First Specialist Assessments

8. GRANT ROBERTSON (Labour—Wellington Central) to the Minister of Health: What progress has been made in achieving first specialist assessment for patients referred from general practitioners in the last two years?

Hon TONY RYALL (Minister of Health) : Great progress. Advice from the Ministry of Health shows that over the past 2 calendar years over 60,000 extra patients have received a first specialist assessment. More people are being seen sooner, and significantly fewer people are waiting longer than 6 months to see a specialist.

Grant Robertson: Is the Auditor-General wrong then when she said that in the last 2 years up to 15 percent of people were not being seen within the 6-month deadline for first specialist assessment?

Hon TONY RYALL: The number of people waiting for over 6 months for their first specialist assessment is lower than when that party left office.

Grant Robertson: Does he stand by his statement in this House in February that his Government will not fix the problems of waiting times by sending people a letter saying they have been culled from the waiting list, in light of a letter I have, dated 12 June 2011, to 3-year-old Joshua Stevens from Palmerston North, telling him that he had been cut from the list of those waiting for a specialist assessment?

Hon TONY RYALL: Without having the full details of that letter, I cannot comment. But I say that that pales in significance to the 30,000 people who were culled from waiting lists when that party was in Government.

Michael Woodhouse: What has been the history in the delivery of first specialist assessments over the last decade, and why are they important to patients?

Hon TONY RYALL: First specialist assessments are often the gateway to improved surgery or to getting surgery in the public health service. Under the previous Government, the number of people getting to see a hospital specialist went backwards because it did not keep up with population growth. There has been a remarkable increase under this Government: over the last 2 calendar years 60,000 extra patients have seen a hospital specialist. More people are being assessed for important issues like respiratory pain, heart trouble, and abdominal trouble.

Grant Robertson: Does he stand by his statement in this House that his Government will not fix the problems of waiting times by sending people a letter saying that they have been culled from the waiting list, in light of this letter, dated 4 July, to a Wellingtonian, cutting him from the waiting list to see an ear, nose, and throat specialist?

Hon TONY RYALL: My experience of Opposition members is that one has to check the facts of the letters they table, and it is always interesting. But none of that compares with the 30,000 people who were culled from waiting lists under the previous Government. Under this Government, 60,000 extra people get to see a hospital specialist—400 extra New Zealanders a week—

Grant Robertson: I raise a point of order, Mr Speaker. I did ask whether the Minister stood by the statement. I guess I could interpret he was saying yes, but I could not really get that from the answer, and then it was sort of going on into nothing. So if he could answer the question, that would be helpful.

Hon Shane Jones: The void!

Mr SPEAKER: The Hon Shane Jones can see further than that. It is difficult when a Minister starts out by saying: “The problem with another party is something.”, or however the Minister started his reply. It is not a very helpful way to start an answer. He could have indicated whether he does stand by his statement. Because of the nature of the question, clearly it is very difficult for the Minister to answer questions relating to specific cases. But I will ask the Minister, please, not to commence an answer by saying that the question has a problem—unless the question is highly provocative. That one was not unduly provocative.

Grant Robertson: Does he stand by his statement in this House that his Government will not fix the problems of waiting times by sending people a letter saying they have been culled from the waiting list, in light of the case of a woman from Wellington who had already been given an appointment time to see a gastroenterologist, only to receive a letter last week telling her that she had been cut from the waiting list?

Hon TONY RYALL: Of course we stand by that statement, because this Government is making sure that more people are getting appointments. But I say that we have learnt from members opposite that until we check the full details of what they table, they should never necessarily be relied upon.

Grant Robertson: I seek leave of the House to table a letter from MidCentral District Health Board, dated 12 June 2011, to Joshua Stevens, which tells him he has been cut from the waiting list.

Mr SPEAKER: Leave is sought to table that document. Is there any objection? There is no objection.

  • Document, by leave, laid on the Table of the House.

Grant Robertson: I seek leave of the House—

Hon Dr Nick Smith: Have you got people’s permission?

Grant Robertson: Of course I have—

Mr SPEAKER: A point of order has been called.

Grant Robertson: I seek leave of the House to table a letter from the Capital and Coast District Health Board, dated 4 July 2011, that culls a patient from the waiting list for an ear, nose, and throat specialist.

Mr SPEAKER: Leave is sought to table that document. Is there any objection? There is no objection.

  • Document, by leave, laid on the Table of the House.

Hon Annette King: Is he aware that people waiting for first specialist assessments were not counted until Labour became the Government, because the National Government refused to count them in the 1990s?

Hon TONY RYALL: I am not in a position to confirm that. But I can confirm that under ministerial instruction 30,000 people were culled from hospital waiting lists under the previous Government, many of whom had been promised an operation.

Venture Capital—Movac Fund 3

9. Dr PAUL HUTCHISON (National—Hunua) to the Acting Minister for Economic Development: What recent developments have there been that will boost New Zealand companies’ access to growth-enhancing capital?

Hon DAVID CARTER (Acting Minister for Economic Development) : Last night I was delighted to launch a new venture capital fund called Movac Fund 3. This fund is specifically aimed at young New Zealand technology companies that show significant growth potential. The Government also demonstrates its commitment to these companies by backing the fund through the New Zealand Venture Investment Fund. The Government is proving that it believes that these companies can expand to be good in New Zealand and then take on the world.

Dr Paul Hutchison: Why does the Government provide funding for the New Zealand Venture Investment Fund?

Hon DAVID CARTER: That is a very good question. The key to economic growth is to allow these companies to have access to capital. In that way we can increase substantially the amount of innovation in New Zealand. This Government’s commitment of funding to the New Zealand Venture Investment Fund, with a $40 million underwrite last year, very much achieved these aims. The New Zealand Venture Investment Fund has now invested in over 100 young technology companies. An interesting study just received showed that those companies have an average revenue, per employee, of $240,000, which is hugely more productive than most New Zealand companies.

Positive Ageing Strategy—Elder Abuse Prevention

10. Hon STEVE CHADWICK (Labour) to the Minister for Senior Citizens: What progress has been made on the Positive Ageing Strategy to ensure service delivery for elder abuse prevention to ensure safety for up to 50,000 vulnerable older New Zealanders living in their own homes?

Hon CRAIG FOSS (Minister for Senior Citizens) : The Positive Ageing Strategy aims to build a society where people can age positively, where older people are highly valued, and where they are recognised as an integral part of families and communities. Good progress has been made in this area and in a number of areas, including Link Age, an online resource produced to promote intergenerational understanding and respect through older people volunteering in schools. I believe that this is one of the best ways to change negative attitudes to ageing, and to reduce elder abuse and neglect. More examples of progress are available on the Positive Ageing website.

Hon Steve Chadwick: Why are there eight regions in New Zealand where older New Zealanders have no access to the provision of an elder abuse prevention network programme?

Hon CRAIG FOSS: Service delivery components are the responsibility of the whole community, including police, family, whānau, and district health boards. Those services, of course, are across the whole country.

Hon Steve Chadwick: What advice has he given to the Minister for Social Development and Employment since his briefing to the Social Services Committee on 15 June where he said, and it was then reported on 16 June: “I wholeheartedly support anything that is done to turn this around.”; and why have those eight regions not got a contract?

Hon CRAIG FOSS: I repeat my earlier answer: delivery mechanism components are the responsibility of all of the community, including Age Concern, district health boards, police, family, and whānau.

Broadband, Ultra-fast—Hamilton

11. TIM MACINDOE (National—Hamilton West) to the Minister for Communications and Information Technology: How will the commencement of ultra-fast broadband deployment in Hamilton help economic growth?

Hon STEVEN JOYCE (Minister for Communications and Information Technology) : This morning I was privileged to be in Hamilton as the first fibre was laid, beginning the roll-out to deliver ultra-fast broadband to 163,000 premises across Hamilton, Tauranga, Whanganui, New Plymouth, Hāwera, and Tokoroa. This is one of the key parts of the Government’s economic growth plan. Internet speeds of 100 megabits per second and more will revolutionise the way in which businesses operate. For example, Stainless Design this morning stated that it was looking forward to increasing the productivity of its design processes by digitally transferring files to clients immediately for review and approval. Benefits will accrue to schools, connecting students to resources around the globe, and medical specialists will be available in more places through technologies such as high definition videoconferencing.

Tim Macindoe: When will these users benefit from the roll-out of ultra-fast broadband?

Hon STEVEN JOYCE: The roll-out will occur in this area over 5 years, with priority users connected by the end of 2015. The roll-out in the central North Island is being conducted by Transfield Services, which has said it will need to hire about 350 to 450 new staff, 150 of which will be technical staff, for its contracts in the central North Island and Canterbury. Telecommunications competition will be increased, with wholesale prices as low as half of the current price for business services. Residential customers will enjoy a vastly improved service for the price they currently pay or for less. The Government is once again delivering on its plan for economic growth with this transformative telecommunications infrastructure.

Veterans—Assistance for Attending Commemorations

12. Hon RICK BARKER (Labour) to the Minister of Defence: Does he stand by his statement in relation to the treatment and care of New Zealand veterans who attended commemorations in Crete that “We need to do better for the future … I am concerned about this and I guess as a nation we do owe them an apology”?

Hon Dr WAYNE MAPP (Minister of Defence) : I am and was concerned that we need to properly respect our veterans. It is clear that the $2,000 was not sufficient, and we will be doing better in the future for the 70th anniversary commemorations. I apologise to the Crete veterans that I did not achieve the level of support that the public and they would have reasonably expected.

Hon Rick Barker: Will the Minister confirm that at the beginning of this year a New Zealand Air Force aircraft was scheduled to take the veterans to Crete, providing them with similar commemorations to those provided by the Australians to their veterans, and can the Minister explain why this plan was shelved, leaving our veterans to make their own way to Crete and to fend for themselves, unlike their Australian comrades, who were treated with appropriate care and respect?

Hon Dr WAYNE MAPP: I was advised that that was the original plan, but of course the earthquake occurred, and there was a huge deployment of the New Zealand Defence Force assisting in Christchurch. Of course, we have a much higher tempo of operations than was previously the case. It would be fair to say that the Government collectively has learnt from this experience, and will be doing better in the future.

Hon Rick Barker: Does he believe that if Australia hosted its Crete veterans to a luncheon following a national war memorial service for the Battle of Crete in the Australian Parliament, the veterans would be served a meal that befits their status in the community, or a meal such as was served to our veterans here in the Grand Hall that consisted of soup, bread rolls, sausage rolls cut in half, tomato sauce, and a lamington for dessert? Why does he believe that half a sausage roll is appropriate?

Hon Dr WAYNE MAPP: I know that the Minister of Veterans’ Affairs has deep respect for the veteran community. I am aware of the many events that she attends; of course, the event was hosted here. She is, in fact, leading the planning of World War II commemorations for the future, and she will be reporting to Cabinet in September of this year going forward.

Hon Rick Barker: Will the Minister defer on the retrospective payments to our veterans who went to Crete, or will the Minister take a leadership position by making a meaningful apology to the veterans, and reimbursing those who travelled for reasonable costs they incurred; if not, why not?

Hon Dr WAYNE MAPP: I am discussing this issue with my Cabinet colleagues. There are some challenges around retrospectivity, but it is a matter I am discussing with Cabinet colleagues.

Hon Rick Barker: With the Minister’s renewed enthusiasm for the concerns of veterans, will the Minister lobby the Government for a response to the Law Commission report on support for veterans—now a year overdue—to fix the fact that veterans are being supported less well than ordinary Kiwis who have access to accident compensation, and when will the vets get some action from the Government on this vital issue?

Hon Dr WAYNE MAPP: I know that the Minister of Veterans’ Affairs is actually dealing with this issue.

Smoke-free Environments (Controls and Enforcement) Amendment Bill

Third Reading

Hon TARIANA TURIA (Associate Minister of Health) : I move, That the Smoke-free Environments (Controls and Enforcement) Amendment Bill be now read a third time. This Parliament can be proud of the culture of change that we are advancing through the Smoke-free Environments (Controls and Enforcement) Amendment Bill. New Zealand has made rapid progress in reducing smoking rates, and this bill is another step in that journey.

During the course of debate on this bill we have heard mention of the brave cause champions and advocates who have led the change in tobacco control. First and foremost I pay tribute to the many groups and individuals such as Aukati Kai Paipa; Te Hotu Manawa Māori; Action on Smoking and Health—

Te Ururoa Flavell: I raise a point of order, Mr Speaker.

Mr DEPUTY SPEAKER: I know what the member is going to say. We have a Minister speaking, and it is very difficult to hear with all of the discussions going on. I ask members leaving the Chamber to do so, and to have their discussions in the lobbies.

Hon TARIANA TURIA: I pay tribute to the Smokefree Coalition, Te Ohu Auahi Kore; Smokefree Nurses Aotearoa; the Asthma and Respiratory Foundation; the Cardiac Society of Australia and New Zealand; the Quit Group; the Centre for Tobacco Control Research; Te Ohu Rata o Aotearoa, the Māori Medical Practitioners Association; the department of public health at the University of Otago; End Smoking NZ; the Public Health Association of New Zealand; the Royal New Zealand College of General Practitioners; Whakauae Research Services; and many other individuals and organisations. If I have missed anyone out by naming but a few, I apologise to you today.

But it is vitally important that today’s achievement is also recognised as a milestone that has resulted from the efforts of so many people dedicated to the cause of eliminating tobacco from Aotearoa. In this House there are also advocates and activists who have taken up the cause of tobacco reform. The gestation of the Smoke-free Environments (Controls and Enforcement) Amendment Bill has involved many key players and history makers. They include the Rt Hon Helen Clark, Tukoroirangi Morgan, Judy Keall, and Stevie Chadwick, and over this last year it has been ably assisted by the commitment of Dr Paul Hutchison as chair of the Health Committee.

The broader context of tobacco reform has, of course, received heightened awareness through the impact of the inquiry into the tobacco industry pioneered by the Māori Affairs Committee, and I record my tribute today to the leadership of Hone Harawira, Tau Henare as the chair, and, in fact, all of the members of that committee who have taken up the call to break the cycle of smoking uptake.

I sincerely appreciate the leadership of the Prime Minister and the support of the Minister of Health, Tony Ryall, in enabling this legislation to be passed during the course of this Parliament, and for being willing to step up to the challenge to ensure that future generations of New Zealand will be protected from exposure to tobacco products and will enjoy smoke-free lives.

The progress we have achieved on this Smoke-free Environments (Controls and Enforcement) Amendment Bill 2010 has been so much easier because of the support across the House. Anyone who listened during the Committee stage of the bill would have heard that the impact of the 150 submissions received by the Health Committee underscored the need to legislate to achieve the vision of a tobacco-free Aotearoa by 2025. But they would also have seen the evidence of the activists’ catchcry that the personal is political. How could it be any different? Almost every single one of us in this Chamber knows the reality that more than one in five New Zealanders smoke tobacco regularly. Many of us know the devastating consequences of tobacco smoking as a leading cause of preventable death in New Zealand, and we know in our lived experiences that Māori and Pasifika people bear a disproportionate burden of tobacco addiction.

The Royal New Zealand College of General Practitioners outlined the impact of smoking on the quality of life through conditions such as lung cancer, heart disease, stroke, emphysema, chronic bronchitis, and cancer of the mouth, breast, bladder, throat, stomach, colon, and on and on. One of the most poignant submissions made during the course of this bill was from Student ASH—a group of medical students at the University of Auckland—and I want to quote from their submission. “Through the course of our training we see the tragic and preventable harm which smoking causes repeated over and over again in the patients we get to know. It is terrible to see patients, who are in hospital as a result of their lifelong addiction to cigarettes, leave their bed and go outside to smoke. Many patients we meet, even in the end stages of their lives, can not break the very addiction which is killing them.” So today I applaud the House for having the courage to continue to work together to address smoking harm.

I am particularly mindful of the kōrero that was shared last night by Louisa Wall, reminding us to keep the needs of our babies uppermost in placing tobacco retail displays out of sight and out of mind.

This bill is driven by the need to reduce tobacco uptake, particularly amongst young people, and to help smokers to quit. It does this by prohibiting retail displays of tobacco products, increasing controls on tobacco, and facilitating the enforcement of tobacco controls. In introducing this legislation, I was motivated by the knowledge that children and adolescents are particularly susceptible to the lure of the images adorning tobacco displays such as colouring and the graphics used on cigarette packages. In New Zealand the average age that 15 to 19-year-olds have their first cigarette is 13.3 years of age. We also know that half of the people under 18 who smoke have tried to quit and two-thirds of them regret ever starting. A Cancer Society survey that was run in 2008 revealed that 45 percent of New Zealanders answering that poll agreed that tobacco displays in retail areas made quitting harder. This legislation makes a cornerstone intervention in the cycle of see, try, and buy. The amendment bill aims to remove tobacco displays from outlets and also includes harsher penalties.

This bill will make the marketing of tobacco products a much more difficult proposition for the tobacco industry. The industry will no longer be able to display tobacco products at the local dairy or include tobacco-related words in their shop signage. These measures will also aid those trying to quit by removing some of the temptation to make impulse purchases. As a result of this legislation we will see an end to the type of covert sponsorship arrangements, such as the exclusive supply arrangements at events like outdoor music festivals. The bill has increased the penalties for selling tobacco products to children and young people—from $2,000 to $5,000 for an individual and up to $10,000 for a business. It also enables these offences to be dealt with by infringement notices rather than by costly and time-consuming prosecutions through the courts.

I believe that this legislation represents an honourable attempt by the Government to support the concerted efforts in homes and workplaces throughout our land to instil pride in ourselves in becoming tobacco-free. I make a special mention of the officials who have aided the select committee process and advised and guided me every step of the way. This legislation is also a result of their expertise, their hard work, and their professionalism. I congratulate the advisers right across the Ministry of Health, but particularly the tobacco team, who have provided me with confidence that we are making the difference we need. Ultimately, we have adopted a position where the public health arguments for tobacco control outweigh the tobacco company interests.

Our retail display legislation will stop tobacco products and brand marketing in just about every dairy, supermarket, and petrol station in the land. Plain packaging goes with the next step, and it will put an end to the vicarious marketing of tobacco in other settings like the kitchen table in a smoker’s house. Our next step, therefore, is to introduce comprehensive plain packaging legislation to seriously regulate and control this product in a way that is commensurate with the devastating harm it continues to cause.

I take this opportunity to thank everyone who has supported this legislation for the decision they have made to create a stronger and healthier future for all New Zealanders. I commend this bill to the House.

IAIN LEES-GALLOWAY (Labour—Palmerston North) : The Smoke-free Environments (Controls and Enforcement) Amendment Bill will today receive near total consensus support in the House. I think that amongst all the things to celebrate about this legislation, possibly one of the greatest celebrations we should note today is the way the House has come together on this legislation and how far a number of parties have come over the years from previous positions on tobacco enforcement and control measures. I congratulate the Associate Minister of Health Tariana Turia on introducing this legislation and bringing it to this final reading, to the point where we are, at the most, 2 years away now from the total eradication of those tobacco displays, and that is fantastic. Within a year we will see most of them gone, and the stragglers will be tidied up over the following year, and that is something we can all smile about. It is great news and I congratulate the Minister. I too would like to acknowledge the people who have taken leadership roles over the years. I think of people like Helen Clark, Tuku Morgan, Stevie Chadwick, and, of course, my colleagues on the Health Committee. Also, of course, I had the pleasure of being a temporary member of the Māori Affairs Committee for its inquiry, which, of course, was initiated by Hone Harawira and well chaired by Tau Henare. The Health Committee was very well chaired by Paul Hutchison. Everybody is part of this great journey.

We have spoken so much about the journey, which has been going for decades now with various pieces of legislation, but there certainly has been a journey over this term of Parliament. I do not want to dwell on it too much, but we have come a long way from the position that was held early on in this term of Parliament when it was believed by the Government that there was no evidence in favour of taking this move. The Minister, I acknowledge, used her position to move the Government away from its position in order to get this bill introduced, and that is fantastic. It is an amazing achievement for the Minister, and it is an amazing achievement for this Parliament. I hope this sets the precedent for future tobacco control legislation, that the days of the bitter arguments are behind us now, and that this consensus is what we will see whenever we seek to clamp down further on tobacco. I agree with the Minister that there is more work to be done. We have set a bold, ambitious goal of making New Zealand smoke-free by 2025, and although this bill is a component of achieving it, it is not the silver bullet by any stretch of the imagination, and there is a lot more work to do. But I take a lot of heart from the support that this legislation has received from around the House.

We all know, of course, the reasons why reducing smoking rates in New Zealand is so important. Five thousand New Zealanders die every year from smoking-related diseases. That means that just in the term of this Parliament 10,000 people have died unnecessarily because of smoking-related diseases. Unfortunately, many of our young people are still being tempted. The number is reducing but not fast enough to achieve that goal of being smoke-free by 2025, so more needs to be done. The journey has been fantastic. We have got smoking out of workplaces. We have got smoking out of bars. Governments led by both National and Labour now have been prepared to increase excise tax, and that is an important component. We are on the journey but there is a lot more to be done.

This bill has some very important measures, and we should note them. We all know what they are but we should note what this bill actually achieves. First and foremost, of course, the bill gets rid of tobacco displays. The last bastion of tobacco advertising is gone, so now people will be free to walk into the dairy without being confronted with this appalling, addictive product. The bill also clamps down on covert sponsorship, which is one of the most surreptitious methods by which the tobacco industry tries to reach our young people. It also ensures that internet sales fall into line with what we expect within a dairy or a supermarket, and it introduces some penalties associated with breaking the new regulations. It also increases the penalties for supplying tobacco to young people. The bill also tries to tighten up the area of trade rebates and discounts, because that is another way in which the tobacco industry incentivises retailers to sell as much as they can and to have tobacco products in their dairies, supermarkets, and service stations.

Obviously, there are a number of groups, organisations, and people who have submitted, lobbied, and worked alongside members of Parliament to get this legislation through. Some people have not been acknowledged yet, and I would like to congratulate them. They are the retailers who have already taken this step. Even though this step was not legislated for, they have voluntarily taken it. I know of dairies that do not sell cigarettes any more. That might be considered a dangerous step by some retailers, but these dairy owners report no loss of sales. In fact, they are very popular within their local community. Some people go out of their way to buy their bread, milk, and newspaper from those dairies because they know the dairies have taken that step and they want to congratulate them on, and reward them for, doing it. I do not think retailers have anything to fear from this measure. First and foremost it creates a level playing field as everybody is in the same boat, so retailers certainly have nothing to fear. I do not think that retailers need to fear that people will not come in to buy their smokes or that they will be put off because tobacco is not visibly available. I think that actually they will be supported and congratulated by their communities around them.

As I have said, a lot has been made of the journey. There are some next steps we have to undertake. The Minister raised the issue of plain packaging, and I think that is something we need to move on swiftly. We need to follow the example of our Australian cousins and to be just as brave as they have been. They have been challenged by the tobacco industry with all the force of the powerful legal teams that industry has available to it—all the resources from all the money it has made over the years from the poor people who are addicted to the product it peddles. Although the tobacco industry is going to take on the Australian Government, we should not be in any way put off by those moves from the tobacco industry. We should confront it head on, we should support the Australians, and we should go down the same path and introduce plain packaging. I would have liked to see another thing included in this bill, but it was not, and when I considered proposing an amendment to include it, it was outside the scope of the bill, and that is the issue of vending machines. It might seem like a small deal—and I know you want me to stick to this bill, Mr Deputy Speaker—but that is the next area we need to consider in the next step of the journey that this bill is a very important aspect of.

In closing, I thank everybody who has supported this legislation and who has supported those MPs who have advocated for this change to occur during this term of Parliament and before. I acknowledge everyone who has got us to this point, and I strongly encourage Parliament to take the next steps that are necessary and to stick to the goal of making New Zealand smoke-free by 2025.

Dr PAUL HUTCHISON (National—Hunua) : It gives me great pleasure to take a call on the Smoke-free Environments (Controls and Enforcement) Amendment Bill. This is one of the great occasions, and it is marked particularly by the fact that just about everyone in Parliament supports this very, very important public health measure.

The fact that Parliament does agree on the basic facts—that something like 5,000 premature deaths are caused through smoking, and something like 500 premature deaths are caused through second-hand smoke—is particularly salutary. But there is still a long way to go. We are told that in the order of 50 percent of young Māori women still smoke. Again, I think it was Tariana Turia who told us that, overall, something like 40 percent of Māori aged between 15 and 60 years smoked, and the figure for the whole population is about 20 percent. We have a long way to go.

The bill also covers herbal products, and it must be mentioned that experts told us and confirmed that smoking herbal products carries significant health harms. Fifteen years ago one would hardly have imagined that we would be passing legislation to effectively prohibit retail displays of tobacco and herbal products, including on the internet, in duty-free stores, and during sponsored events. The legislation introduces very tough enforcement laws to back that up. Corporate offenders can be fined up to $50,000, so this indeed is pretty tough on them.

Evidence has accumulated from around the world that removing signage is effective, and last night I described the Pavlovian dog reflex. Certainly the evidence from places like Iceland and Canada has accumulated, and there is no doubt that that particular reflex has been described in medical literature for many, many years. We know that addicts will come into a store or a supermarket innocently wanting a bottle of milk and, bingo, the signs are in front of them and they cannot resist buying another packet of cigarettes. So the evidence behind this is pretty overwhelming.

The Health Committee worked extremely well together through a somewhat complex and challenging set of submissions, but we all enjoyed them. I remember Kevin Hague, in the first reading debate, saying it was intriguing to see individual retailers think of ingenious reasons why they should be exempted from this legislation. It was also fascinating to hear one extremely innovative submission that this legislation contravened the New Zealand Bill of Rights Act. As I understand libertarian philosophy, the basic premise is as much freedom as possible provided it does not harm others. There is no doubt that second-hand smoke does harm others.

Finally, I too acknowledge the many, many individuals and organisations who over a long period of time have contributed to bringing about this legislation. I particularly want to mention Dr Murray Laugesen. He has dedicated pretty well his entire professional career on this subject in New Zealand. Professor Robert Beaglehole is an international expert in this area. I also include the organisations that were mentioned by Minister Turia. Of course, people within this Parliament have contributed, and I mention Mr Ryall and Tau Henare, and, of course, Tariana Turia for becoming a legend in terms of championing this legislation. It is great to have multiparty consensus, and this certainly signals another step towards New Zealand becoming smoke-free.

GRANT ROBERTSON (Labour—Wellington Central) : I am pleased to follow on from the chair of the Health Committee, Dr Paul Hutchison. I went on to the Health Committee part-way through its inquiry, and I could feel that the committee was determined to make progress on the Smoke-free Environments (Controls and Enforcement) Amendment Bill. There were a lot of submissions to hear, and it was important that all those voices were heard. Associate Minister of Health Tariana Turia, in her speech today, read out the names of a large number of the organisations that have advocated for this legislation over a long period, with good evidence and research to back up their arguments. We heard from a large number of those people, and the submissions were eloquent and often quite emotional.

We also heard from the other side of the debate. As the speaker who has just resumed his seat said, inventive things were put in front of us. There were claims that all manner of economic espionage was being undertaken. There were some outrageous statements, as well, about the lack of social concern, perhaps, of some retailers.

I am very pleased to be able to speak in the third reading debate in support of this bill. This is one of those times in the House when every New Zealander who is watching or listening to this debate will understand exactly what we are trying to stop today. When we enter a corner dairy we see the wall, the wall that sits behind the person who is operating that dairy, the colourful wall, the wall designed after years and years of work by the tobacco industry. It is designed for the sole purpose of making cigarettes attractive. It is designed in part to make cigarettes attractive to younger people, who are more likely to respond. There are people sitting in offices in the United States of America, and in other parts of the world, working out how to make sure that those walls of colour behind the counters of local dairies all over New Zealand, and all over the world, are attractive to young people. But we in this House today are saying that we are not buying into that. As a country, New Zealand is standing up and saying that we are not going to let our children and future generations be manipulated by those tobacco companies. We in this House today should all be proud that we are prepared to take that stand. Sometimes in this House we debate the arcane, or things that people in the public arena may not fully understand. Today they will understand, and they will see the difference within 2 years in New Zealand retail outlets. That is a very, very good thing.

I too join in congratulating all those who have worked on this issue. It is truly a cross-party approach. Minister Turia most definitely deserves the credit for the work she has done in bringing the current Government along to this position. I also acknowledge the role of the officials, because I think they had a difficult task at times to interpret different aspects of the legislation. At the risk of naming names—which is always trouble because there are many—I mention Matthew Everett, who provided some excellent advice. I think the role of the Parliamentary Counsel Office needs to be acknowledged too. Ross Carter provided the words, and the tweaks to the words, that managed to keep the meaning we wanted whilst still allowing it to remain within the rules of this House.

At the risk of widening the breadth of the debate, I note two or three things that were raised in submissions to this bill but that are perhaps not within its direct scope. They have been mentioned before. One of those is plain packaging. Again, we can have no doubt that the reason the tobacco industry is so energised to take on the Australian Government is that the industry knows the impact of plain packaging on its sales. It knows the impact on its sales of getting rid of the wall of colour behind the counter at the dairy. That is why the industry is fighting so hard, and that is why it is so important that we go down that path, as well, and that we continue to stand up for change. I know that Minister Turia and, indeed, Minister Ryall have made comments that plain packaging is inevitable. I think we need to start making moves towards that as soon as possible, and many of the people who submitted to our committee also thought so.

The same goes for vending machines. My colleague Iain Lees-Galloway is a modest chap, and he did not mention in his own speech that he had a member’s bill to address that very thing. I think it is worth acknowledging that Iain showed leadership in bringing that before the House. We are delighted that the legislation is coming into law as a Government bill, but I think the fact that Iain Lees-Galloway did that is worth noting.

I also think that in this legislation there is the beginning of an issue that we will have to look at further. It is the question of sales over the internet. Nowadays most New Zealanders are buying products of all types over the internet. That is the way things are going, and it will occur only more often. The internet, as we know and as we have debated at some length in this House in recent times, is an arena that is difficult to regulate. That is obviously true, so further attention will need to be given in the future to the role of the internet and the supply of tobacco into New Zealand. For instance, should we reach the laudable goal in 2025 of a smoke-free New Zealand, sadly the rest of the world will not be smoke-free by that time, I predict. So we will need to think about our relationship with other countries and, indeed, about the way in which the internet, being a global phenomenon, will facilitate tobacco being used in New Zealand. But these are challenges for another day.

I will highlight two or three other matters from the bill that I think are important for those who are realising today that we are making this small but very significant step. One is the issue of covert sponsorship, with its notion of exclusive supply rights. That was something the committee grappled with, and we decided that it was important to have it addressed. Tobacco companies cannot now sponsor major events because of earlier legislation, but they create deals about exclusive supply for events, which can have the effect of sponsorship and the effect of the promotion of tobacco. It was good to be able to have clauses within this bill, which we are passing today, that will address the issue of covert sponsorship.

The same applies to trade rebates and discounts. Again, tobacco companies build relationships with retailers that are designed to facilitate the sale of their products. Those things can amount to a promotional activity, and they need to be addressed. This bill has done that.

Without wanting to break into the spirit of consensus around the House, I say that the question of signage was one we debated. The committee discussed at some length the possibility that health warning signs can be somehow manipulated into being promotional signs. The fact that on a sign announcing restrictions on tobacco it can be possible for the picture of a packet of cigarettes to appear, with perhaps the number 18 on it, or a cross over it, was something that concerned us. Iain Lees-Galloway put up an amendment in that regard in the Committee stage of this bill, but it was not accepted on the grounds that it was unnecessary. I hope that is true. I hope it is true that we will not see the signs designed to alert people to the restrictions on the sale of tobacco being used, in effect, as signs to promote tobacco. There are examples internationally of where this has happened, and it is something we would not want to see in New Zealand. I hope that we are not back here in a year or so having to correct that, and that there is sufficient coverage in the bill in front of us.

I believe that this legislation is very good. It is a small but significant step forward in the journey to ensure that we get rid of the scourge of smoking from New Zealand, and that we take on a tobacco industry determined to knock out the small country or countries trying to address the issues the industry is promoting. This bill is very important. It will be good for the health and well-being of future generations of New Zealanders. I am proud to support it.

KEVIN HAGUE (Green) : Tēnā koe, Mr Deputy Speaker. Ngā mihi nui ki a koe. Others in this debate have already mentioned the 5,000 deaths per year from smoking-related diseases. When we reflect on the work the Health Committee has done and on the succession of members of this House who referred to that number extensively in the Committee stage debate on the Smoke-free Environments (Controls and Enforcement) Amendment Bill, we see that it has been the number of deaths, it has been the years of life lost, it has been the much larger number of people whose quality of life has been compromised every year, and it has also been the economic cost of that sickness and death that have formed the backdrop of the determination to take effective action.

We had an interesting discussion in the Committee stage on what the correct historical antecedents were. Paul Hutchison, the chair of the select committee, referred to a 1960 Richard Doll paper. Personally, I go to Doll and Hill in 1956 as my marker of the first study that authoritatively linked lung cancer and cigarette smoking. That is important because one of the arguments heard against legislators such as us taking action against the power of the tobacco industry, and taking action to control tobacco, is the argument of individual choice. There certainly is in health theory a strand of thinking that says that individuals make choices. I link this back to an even earlier date: 1776, Adam Smith and his Wealth of Nations. He sets out a philosophy that says that individuals consider the benefits and costs of potential courses of action and then choose on a rational basis the one that has the best balance of benefits and costs. When we link that into evidence about disease that is non-communicable but is linked instead to a behaviour, it leads to a strand of thinking that says that individuals make rational choices about their lifestyles and therefore it is not up to legislators to step in to interfere with those.

The problem with that thinking is this: it fails to explain the pattern of health and disease we actually observe. If the pattern of cigarette smoking we see in New Zealand were explained by rational choices, then something truly extraordinary would be going on, because the rates of smoking amongst Māori, amongst Pacific Islands people, and amongst poor people are very much higher than the rates amongst those who are relatively better off in society and those who are relatively privileged in society. We could conclude only that smoking and all of the tobacco-related disease that is associated with it is effectively a disease of marginalisation. That says that a model based on the idea of individual choice fails to explain what we actually see, and that a model based on providing people with more information so that they will make better choices will also fail. That is why we have to step in. We have to step in to address the environments that surround those marginalised populations.

Coincidentally, Paul Hutchison this morning hosted a breakfast here in Parliament for Sir Michael Marmot, who was formerly the chair of the World Health Organization Commission on the Social Determinants of Health. Sir Michael gave a fascinating discourse on those environmental determinants. In passing, I thank Paul Hutchison for hosting that and the New Zealand Medical Association, which has been hosting Sir Michael’s visit. That theory of environmental determinants sets out to address the risk environments in which populations find themselves: the risk environments of racism, the risk environments of poverty, and those other social and economic inequalities in our society. Effectively, those environments, and the environments this bill seeks to address—the immediate environment of advertising both on the internet and in retail stores—create a “smoke-ogenic” environment. This bill is a substantial step forward in addressing that. Ultimately we will need to create a fair and just society in which those structural inequalities are addressed and eliminated. Ultimately we will need to do that, and we need to work towards that goal.

In the short term, I would like to celebrate the achievement of Associate Minister of Health Turia and others in bringing this bill to the House and seeing it through. I know there will be people from those various passionate community groups that Minister Turia and others have referred to who are watching this debate and listening to it, both in the gallery and at home. I know they will feel a sense of pride and achievement in this major step forward. I thank them for their contribution. I think members will be aware that at earlier stages of the debate I pushed for this bill to go a bit further than it does. I am sorry it did not do that, but today is a day for celebrating what the bill does, because it will make a major contribution.

In closing I say, as indeed others have in this third reading debate, that this is not the end of the journey. As Paul Hutchison said, there is still a very long way for us to go. I turn once again to the findings of that landmark inquiry by the Māori Affairs Committee. Let us celebrate this achievement today, but tomorrow set ourselves up for the next step forward—the next step that will implement the rest of the recommendations of the Māori Affairs Committee. Kia ora tātou.

Hon JOHN BOSCAWEN (Leader—ACT) : It is indeed a pleasure and a privilege to speak on the third reading of the Smoke-free Environments (Controls and Enforcement) Amendment Bill. I particularly want to take this opportunity because I see it as an opportunity to congratulate and to recognise the hard work of Tariana Turia. I pay particular credit to her and to her colleagues who have championed this legislation. The ACT Party will have a split vote on this bill, and I will address that issue very shortly, but I would like to start by saying that this particular issue has been a very personal one of mine for many years. As Tariana Turia acknowledged, the effects of tobacco smoking are devastating. She talked about smoking being the leading cause of preventable death, and, yes, it is preventable. So why do we condemn 5,000 people a year to die from the effects of smoking, when we can actually do something about it?

Tariana Turia went on to acknowledge the contributions of many organisations and many members of Parliament on this particular issue over many years. I would like to add to that list, as Grant Robertson did, Iain Lees-Galloway. Iain Lees-Galloway introduced a member’s bill. He put the issue on the table, but it was Tariana Turia who picked up that issue. I congratulate Iain Lees-Galloway, and I congratulate Tariana Turia on convincing the Government to pick up that issue and run with it. Mr Lees-Galloway referred to the fact that he was a member of the Māori Affairs Committee for its deliberations on the inquiry into tobacco. I also attended one or two of its meetings. I certainly was not a member of the committee, and I certainly did not put the time into it that Iain Lees-Galloway and the other members of the committee did. On the two occasions I did attend, I was very impressed with the dedication and the commitment with which the members of that committee went about their job.

The very first person Tariana Turia acknowledged was the Rt Hon Helen Clark. I will also pay a tribute to her today. Even though we have political differences in many areas—

Hon Trevor Mallard: No!

Hon JOHN BOSCAWEN: That is right, I say to Mr Mallard. We do have differences in many areas, but I will never forget the first occasion when I met Helen Clark, when she was the Minister of Health. She was attending a small, private cocktail party in 1989. She had just announced measures, or in fact may well have just passed legislation, to ban tobacco company sponsorship of sporting events. If members think back 20 years, they may recall the Benson and Hedges Open tennis tournament in Auckland. The legislation that Helen Clark passed as Minister of Health in that Labour Government outlawed tobacco company sponsorship of sporting events, an activity that legitimised, if you like, the regular use of tobacco.

I will never forget a question that was put to Helen Clark. She was asked to justify how she could ban tobacco companies from sponsoring sporting events, but would not ban liquor companies from sponsoring an event. The answer she gave on that day still sticks with me 22 years later. Some people today would dispute her answer. Straight as a flash, she looked at the questioner and said: “Tobacco kills people.” Tobacco kills people. Yes, people die from alcohol-related causes. They do die from the effects of car accidents. But people can drink alcohol in moderation, and they can have a glass of wine each day without it doing permanent damage to their health. The tragedy is that no one can actually smoke safely. People cannot smoke one cigarette a day, 10 cigarettes a day, or a packet a day, without the risk that it could damage their health and eventually kill them. I do not doubt that there are people who smoke for their entire life. I will never forget my late grandmother, Sydney Boscawen. She gave up smoking in her early 80s, she gave up drinking whisky in her mid-80s, and she lived a very long life. My grandmother played the odds and she was successful, but, tragically, so many are not.

Reference has been made to the fact that although the average incidence of smoking is one in five, amongst young Māori women it is one in two. That is 50 percent. Because my interest in this issue goes back many years, I will never forget a documentary I saw on Television New Zealand one Sunday night. It would have been probably 20 years ago. It followed the last 18 months in the life of a young Māori mother from the East Cape. Looking at the nods, I see there may be people in this Chamber who recall that documentary. I do not know the family and I cannot recall the name, but the tragedy of that documentary was that it followed how that lady was diagnosed, the initial feelings of optimism—“We can beat this cancer; we’re going to survive.”—the slow realisation that the treatment was not working, and the general acceptance that the lady was going to die, with her young children around her realising that their mother was going to die. Tragically, the documentary concluded with her tangi—her funeral—on a marae on the East Cape of the North Island. That sort of death is preventable, and I congratulate the people who have supported this bill.

I want to focus particularly on young people, because we know that tobacco is very, very addictive. People get addicted at a very young age. We heard this afternoon that of the people between the ages of 15 to 19 who smoke, the average age they had their first cigarette was 13½ years. We heard that of the people who smoke between the ages of 15 and 19, two-thirds of them wish they had never smoked or never had their first cigarette. A young child—because that is what 12, 13, 14, 15, and 16-year-olds are—with a young brain gets addicted before his or her brain is properly formed. Once those young people realise that they have become addicted, and realise the consequences for their health, so many of them cannot give up.

I referred to the fact that the ACT Party will be having a split vote on this issue, and I am very lucky, in a caucus of five, that our caucus rules allow us to split our votes. We do not do it often, but, certainly, on issues of principle we do. On this occasion, the ACT Party will be voting two votes in favour and three votes against. I would like to take the opportunity to explain a little about the reasons why my three colleagues are voting against it. The concern of Heather Roy, Sir Roger Douglas, and Hilary Calvert—Hilary has joined me in the Chamber this afternoon—is, I guess, the issue of freedom: if one is informed of the issues and if one is aware that smoking is addictive, one should be free to take it up and we should not place that restriction on people.

I have no doubt that my three colleagues are every bit as concerned about young people—both Pacific and Māori, and people of other races—in this country as we are. I have no doubts about their concerns. But, interestingly, Kevin Hague said that the model that was based on providing more information and giving choices was a flawed model, and it was flawed because young people become addicted at a very young age. That is a very fair argument, and I have to say I support Mr Hague’s argument, but I acknowledge that the views of my three colleagues who are voting against this bill are very strongly held. I totally support and understand that. I would also like to take this opportunity to acknowledge that in the second reading of this bill the ACT vote was recorded as being one vote for, and four votes against. The vote of Rodney Hide was recorded as a vote against, but that was a misunderstanding. Rodney Hide voted for the first reading of this bill, and he voted in favour of it during the Committee stage, and his vote was incorrectly recorded as a vote against the bill in the second reading, when in actual fact it was a vote for it.

I am very conscious of the narrowness of this debate, but I would like to issue, I guess, a challenge to the Māori Party, because we are concerned about this issue. There are other issues where we can do things to address major differences—the deprivation, if you like—between Māori, Pacific, and non-Māori.

RAHUI KATENE (Māori Party—Te Tai Tonga) : In one of the submissions presented to the Health Committee, there was a statement attributed to Moana Jackson that had come from the National Māori Tobacco Control Strategy: 2003-2007. That statement reads: “No greater taonga than the wellness of the people of the land and those expected to care for them had no greater obligation than to ensure its maintenance.” Directly above this statement were pictures of 10 of our tūpuna—their beautiful, strong faces adorning cards to be used in the sale of tobacco. There is no greater taonga than the wellness of the people, yet over the centuries their health and life cycle have been placed at such risk through normalising the practice of tobacco use and addiction.

Those tobacco cards of tūpuna dated back over 90 years, to the 1920s and 1930s. Today’s modern-day tobacco displays simply perpetuate the proliferation of paraphernalia used to peddle tobacco products. The Māori Party has raised our concerns about tobacco use, as a key party policy since the earliest days of our establishment in 2004. One of our key policy planks in our manifesto, He Aha Te Mea Nui? He Tangata, He Tangata, He Tangata, was to introduce measures to take tobacco out of Aotearoa. The rationale was sound.

Despite the legislative and regulatory environment, the number of cigarettes and the volume of tobacco available for consumption are increasing. So in our Māori Party policy document we resolved that the health of the nation must come before the profits of the tobacco giants. Our campaign rested on many fronts. We were to draft legislation to bring about tobacco excise increases. We were to call for an inquiry into the tobacco industry in Aotearoa and the consequences of tobacco use upon Māori. We were to remove tobacco displays from public view. So it is an amazing feeling today to reflect on the successes we have had in every aspect of the campaign for tobacco control.

If there was ever a day to question the value of a coalition agreement with the Government, this would be that day. This Government has ventured far beyond what one might have even thought possible in this term of Government, in response to the advocacy, the expertise, and the leadership of our co-leader Tariana Turia.

Last April the Government enacted legislation to increase the tax on all tobacco products by 10 percent, and to equalise the duties on manufactured and roll-your-own cigarettes. Earlier this year it responded with a comprehensive and forward-looking response to the Māori Affairs Committee inquiry into the tobacco industry. This bill today introduces a prohibition on retail displays of tobacco products, as another key measure to reduce the prevalence of smoking in Aotearoa. From a “watch this space” preview in Minister Turia’s speech, we know that action will soon be taken to introduce plain packaging of tobacco products, in line with Australia’s policy.

On the same day we are making tobacco history with this bill, my colleague Pita Sharples was presiding at the opening of the Whare Ōranga Ake, another major achievement for the Māori Party. The idea is that when the time comes for prisoners to return to their families, marae, and communities, their whakapapa links and family bonds need to be carefully restored. If we just throw prisoners out of jail, many of them get into trouble again and go back to prison, which is a waste of people. But with Whare Ōranga Ake there is a different wairua and tikanga, which we believe is possible only as a result of the difference achieved by the Māori Party working in a relationship with the Government.

I cannot emphasise enough how important these gains are. The legislative moves relating to smoking in Aotearoa are being watched. I go back to Moana Jackson’s words; we are talking about “No greater taonga than the wellness of the people of the land”.

Of course, it is not all roses, and I was disappointed that National was unable to appreciate the value of the amendments I sought, which were to enable a register to be established, and for registration to be mandatory and a condition of selling tobacco. This was a simple, pragmatic response to the issue that there is currently not a central list of tobacco retailers—and I appreciate the support of Labour, the Greens, and Progressive in this regard. Such a register would have been an effective way of keeping track of the growing pressure placed on the public by cunning tobacco companies seeking to market tobacco products through any means. But putting aside the matter of register, I can only note just how important this bill is in making progress towards a greater vision of ensuring that Aotearoa is smoke-free by 2025.

One of the important pieces of information that has enabled this legislation to proceed so smoothly is the research from the Cancer Society of New Zealand, which revealed that a large majority of New Zealanders consistently back the removal of tobacco retail displays. But to my mind, when I read the submission from Te Oho Ratu o Aotearoa, the Māori Medical Practitioners Association, there is absolutely no room for doubt. This is what its members said: “Future generations of New Zealand, our tamariki and our mokopuna, should be free from exposure to tobacco products. … As doctors we deal every day with the tragic human consequences of smoking-related illness. We target our strongest objection, opposition, and opprobrium at those who profit from the production, supply, and sale of this addictive poison tobacco.”

This is a very big move. Today this House will pass into law a bill that will remove tobacco retail displays, restrict tobacco trading names, and introduce tighter controls on sales to minors. We know that relapse into smoking is influenced by the retail displays of tobacco products. The mere sight of tobacco on display becomes a temptation for smokers trying to quit. During the select committee hearings we were also told by the Centre for Tobacco Control Research that experimental smoking among youth is influenced by the retail display of tobacco products. Basically, the availability of tobacco and the easy access to it encourages the initiation and the maintenance of smoking.

It can be so simple: we have to denormalise smoking. We have to instil pride in ourselves that we can be smoke-free, because we know, we experience, and we grieve the reality that smoking kills. To bring us back to the fundamental reason for tobacco reform, we need only to return to our urupā and our cemeteries and remember those loved ones who have been taken from us too soon. Smoking is the most significant cause of premature and preventable deaths in New Zealand. As Professor Tony Blakely has said so clearly: “eradicating smoking is the single most important and attainable policy action to reduce inequalities in mortality for Maori and Pacific peoples.”

The Māori Party is proud today of our champion Tariana Turia, and of all the smoke-free advocates—too many to name—who have taken up this cause so valiantly on behalf of whānau. We are delighted to support the third reading of the Smoke-free Environments (Controls and Enforcement) Amendment Bill.

Dr JACKIE BLUE (National) : I am pleased to rise in the third reading of the Smoke-free Environments (Controls and Enforcement) Amendment Bill. This bill prohibits displays of tobacco products, and will tighten up tobacco controls and enforcement. I congratulate Minister Tariana Turia, the Māori Affairs Committee, and also the Health Committee on their work on this legislation, which complements other measures already undertaken by the Government to date to address the harm from cigarette and tobacco smoking.

One of the initiatives undertaken by the Government was an unprecedented increase in the excise duty on tobacco products by 30 percent over time, which has been proven to be the most effective way of preventing people from smoking and of stopping smoking. Of note is the fact that Quitline calls have increased dramatically, and attempts to quit are up by over 50 percent. This has been backed up by massively improved access to smoking cessation treatments, which is up by 82 percent in the last 18 months. I think that smokers need to realise that smoking is an addiction; they should not be tough on themselves. They need to have nicotine replacement products to help to stop the effects of this addictive product. Another initiative undertaken by the Government is smoking cessation advice to hospitalised in-patients, which is one of our six national health targets. We are making good progress on that front, with more and more in-patients being advised about ways to stop smoking. It is all about those trigger points: getting people to think about what they are doing and about their smoking, and asking whether it is about time they stopped smoking for the sake of their health.

Who would have thought, even 5 or 10 years ago, that our prisons would ever be smoke-free. They have been smoke-free since 1 July. The transition phase has gone well, with almost 6,000 prisoners currently on nicotine replacement products. Of course, the ban includes staff; they are not allowed to smoke at work. This whole venture has been planned for over a year. In the planning there has obviously been education, and prisoners have been on nicotine replacement for some time leading up to 1 July. The venture has gone smoothly, and I congratulate the Minister of Corrections, the Hon Judith Collins.

This bill has virtually the universal support of the House, and that is commendable. It allows for a transition phase for retailers, and it is important to note that the provisions extend to internet sales of tobacco and herbal smoking products. Of course, sponsorship activities by manufacturers, importers, and retailers of tobacco products are prohibited. The penalties for selling to minors have been toughened up and increased. The penalties are $5,000 for an employee and $10,000 for a body corporate. The penalties are certainly up quite a lot from the current ones. I think the tougher penalties send the very strong message that if retailers sell to minors, it will cost them dearly in the pocket. Those doing that will pay a high price. This Government is serious about reducing harm, and this bill goes one more step along the way to achieving that. Thank you.

KRIS FAAFOI (Labour—Mana) : Taloha ni, Mr Assistant Speaker Robertson, and thank you, very much, for the opportunity to speak to the third reading of the Smoke-free Environments (Controls and Enforcement) Amendment Bill. No doubt, with the great interest that the tobacco industry has taken in this bill, some of the executives here in New Zealand will be watching. It is with great pleasure that I can say that we have set a deadline on banning tobacco displays in New Zealand. The clock is ticking, and another step has been taken against the harm that tobacco has caused in New Zealand.

It is an honour to be given the opportunity to speak in the final debate on this bill in the House. This is the next chapter in a significant culture change in public health in New Zealand, because we are moving away from smoking tobacco being the norm. There is relatively wide consensus around this House that by 2025 smoking will be considered unacceptable, and that New Zealand will be smoke-free.

Both my parents smoked when I was quite a young age. I am quite happy to say that at that young age we had the foresight to throw our parents’ cigarettes in the rubbish. I am glad to say that, even though they disciplined us at the time. I am glad to say that we did that, because of the huge hurt and pain that is caused in so many families in New Zealand by the harmful effects of tobacco. Every year 5,000 families pay the ultimate price because some of their family members decided to light up. At the moment 700,000 New Zealanders smoke. We think of every one of those 5,000 families whose family member dies. We heard a very touching story in the House last night from one of my colleagues, Louisa Wall, about how her father passed away prematurely because he smoked two packets of cigarettes a day.

The hurt and pain caused by tobacco makes me very proud that I have the opportunity to talk to this bill today. This is another step, as I said, on the journey. We have also banned smoking in workplaces and bars, and, as mentioned earlier, tobacco sponsorship was banned a couple of decades ago. Today we are banning the display of tobacco products in our shops and service stations. We are looking towards that goal, that culture change, of having a smoke-free New Zealand by 2025.

There is obviously some significant work still to do, but today is a big step. Banning tobacco displays takes away one of the major weapons that the tobacco industry uses to target our young New Zealanders. It knows that, and that is why it fought so hard and pushed so hard against the changes that we are bringing in with this bill.

On this key issue, I am glad to say that, with almost the complete support of the House, the industry has lost. This House, and the members who are supporting these measures, make no apologies about that, because every day, as those 700,000 Kiwis light up, and every year as those 5,000 Kiwi families lose their loved ones, the tobacco companies have continued to make huge profits. They have used those profits to target our youngsters to make sure that the industry still has a significant and continuing market for its products, although they cause huge and significant harm to New Zealanders. Yes, tobacco is a legal product and they use that line quite a lot in all of the correspondence that they send to members of Parliament. As I said, today is a big step but we should not shirk our responsibility to make sure that the intentions of this Parliament to ensure that New Zealand is smoke-free continue.

Can I now look at the area of Pasifika smoking. Tobacco has a disproportionate effect or impact on the Pasifika community, and that cannot be understated. Thirty-five percent of Pasifika men smoke and 28 percent of Pasifika women smoke, which is well above the national average. Unfortunately for my own Tokelauan culture 42 percent of Tokelauans have registered that they are smokers. Can I first of all congratulate a lot of the Pasifika health watchdogs that have made a significant contribution to the submissions on this bill. I make particular reference to one organisation, Tala Pasifika, and I have referred to it in earlier contributions on this bill, and to the submission made by the programme manager, Stephanie Erick. In its submission Tala Pasifika points out some of the concerns around the disproportionate effect of cigarette smoking on Pasifika people, which causes premature death, disease, and illnesses. Around a third of Pasifika people in New Zealand smoke. It went on to say that addressing the issues of tobacco accessibility to youth at-risk populations in New Zealand is a major step towards protecting current and future generations who would otherwise have been vulnerable to the deadly and addictive tobacco products that currently enjoy prominent promotion in retail settings across the country.

Just to finish on its submission: “To protect our Pacific children and the wider community from being initiated into smoking, the removal of tobacco retail displays from sight is an essential and urgent requirement for New Zealand.” I think it will be very happy with the move that this House is making today. I congratulate those Pacific health groups who work hard, day in, day out, to encourage Pasifika people to quit smoking, and also not to begin smoking. I also take this opportunity to acknowledge the leadership of the Minister in charge of this bill, the Hon Tariana Turia. This is a significant step for a New Zealand Minister, so I thank her for making sure that this has become a priority on behalf of Pacific people.

As I mentioned earlier, we have, first of all, banned tobacco sponsorship; not so long ago we banned smoking in bars and workplaces; and soon we will have a complete ban on tobacco displays in our shops. As a number of members on this side of the House have mentioned, we want to know where we are going and what the next steps are. We have also alluded to what we think those steps are. We think there will be relatively widespread support for having plain packaging. We know that across the Ditch that jurisdiction has moved towards plain packaging. I for one completely and utterly support that. Also, there are changes in relation to the use of vending machines, which we believe are used in a way that targets casual smokers.

I also take this opportunity to thank those many people who submitted, both for and against, on this bill. I found some of the stories to be inspirational. There were a number of personal stories from submitters to the Health Committee about their support for this bill, such as from people who have lost loved ones. I also found some submissions—not surprisingly—from retailers and the tobacco industry, and from those bodies aligned to the tobacco industry, to be infuriating. There was one particular submitter who was a retailer, I think from Dunedin. I think Kevin Hague has already mentioned him. He thought he sold about $150,000 worth of tobacco each week, which is a significant amount. I am not sure about the accuracy of that claim. This man had been in his community for some time as a tobacconist, and claimed that he came to know some of his customers very well; they became close friends. Upon questioning whether he knew his customers well enough to know whether they wanted to quit, he told us he knew that about 70 percent of them definitely did. Despite him knowing that, he continued to sell tobacco to them for years. I think in that respect that retailer needs to take a little bit more responsibility for how he targets his customers.

We are in a political setting; this is an election year, so we all know the power of marketing. The tobacco companies know that, and that is why they have pumped in a significant amount of money to try to make sure that this bill did not happen, especially because they know that they can use those marketing ploys to ensure that they continue to have a significant market into the future. It has been amazing, as I am a non-smoker, to see and to listen to some of the loopholes that the tobacco companies will try to get through. They use any sliver of light they can find to make sure that they can continue to market their products to young New Zealanders.

I will take this opportunity—because I know I am running short of time—to thank the officials, some of whom are in the public gallery today, for the significant amount of assistance they gave the Health Committee. I came into the Health Committee part-way through the process, and getting my head around some of the issues in this bill was certainly helped by some of the officials who helped us out during our consideration of the bill.

I will finish with the words from one submitter, Boyd Broughton, who said: “The current legislation, laws and restrictions governing tobacco retail displays are like the efforts of the Moa to hide from hunters in days when Moa were plentiful. Due to their size, elaborate colouring and sheer numbers, they are easily seen. Let us hope tobacco retail displays future mirrors not only their ability to be seen, but also their fate.” It is an absolute pleasure to support this bill.

NICKY WAGNER (National) : I, too, am very pleased to support the final passing of the Smoke-free Environments (Controls and Enforcement) Amendment Bill. I thank everybody who has worked on this bill: the people in the communities, people in Parliament, the honourable Minister Tariana Turia, the Māori Affairs Committee, and the Health Committee. I think we are passing this bill today because so many people in this House are absolutely committed to reducing the harm caused by smoking.

Since 2008 the National Government has been very active in this area. We have made helping smokers to quit one of the six health targets for all district health boards across the country. We have supported those targets with $50 million a year for tobacco control and smoking cessation. We have greatly increased the tax on tobacco, and that has proved to be the most effective way to prevent and deter smoking. We have increased that tax by 30 percent over about 2 years, and that is the biggest jump ever. Interestingly enough, it has had great results. Since the tobacco tax increase, there has been a 50 percent increase in the number of people approaching Quitline, and about an 82 percent increase in the numbers of people who have committed to smoking cessation treatments. We have banned smoking in prisons, which shows that we are prepared to tackle this problem on many fronts.

It is all part of the Government’s two-pronged strategy to reduce smoking. The first prong is to try to prevent people taking up smoking. It has been interesting to listen to the discussion today and to think about the ages of people when they tend to take up smoking. It is young people between 13 and 16 or 17—that sort of age—who have not really thought through the process of what happens when they smoke tobacco, and they end up being addicted before they know what has actually happened. It is interesting to see that very few people take up smoking after the age of 25. The second prong of our strategy is to help existing smokers to quit.

The purpose of this bill is to prohibit retail displays of tobacco products. It increases the controls on tobacco, and facilitates the enforcement of those tobacco controls. It is an important new push towards the Government’s stated goal of halving tobacco consumption by 2015 and being smoke-free by 2025. That will be a tough call, but it is a worthy goal and this bill will help. I commend the bill to the House.

Hon STEVE CHADWICK (Labour) : I will join the chorus today that the Smoke-free Environments (Controls and Enforcement) Amendment Bill, which prohibits the display of tobacco products in 2 years’ time, is a great achievement. It is the next step in a long journey, and lots of people have mentioned that journey.

Labour certainly supports the aspirational goal of New Zealand being smoke-free by 2025, and a lot of people have talked about the leadership that is needed to do that. I acknowledge Tariana Turia and congratulate her on actually taking on Minister Ryall and saying that this issue was important to all New Zealanders. I thank her for that, and for convincing the Minister of Health that excise alone would not make the difference in smoking cessation; we needed a package, and a comprehensive package, to make a difference to the health of all New Zealanders. We have talked about Tukoroirangi Morgan; he handed the mantle on. And I enjoyed working under the leadership of Helen Clark, who was determined that the original smoke-free environments bill would go through. Minister Turia was in our team at that time, and she supported that take way back then. She knew the debates and she knew the challenges we faced with that next incremental step.

I want to record how times have changed. I got handed the mantle, but there was an element of poison about any public health reform to do with smoking cessation—and my bill was just about second-hand smoke. I had death threats. White powder was delivered to my office, so security staff ring-fenced it. I had to be escorted back to my home at night after Parliament. The environment in the House was as toxic as tobacco! How it has changed. I hope that at the end of today Minister Turia will get a bouquet of flowers. She gets a bouquet from us in Labour for her leadership. I am sure that, intergenerationally, this issue will be back before the House.

I do not usually bring family into debates, but one night when I was caught in that toxic environment, after sitting in the chair in the House for 5 hours sponsoring the bill, I went back to my office and thought the journey was simply too hard. Even with the support of all of the non-governmental organisations that did awhi us through that process then, I thought it was just too hard and I felt like walking and pulling the plug. I went home that night and my youngest son said to me: “Mum, you look dreadful.” I said: “I feel awful. I’m not sure about this.” He asked: “What is it?”. I told him it was the Smoke-free Environments Amendment Bill, and he said: “Mum, keep going. We’re really proud of you, because you’re doing the right thing.” That was from my young kids, who at that time were about 23 or 24. They knew it was wrong; they went into pubs and bars, and they knew that they were inhaling air in an environment that was not good for their health, not good for the cleaners, and not good for those who choose to live their lives in a clean environment.

The environment has changed, but it has changed because of advocacy, and I want to acknowledge all of those advocacy groups, including Te Papa Tākaro o Te Arawa, Action on Smoking and Health (ASH), and the Heart Foundation. Without them I do not think we could have got there, actually. They gave us the information, they gave us the research, and they gave us the evidence, and that is what we need as legislators to feel brave about doing the right thing. So I acknowledge them. I heard specific mention of Dr Murray Laugesen, and I think he has been amazing, along with the evidence from Professor Beaglehole. We could not go wrong, actually, when we had the evidence—it was so compelling. At that time 380 New Zealanders died every year just from the effects of passive smoke. Now, with this legislation, 5,000 smoking-related deaths will be prevented in this country, and that is absolutely fantastic.

In terms of public health, I have been interested to hear Government members talk about the great contribution of an increase in excise tax. That is nothing; it is one leg of the stool in good public health legislation, and I wonder when the Government will really understand that it is about leadership, it is about advocacy—actually accepting advocacy and lobbying. The environment for lobbyists and advocates in this country was changed dramatically in 2004 when Rodney Hide said it was no longer the place for groups that advocate to get funding from the Government. That was a very, very sad day, because where else do we get our evidence? That is advocacy in my book.

It is also about education and information for the public, so that they can make choices but also so that we can socialise change. I thank the media that ran the stories. They ran the good, the bad, and the ugly stories, but still they ran the stories that informed the public at that time, and I think that is important.

But, above all, the slow-burn approach to public health legislation for smoking cessation must be backed by legislation. It is not just excise tax; it is legislation, and legislation with teeth. I think that is what we are seeing here today.

I will talk about incremental change in public health legislation, approaches, and policy. In 2004 that previous bill was passed. Then there was a petition in 2008 that gave us a very clear steer on where society—the community—wanted to go next with smoking cessation. I recall Tony Ryall, the Minister, arguing that there was absolutely no international evidence that banning cigarette displays had resulted in a reduction of smoking rates. How wrong he was! But something must have gone on, quite magically. I know how persuasive Minister Turia is when she has a bee in her bonnet, and she has got Minister Ryall onside, and I say well done to her. That is why we are here today; without it, you would not have had the backing and we would not have had the backing.

The ASSISTANT SPEAKER (H V Ross Robertson): Order!

Hon STEVE CHADWICK: Well, not you, Mr Assistant Speaker. You always have our backing.

I also acknowledge Iain Lees-Galloway. After that public petition he picked up all the recommendations in the petition and put them into his own member’s bill, because he knew where we needed to go as a country to reduce the rate of smoking uptake and the effects of tobacco smoke.

But a gap in the public health approach of 8 years—from the previous legislation to now—is far too long. I put a ring round this matter being back in the House in 5 years. We will be back here with the next legislative shift to keep the foot on the pedal of this slow burner.

Also, we cannot say we are doing enough about smoking cessation when the Government cut public health funding in last year’s Budget. I think it is appalling that people who had made a window-of-opportunity decision to stop smoking found that a lot of the access to the services they needed to stop their habit had been cut. They had made the choice, and good on them. We have to catch that golden window, but the Government cut smoking cessation programmes. That is sad, and it is not a comprehensive response from a Government that really believes in making a difference.

I have talked about the organisations involved, but one other plaudit is for those in the Ministry of Health. I am so relieved to know that there is a small directorate—and I am sure it is not called the tobacco directorate—in the Ministry of Health still, advising on public health issues. It will probably move now to alcohol and the effects of alcohol, and the effects of obesity, but thank goodness those officials are still there to advise the Health Committee.

I say well done to the select committee. There was a great response to the bill, and the committee made good amendments. I am delighted to support this next stage of the bill in the House today.

CHRIS AUCHINVOLE (National—West Coast - Tasman) : We will remove retail displays, ban retailers from using tobacco trading names to advertise tobacco, and have stricter restrictions on selling tobacco to young people, particularly to minors. I offer congratulations to the Minister the Hon Tariana Turia on her compassionate, persistent, striving effort to bring this bill to fruition. I offer congratulations to the Māori Affairs Committee and all others who have worked so assiduously on this issue.

A lot of people have said how good, timely, and really there the Smoke-free Environments (Controls and Enforcement) Amendment Bill is. As someone who started smoking when I was 11 and did not stop until about 15 years ago, I would like, although I strongly support this bill, to spare a thought for the dedicated, die-hard—and I mean that phrase quite literally—smokers. I am talking about the guys who have smoked pretty much all their lives and feel that they cannot stop. They are still out there—in ever-decreasing numbers, dying faster than the rest of us, but they are still there. I have a message for them: “You can give up—oh, yes you can.” The best way to quit that I ever found—the only way I ever found—was to simply get someone to ask one to. So, if a person knows another who smokes—and this is a bit like the alcoholic who drinks—they should face them with it and ask them not to. If it is someone they respect and love, all the better. It does work.

The curtain is coming down on smoking, which was a phenomenon of my generation. We have seen the birth of wholesale smoking and the cessation of it. All the films we used to watch when people like Shane Jones and I were quite young would show everybody smoking. It was a forced illustration of how to be cool and manly—and womanly, too; they had ladies’ cigarettes. It was a solid advertising wall, and the curtain is now coming down on it.

As one totally committed smoker, I thoroughly enjoyed cross-examining the representatives of the tobacco industry at the select committee meeting I attended. One could say only that we stitched them up—we really did stitch ’em up. We knew rather more about their industry than they did. There can be no pretence about the effect of smoking.

I still feel for those smokers we meet who suffer from the effects of emphysema after a lifetime of smoking. What a tragic way to end an otherwise active life! I still feel for the guys I worked with in forestry who would start each day with a 5 minute - long cough and a lot of throat clearing and would then light up a gasper because it was their “only pleasure”. It is sad.

Have we got there yet? I would suggest that we have not—not yet. I still have sympathy for those who gather outside pubs for a puff in the evenings, but, again, my message to them is: “Hey, fellas, you can give up. You really can.”

The ASSISTANT SPEAKER (H V Ross Robertson): Order!

CHRIS AUCHINVOLE: Well, the Assistant Speaker may have already done so. My message to those people is that they can give up, they really can, and they will be loved for longer if they do.

A party vote was called for on the question, That the Smoke-free Environments (Controls and Enforcement) Amendment Bill be now read a third time.

Ayes 117 New Zealand National 57; New Zealand Labour 42; Green Party 9; ACT New Zealand 2 (Boscawen, Hide); Māori Party 4; Progressive 1; United Future 1; Independent: Carter C.
Noes 3 ACT New Zealand 3 (Calvert, Douglas, Roy H).
Bill read a third time.

Taxation (Tax Administration and Remedial Matters) Bill

Second Reading

  • Debate resumed from 13 July.

Hon SHANE JONES (Labour) : Tēnā tātou. I give greetings to those people who have just celebrated the successful passage of the legislation dealing with that scourge otherwise known as smoking, and related cancer.

I rise, along with my colleagues, to oppose this bill, but in expressing opposition there are one or three things that can be found to be less disagreeable about it. First, the bill does not enable the indiscriminate sharing of information between the Inland Revenue Department and a host of other agencies. The Inland Revenue Department is the repository or, dare I say, the steward of very important information, and we on the Finance and Expenditure Committee felt there was not a suitable level of confidence that such information should be shared, certainly with private sector agencies. On that small matter, we actually find ourselves in agreement with our colleagues on the other side of the House.

It has been a very taxing day. This legislation deals with tax, but perhaps one of the most taxing elements was watching the Speaker’s patience being taxed. Unfortunately, that has led to a level of coverage that I fear might eclipse the announcement of the day, which is to do with tax reform policy that is not unrelated to this bill. Today’s announcement builds upon the reasons why Labour does not support this legislation, which abolishes gift duty. We feel that it is likely to have the effect of calcifying the current distribution of assets and resources, and that we should pay attention to those submitters who did not support the notion that it be stripped. For those reasons we will not support the bill.

However, we do support the announcements that have been made today. Those announcements are directed at improving the distribution of resources and adjusting the structure of our economy. Fiscal policy, and in particular tax policy, has a key role in influencing the way in which investment decisions, financial conduct, and economic bets are placed, to advance either an individual’s interests, a firm’s interests, or indeed the overall well-being of society. For those reasons, it has come as something of a surprise to us, in all honesty, to hear the rather shrill voice of the current Minister of Transport talking about economic vandalism, etc., and, surprisingly to me, to hear the very mercurial Judith Collins finding every which way to demonstrate new levels of hysteria. It is unusual that tax policy, or tax decisions, should elicit those kinds of responses from politicians.

This day, which is not disconnected from this bill, also represents a clear demarcation of where we will be going over the next 16 to 18 weeks. We have not feared making a very difficult but challenging—and ultimately rewarding, we believe—call about why the tax burden should not fall exclusively on labour. It ought to be shared between those who have only their labour to sell and those who enjoy the fruits of their capital stewardship. For those reasons it will be very exciting, although in itself that is an incongruous statement—that anything about tax could be exciting—except to people like Robin Oliver, Rob McLeod perhaps, or some of those other hacks who quietly contribute to our colleagues on the other side of the House. For those reasons, although this is not particularly colourful legislation, a great deal of colourful language has been emitted from the other side of the House. As a consequence of the overdue statements and policy directions that were adopted today, we will have a relatively modest impost of 15 percent—an improvement, and an invitation for those New Zealanders who earn well beyond $150,000 to make a contribution to issues such as the Christchurch earthquake. Of course, their contributions will be indexed.

We have a host of other challenges, not the least of which is how we would deal with Māori land, because gifts have a great deal to do with Māori land, and in particular with what we call in te reo Māori whenua tuku iho, or multiple-owned Māori land. Fortunately for those worry-warts on the other side of the House, a panel of experts will be dragooned into action. In fact, names come to mind while I am on my feet, but, for fear of them being ensnarled in the debate and debacle of Hone Harawira today, I will put their names to the side. Experts will take a very, very close and judicious eye to the implementation of these historic announcements today, not the least of which will be to ensure that assets transferred through the Treaty of Waitangi process are not disproportionately impacted in a negative way, in particular the Māori land in Te Ture Whenua Maori Act, which is a bit of a challenge because, if we were to ask 12 lawyers what it means, they would be likely to give us 12 different answers. Perhaps they are not unlike tax lawyers. That is why a group of experts will be empanelled. They will look at these matters, and in good time they will come back to a select committee and provide the public with a host of opportunities to finesse the ideas and the concepts that we have announced today.

I will come back briefly to the bill. Part of the reason why we were not supportive of the abolition of gift duty was that although we saw that it would provide an opportunity for ongoing activities that were bedevilling the tax department, we feared that changes of this nature would not have a desirable impact in terms of how we want to see generations of New Zealanders enjoy the opportunity to amass wealth and develop resources, rather than play second fiddle to a calcified cast of economic players that we can guarantee will be the primary beneficiaries. Small though they may be in number, those players will be the primary beneficiaries once the current Government moves on its foul plans, etc., to privatise State-owned enterprises for a narrow cast of economic beneficiaries.

In addition to that reason why we will not be supporting this bill, I say that we should pay a great deal of care and attention to the regulatory impact statement. It notes that tax avoidance could increase in the absence of gift duty. When Labour was in power, we were assiduous in following to an exhaustive degree what those regulatory impact statements had to say. It is very disappointing that the current crop of Ministers and their backbench colleagues tend to have a cavalier disregard for such matters. It is almost a constitutional impropriety. It falls to me to read from the statement: “it is not possible to precisely determine the extent to which gift duty alleviates issues such as income tax minimisation, social assistance targeting and defeat of creditors.” I think that even those colleagues on the other side of the House agree on that, for that narrow range of New Zealanders who are able to rort their affairs so they can qualify for a large degree of social assistance through the welfare distribution system. That is wrong. If they are capable of standing on their own two feet, then they ought not to be allowed to manipulate their affairs in such a way that they are able to enjoy access to welfare programmes that were designed for people in “Strugglers’ Gully”, not for people living in “Parasite Drive”—

Phil Twyford: Parasite?

Hon SHANE JONES: —sorry, Paritai Drive. That means the high-tide mark. The tide is definitely lifting the wakas of Te Rōpū Reipa today. [Interruption] Why do we have that shrill denunciation from the other side of the House? It is because those members cannot agree on what it is they dislike about this particular tax policy, other than the fact that they cannot find any reasonable or credible companies to bolster their arguments. For those reasons, the electorate has a clear view about what is being offered—contributing in a fair system by everyone, or hocking off the assets and watching foreigners and a narrow cast of economic players amass wealth, and maintain it, amongst a narrower and narrower group of people. That is not the vision for Aotearoa. It is akin to spending a great deal of money on a road going nowhere, and not having the money to maintain the road, which is something the current Minister of Transport is an expert at.

Labour will not be supporting this bill. Assistant Speaker Robertson’s body language and the way he is moving his hands are encouraging me to be focused; being unfocused is quite unlike me on ordinary occasions. No one should be in any doubt that we will not be supporting this bill. We think that it is ill-placed, and that the real tax issue of the day is the announcement offered by the Leader of the Opposition, our tumuaki. Kia ora tātou katoa.

AARON GILMORE (National) : It is always an honour and a privilege to follow the member who has just resumed his seat, Shane Jones. I remember when he had a future, and I remember when he had an idea that he might be the leader of the Labour Party. We have just heard from Mr Jones that he has no idea about the Taxation (Tax Administration and Remedial Matters) Bill, Labour’s tax policy, or anything else—great orator and user of flowery language though he may be.

Today some amazing stuff was put forward by the Labour Party, and I want to take a little time to talk about it. The bill before us is about simplifying the tax system so that it works more efficiently and operates in a way that reduces compliance costs for New Zealanders. It takes away $70 million of compliance costs that apply to mums and dads up and down the country. But today we heard the Labour Party put forward the absolute opposite.

We heard the Shane Jones talk about simplifying the tax system, but what has been announced today is a boon for tax accountants and lawyers up and down the country. Thousands of tax accountants up and down the country will be looking at Labour’s announcements and rubbing their hands with glee. They will think that although they are losing $70 million in fees with the removal of gift duty, one side will give back to them what the other side has taken. Labour has put in place a policy that tax accountants up and down the country will be rubbing their hands with glee about.

Labour has announced a system so complicated, convoluted, and ridiculous that I do not think even Labour members understand it—and we heard that in the speech made by Mr Jones. Mr Jones outlined some things, yet he did not even understand what the existing bill is trying to do. It is pretty clear that whatever the situation is, Labour’s numbers do not add up.

Last night we heard Mr Huo talk on this bill. He said that any bill that takes about $70 million in costs and raises half a million dollars in net revenue is not a good idea. We heard Mr Parker talk on this bill last night. He talked about his fetishes with Filipino brides and made a reference to incest, and he said this bill would enhance those things. I was outraged, as were a number of my colleagues. It was completely irrelevant to what was under way, and I encourage people to go and listen to it.

The situation at the moment is that 44 percent of households pay no net tax—44 percent of households. In New Zealand 17 percent of households pay 97 percent of tax—17 percent pay 97 percent of the tax. This bill goes some way to try to address that situation. It puts in place a simplification procedure, it reduces the costs by removing gift duty, and it puts in place an arrangement whereby portfolio investment entities have more flexibility to invest in things that are productive in New Zealand. It allows these entities to invest more into land—up to 20 percent. It allows the ability to put in place other simplification procedures that cover the reduction of costs to taxpayers up and down the country.

That is what our Government truly believes in—reducing the burden on taxpayers so that they can put that money into productive enterprises. When we reduce costs by $70 million with the removal of compliance costs in respect of gift duty, it does not mean that some tax accountant—who may be a former friend of mine—buys a new BMW this year. It means that that money will sit in the back pockets of Kiwi mums and dads, and they can spend it on productive, useful things.

Those are the key aspects that came out of the report of the Finance and Expenditure Committee. It was not about scaremongering and saying we could not protect assets with the removal of gift duty; it was about reducing costs for hard-working Kiwi mums and dads so that they could keep $70 million in their back pockets and invest it more wisely and productively in the things they choose to invest in.

The only shame is that if a fluke occurred in the near future and there was a change in Government, much of that $70 million would be taxed at a ridiculous level. But, given the polls we saw at the weekend, I am pleased to say that that is very unlikely. Despite what Labour members have said today and last night, I think that they truly believe it is right to incur $70 million in costs. That cost is completely unnecessary, and we do not know what purpose and benefit it is for. We believe in reducing the tax burden so that New Zealanders can get ahead, and I think that is a positive thing. It will help us to steer the way towards the brighter future that we really believe in. Thank you.

MICHAEL WOODHOUSE (National) : I am delighted to take a call on the Taxation (Tax Administration and Remedial Matters) Bill. As the newest member of the Finance and Expenditure Committee, I was not on the committee to hear submissions on this bill.

I will not be as hard as my colleague Mr Gilmore was on the speech of the Hon Shane Jones, because apart from his terrible quips on the use of the word “tax”, I think he had a very good point: today and yesterday are very important days for tax policy. I think I heard him say that experts will take a very close and judicious eye to Labour’s tax policy, and they probably will, but that judicious eye was already cast over New Zealand’s tax system at the end of Labour’s term in 2008, when the Tax Working Group released its report. It said that our tax system, which had previously been the least distortionary in the OECD in the late 1980s and early 1990s, had become incredibly distorted. It made some recommendations that included not tinkering with GST, which is something the good Dr Cullen, when he was the Minister of Finance, was absolutely adamant should not happen. It also said that, yes, there were some things that could be done regarding capital gains, but that included things like the removal of depreciation and the 20 percent premium. They are all things that have been done by the National Government since it came to power.

So I think that yesterday and today are very important days for tax policy. I mention yesterday because of the oral question asked by that very erudite National member of Parliament from Dunedin of the Hon Bill English about how fair our tax system was. The answer was quite remarkable. We seem to have one of the most progressive tax systems in the Western World, where 17 percent—17 percent—of income tax payers in this country pay 97 percent of the tax burden, and 43 percent of households in this country pay no effective tax because of the redistributive policies of Working for Families and other schemes. That does not include those families who might also be drawing New Zealand superannuation. We have a clear separation in terms of tax policy. We have a Government that, through this bill and previous legislation it has passed, is unhooking itself from the very distortionary and punitive tax policies of the past and heading on a low-tax simplification process on the same day that the Labour Party has announced a punitive, envious, and, frankly, unworkable tax policy, about which its previous Minister of Finance had said: “Do not go there.”

I was also mindful of Mr Parker’s comments on the removal of gift duty. I find it quite fascinating, but illuminating in respect of Labour’s theoretical commitment to a gift duty in the face of the fact that it simply did not work. Its abolition will have no effect and no fiscal impact whatsoever. I do not believe that Mr Parker was dog whistling to tax lawyers and tax accountants around the country when he suggested that the sky would fall in if the duty was changed. But there are many who do think that and who see the huge fees that lawyers earn in tax planning for trusts to avoid gift duty. They will be disappointed when this bill is passed. I certainly will not be one of them. I think it is a very, very good change, and I commend it.

A party vote was called for on the question, That the amendments recommended by the Finance and Expenditure Committee by majority be agreed to.

Ayes 66 New Zealand National 56; ACT New Zealand 5; Māori Party 4; United Future 1.
Noes 52 New Zealand Labour 42; Green Party 9; Independent: Carter C.
Question agreed to.

A party vote was called for on the question, That the Taxation (Tax Administration and Remedial Matters) Bill be now read a second time.

Ayes 65 New Zealand National 56; ACT New Zealand 5; Māori Party 3; United Future 1.
Noes 53 New Zealand Labour 42; Green Party 9; Progressive 1; Independent: Carter C.
Bill read a second time.
  • The result corrected after being originally announced as Ayes 67, Noes 53.

Child and Family Protection Bill

In Committee

  • Debate resumed from 21 October 2010.

Clauses 1 to 35

CHARLES CHAUVEL (Labour) : I will just call attention to Supplementary Order Paper 178 and Supplementary Order Paper 179 in the names of, respectively, Lynne Pillay and Jacinda Ardern, both of whom were members of the Justice and Electoral Committee while this bill was considered. I am very interested to hear from the Minister in the chair, the Associate Minister of Justice, about the Government’s attitude to both of the Supplementary Order Papers. I recall assisting Ms Pillay and Ms Ardern with the drafting of them at the time that they put them forward, back in November 2010. I commend both of the Supplementary Order Papers to the Committee, because I think they would make sensible and helpful changes to the legislation. It would be helpful, I think, given the spirit of cooperation that has surrounded this legislation to date, if the Government were to support the Supplementary Order Papers, as well.

The first Supplementary Order Paper that I will deal is Supplementary Order Paper 179, which sits in the name of Jacinda Ardern. This Supplementary Order Paper would amend the bill to change the definition of a “child” in the Domestic Violence Act 1995 from “a person under the age of 17 years;” to “a person under the age of 18 years;”. That would bring the proposed legislation into consistency with the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child, to which New Zealand is a signatory, as well as with the definitions currently in the Care of Children Act 2004 and the Children’s Commissioner Act 2003.

I would have thought that that was a very logical thing to do. There is no particular common sense surrounding the choice of the age of 17, which is what the legislation as drafted plumped for. If the Minister thinks there is any particular compelling reason to defy our international obligations and to legislate inconsistently with two important existing pieces of child welfare legislation, then I think the Committee of the whole House ought to hear what that justification is. If the Minister does not know because he has had to take the chair on behalf of a colleague, then I note that he has the assistance of officials available to him. I think it would be very helpful, as I have said, as well as being consistent with the spirit in which this legislation has been advanced—it has been cooperated on by, certainly, the Labour Opposition—to hear why this inconsistency continues to be supported by the Government.

The second Supplementary Order Paper I referred to and now wish to speak a little bit more about is Supplementary Order Paper 178, in the name of Lynne Pillay. Lynne Pillay chaired the Justice and Electoral Committee for 3 years in the previous Parliament, and I think her views are entitled to some weight. She would not have put this Supplementary Order Paper forward unless she had given it a good deal of thought. Her Supplementary Order Paper is designed to try to provide some enhanced protection for the children of applicants under the Domestic Violence Act 1995.

The Supplementary Order Paper would amend the Child and Family Protection Bill to provide that protection orders would continue to protect a child of an applicant’s family after they reach the age of 18, whether or not they reside with the applicant. I think it is important to note that in this context we are talking about young people who have been exposed to a considerable degree of acrimony and violence, and who may still be exposed to that in the future.

The Supplementary Order Paper is very consistent with the general aims of this legislation, because it would continue to extend some protection to young people until they decide for themselves that a protection order is no longer required. After all, maintaining an existing order is surely more efficient. We hear from this Government on many occasions that it wants greater efficiency in the field of justice and law and order. Well, it is much more efficient, quite plainly, to extend an existing order rather than to require young people to go to the expense and the trouble—with paperwork, judicial time, and lawyer time involved—of having to apply for a new order simply because they reach an arbitrary age that has been arrived at in the text of a bill.

I hope the Minister will feel able to take a call on these two issues. Obviously, we are not asking that he do that instantly if he wants to take some time to take some advice from his officials, but we have put these Supplementary Order Papers forward in good faith, further to what I think it is fair to say is the weight of evidence that the Justice and Electoral Committee heard from submitters. These measures are designed to try to improve the overall efficacy of the bill, and to ensure that we legislate as a Parliament, consistent with both our international obligations and other existing legislation in force in this field. If we are to depart from those practices, then we should know why. There should be a proper justification advanced for that.

On the second question, without proper justification we ought not to miss an opportunity to continue to provide the sort of protection that this legislation is designed to provide. If we are going to be efficient about the way we do it, we should extend orders in their in-force state until such time as the people who are protected by them actually tell the court that they no longer need that protection. If we are to do things differently from what either of the Supplementary Order Papers proposes, then I think there ought to be a case made, because I do not want the Opposition to have to rethink its support for the substantive legislation.

CHESTER BORROWS (National—Whanganui) : It was a privilege to sit on the Justice and Electoral Committee, which considered this bill, the Child and Family Protection Bill. The bill does a number of things that enhance the protection of young people who have previously witnessed, or who have been in a situation of, family violence. Of course, we have a disgraceful record in respect of family violence in this country.

In response to some matters raised by the previous speaker, Charles Chauvel, I say it is confirmed that Supplementary Order Paper 178 filed under the name of Lynne Pillay contains in effect an opt-out clause rather than an opt-in clause, or an opt-in situation as it applies within the bill as it is before the Committee at the moment. The majority of the select committee at the time felt that as people at the age of 16 can leave home, live where they like, and be independent under New Zealand law—and many do tend to leave home at that time—and as they can make decisions for themselves at that time as to whether they stay at home or move away from home, and decisions on the relationships they want to have, the relationships they want to keep, the relationships they want to change, and the nature of those relationships, it was fitting for the continuation of a protection order to be an opt-in situation if a person moved away from home. In other words, 17-year-olds would have to make a decision as to whether they wanted to continue within the protection of a protection order. It is a relatively simple matter for them to do that, and if they need assistance to do it by way of legal aid, then that is something they are able to get.

In respect of Supplementary Order Paper 179 in the name of Jacinda Ardern, which seeks to extend a protection order to 18 years from 17 years, I have to say that, really, there is a philosophical difference between the two parties, Labour and National. Under the previous term of Government, Labour, in a number of pieces of legislation, sought to extend the age of a young person—or a child, in some cases—to 18 years. The incoming National Government disagreed with that, so in its child protection legislation—the Children, Young Persons, and Their Families Act amendment legislation, for instance—it kept it at 17. So there are some inconsistencies, but, again, the point is made that in this country young people can leave home at 16 and make their own decisions as to where they are—by law they can choose where they live. As most of our legislation—for instance, our criminal law legislation—means that young people get into the adult jurisdiction when they turn 17, it was decided in this case that we would stick with 17.

We recognise that that is contrary to the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child, but at the same time, despite a number of the treaties and the conventions that we have signed internationally, New Zealand continues to act in deference to its autonomy and sovereignty as a nation. It continues to act outside those conventions and has done so under both Governments.

Hon RUTH DYSON (Labour—Port Hills) : First of all, I say that it is a real pleasure to be supporting the Child and Family Protection Bill. I particularly commend to the current Government and to the incoming Government after the election that we end each week on a bill that has more bipartisan agreement, or cross-party agreement, rather than on ones that end as going up—

Grant Robertson: Do you want us to sing together, as well?

Hon RUTH DYSON: No, I am not promoting singing together; I am not in any of those parties. But I do think that it is a good note on which to end the week. I commend Chester Borrows, the member who has just resumed his seat, and thank him for his chairing of the consideration of this legislation. But at the same time as that genuine acknowledgment, can I express my frustration with him for insisting on trotting out the party line. I think it is about time he moved on from that, and recognised that some parts of this legislation are deficient, that they are improved by the Supplementary Order Papers that are being promoted by two of my colleagues, Lynne Pillay and Jacinda Ardern, and that we should be above politics—probably in a lot of areas but none more so than in the area of this Parliament being united against family violence.

I also express some frustration that a new bill was introduced and referred to a select committee, and is now taking the time of Parliament, when we actually have a better bill on the Order Paper, and that is the Domestic Violence Reform Bill, introduced in 2008 by my colleague the Hon Annette King when she was the Minister of Justice. That bill is broader than this legislation, and it is stronger than this legislation. It is more robust and more credible internationally than this legislation, but, more important, it would do more, particularly, to protect our children who are in homes where they might be subject to violence. How could anyone not want to do the most possible to protect children? But here we have the Government saying that Labour introduced that bill, so National will do something different and it does not care if its legislation is weaker. I think that is a poor position, and I challenge the Minister in the chair, the Associate Minister of Justice, to defend doing something less than is possible, to defend weakening an existing piece of legislation that is before a select committee. I personally do not think that that is credible.

I will talk a bit about the background to that 2008 legislation introduced by the Hon Annette King, because it had a very unusual background, which is one that I do not recall having discussed in this House before. I was Minister for Social Development and Employment at the time, and I had convened a cross-all-parties group—one person from each party was invited to join that group—to look at how we could make families safer in New Zealand. It occurred to me, as Minister for Social Development and Employment, that this was an area where party politics was probably irrelevant, and where every party would want to contribute. We had a very diverse group of representatives. We started off just for a couple of meetings having the now Hon Judith Collins—she did not stay for very many meetings, just two on behalf of National, and it was much to my sadness that National was not represented after that. We had the Hon Heather Roy from the ACT Party—everyone knows Heather Roy’s views; no one will die wondering what she thinks about—and sitting next to her was Sue Bradford from the Green Party. Can members imagine two women with more diverse views than the Hon Heather Roy and Sue Bradford? I cannot, actually. They are pretty much poles apart, but on this issue they both put every amount of effort, attention, and passion into contributing, and found that they, and all the rest of our group, had much more in common than we had to divide us. I think that that was a very good thing.

The Hon Tariana Turia was the representative from the Māori Party, and when she was not able to attend the Hon Pita Sharples was its representative. Judy Turner from United Future was its representative, and Barbara Stewart from New Zealand First. So every party in Parliament, except National, said that this issue was so important that it would give its time and effort to contributing to policy development. From that committee came the basis of the domestic violence legislation. The Hon Annette King gave our group a commitment to not progress through even a Cabinet committee, let alone Cabinet itself, any proposals until those proposals had been looked at by that multiparty group. We had justice officials coming in, we had social development officials coming in, and we had members of the community and voluntary sector who were involved in delivering many of our family violence prevention programmes. We had a whole range of experts giving us information, and then we gave the Hon Annette King our views on what should be in that domestic violence legislation. The draft came to our multiparty group before it went to a Cabinet committee, which is pretty rare but I think it is a very good model. But because of National’s petulance, childish behaviour, immaturity, inability to see above its own party’s so-called superiority—

Hon Dr Jonathan Coleman: Is this bipartisan time?

Hon RUTH DYSON: —with the arrogance that the Hon Jonathan Coleman has turned into an art form, that is the bill that, developed by the multiparty group, is now languishing on the bottom of the Order Paper. We have not put in all of the missing bits of that legislation as Supplementary Order Papers to this legislation, but perhaps we could have, just to reinforce the point. But I urge the Hon Nathan Guy to look at the two Supplementary Order Papers that we have put forward, and to take them seriously. Their aim is to improve the bill—not to the standard of the domestic violence legislation that is on the Order Paper but at least to make some small improvements.

The other areas that have been omitted, but that are in the Domestic Violence Reform Bill, include, as Chester Borrows pointed out, the age in the definition of “child”. We have had some pretty tragic situations where people who should have been classed as children have been classed as adults. I do not see any reason, at all, why we would want that sort of thing to occur to a young person. The difference between the response to a person who is not of adult mental capability and someone who is should be at the heart of a police and justice response, but it cannot be while we have that age differentiation.

Our bill, the Domestic Violence Reform Bill, also has a provision that requires any judge who declines a without notice application for a protection order to provide written reasons for declining that application. So the applicant would then be able to decide whether to proceed on notice. That is a really important part of understanding judicial decisions, but it has been just omitted from this legislation. There is no logic, at all, for that provision to be omitted, but it has been.

Our bill also has provisions for applicants to be able to attend information sessions, so they could get advice on making effective use of protection orders and on any social assistance that may be available—so practical help to people who are in the situation where they are being affected by domestic violence.

The National Government’s bill does not have any provision for the court to deal with the power to direct attendance at addiction assessment and treatment programmes. Our bill gives the Family Court that power. Every member of the House understands the relationship between drugs and alcohol and dysfunctional family situations. We should be doing everything we can to engage people who are either drug or alcohol addicts with the right path into support.

Our legislation empowers the Family Court to appoint a lawyer to represent the interests of a child in a broader range of circumstances than is currently the case. Our bill also offers better protection and provision around applications for discharge of protection orders, and allows the court to order reports if necessary. Those are the improvements that could be made to this legislation if the National Government had the inclination to put aside party politics and say we should have the best legislation possible. I really urge Government members, over the coming hours as we go through the Committee stage, to consider those potential improvements. We should be able to do the best possible job that we can as a Parliament to make our children’s lives safe.

Despite its failings, this legislation does do a number of important things. I do not want to diminish, in any way, the respect that I have for the introduction of this legislation, but I do have to make the comment that it could well have been better.

SUE MORONEY (Labour) : It was very useful to listen to that very good contribution from my colleague Ruth Dyson, who gave the background to Labour’s Domestic Violence Reform Bill, which, one could say, precedes the Child and Family Protection Bill.

I think it is very relevant and very appropriate that we are debating the Committee stage of this bill on the eve of the school holidays, because I know that for far too many children, this time may not be one they particularly look forward to. Many of our children, particularly at this time, are very much looking forward to the school holidays, because this term has been an incredibly long term, given that things have been changed around for the Rugby World Cup. I think that many families are thinking: “Good grief! How many more sleeps before our children get a rest. It’s been a very, very long school term, indeed.” But for far too many children the prospect of spending more time at home, amidst violence, will be a very, very hard prospect indeed.

I say at the outset that I am concerned about the sheer length of time it has taken for this bill to make its way even to the Committee stage, and how much faster the legislative process could have been if the Government had simply picked up Annette King’s bill, which, as we have already heard, was already on the Order Paper, but has languished there ever since the change of Government. We could have made much quicker progress on not only the issues addressed by this bill but also a whole range of other issues that would strengthen and protect children in violent situations much more than the current bill does.

I think the legislative history of this bill tells us everything we need to know about the priority and the speed that the Government places on this particular issue. I know the Government will say it is a top priority for it to protect children, but this bill was first introduced on 20 August 2009—20 August 2009—yet here we are nearly at the end of the parliamentary term and we are only in the Committee stage. I think that is an indictment on the priority that this Government places on this very serious issue. The Government had choices. It had choices to make about which legislation it would use this parliamentary term to make progress on, and, sadly, this bill has not been at the top of that list.

This bill had its first reading on 11 February 2010. It was then referred to the Justice and Electoral Committee, and public submissions were called for. Those submissions closed on 1 April 2010. The select committee did its work in a timely fashion. It reported back to the House on 10 August 2010. The second reading happened quickly thereafter; on 9 September 2010 the second reading of this bill happened. The Committee of the whole House, which is the stage we are in at the moment, also started in a timely fashion; 21 October 2010 was when we started the stage we are debating today. But what has happened in the interim? Fast forward to July 2011 and we are still debating the Committee stage of this bill. The Government could have chosen to have the Committee stage over and done with by now, if it really wanted to prioritise this bill.

There were other pieces of legislation, and, gosh, I could name a handful of them just standing here—like the national standards legislation, which suddenly we had to put through under urgency. That legislation could have been left aside. This Child and Family Protection Bill does much more for children than the national standards legislation ever will do, yet that legislation was pushed through under urgency. Annette King’s very good domestic violence bill languishes on the Order Paper, but then the Government’s own watered-down version of that bill has done the same thing. I would like to hear from members opposite what was so important, what was so much more important than the protection of children, that meant this bill did not come back and proceed through its Committee of the whole House stage in that period.

The CHAIRPERSON (Lindsay Tisch): Before I call the member again, I tell her we are in the Committee stage. She needs to concentrate on what is in the bill, not the historical background—that is what a first reading speech is about. Please concentrate on what is in the bill.

SUE MORONEY: Here we are in the Committee stage, and I say that despite the concerns about how long it has taken to get here, and despite the fact that we believe there is currently a much stronger bill on the Order Paper, Labour supports this legislation. However, we think the Government should be doing more to prevent domestic violence and to mitigate its harms.

Stopping family violence and preventing those tragedies of child and partner deaths in New Zealand is an urgent priority for all of us. As well as progressing this bill, the Government has progressed other domestic violence legislation, such as the Domestic Violence (Enhancing Safety) Bill, and it has introduced on-the-spot protection orders, which were also originally provided for in Labour’s bill. However, there are some major omissions from the Child and Family Protection Bill. The Government has claimed in previous readings of this bill that it does not have the resources to progress the other provisions, but, strangely enough, it does have the resources to give tax cuts to the wealthiest chunk of New Zealanders. I think that again demonstrates exactly where the Government’s priorities are.

It was really interesting to hear Ruth Dyson talk about the cross-party working-group that she brought together, which underpinned the development of this and other legislation, because it is actually quite different today. That was when Labour was in Government, and Labour actually asked for a cross-party group in the interests of children. Today, we have had every other party wanting to form a cross-party group in the interests of children, and the governing party, National, is the only one to say no, it will not take part in a cross-party forum. I think it is time that the Government put aside party politics to actually work with other parties to get the very best legislation we can. I urge Government members to show a sign that they are capable of doing that, by supporting Supplementary Order Papers 179 and 178, put forward by my colleagues Jacinda Ardern and Lynne Pillay respectively. The Government says it will address those issues at some other time, but—for goodness’ sake—the Government is running out of time. An election has been called for 26 November. What other time will the Government take to actually pick up those issues, if not now? It has the perfect opportunity to do that right here, right now, today, by supporting the Supplementary Order Papers that will strengthen this bill. They will actually strengthen it in order to protect children, because that is what we are talking about here.

A number of important changes have been missed out. We do not have Supplementary Order Papers on all of them, but one of them is Labour’s amendment that would change the definition of “child” in the Domestic Violence Act to be someone under the age of 18, to make it in accordance with the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child. Currently a child is defined as anyone under the age of 18. That is the subject of Supplementary Order Paper 179, which Jacinda Ardern has put forward. We heard Chester Borrows say earlier that National members are ideologically opposed to it, but I did not hear why. I got the fact they were ideologically opposed to it, but heard no practical example of what National would do with regard to the protection of children. That is what we are trying to do here: we are trying to offer the maximum protection possible. I am sorry, but the explanation that children can choose to leave home at 16 years old does not actually cut it for me, I tell Mr Borrows. What is wrong with affording them continued protection even after they have the right to leave home? I think we all know of very sad situations in which exactly that protection is needed. For those young people in a violent situation with a violent parent, leaving home does not necessarily remove them from that harm. That is what we are trying to resolve here. What Labour is desperately trying to resolve is to make sure that up to the age of 18—only 18—they can have that protection. But the Government is saying no, they can have that protection only up to the age of 17. I think that is wrong. The Government will need to put its hand up if something terrible happens to someone between those ages because the Government has been unable afford them that protection, because it was too short-sighted and too pigheaded.

CAROL BEAUMONT (Labour) : I rise to speak to the Child and Family Protection Bill. I acknowledge the contribution of all my colleagues. I think we have put this legislation in an important context and have looked at some of the history. But, as you say, Mr Chair, we need to focus on the bill, and I intend to do that, and to look at some of the main provisions of the bill.

The bill has three parts, which amend respectively the Domestic Violence Act 1995, the Care of Children Act 2004, and the Adoption Act 1955. Before I look at some of those changes, I add my voice in saying that not much, if anything, can be more important than the protection of children. As politicians, that must surely be something that we have an absolute responsibility for: to make sure that those who do not have their own voice, or access to services in the way that adults do, are appropriately cared for. When I made my maiden speech in this House I undertook that I would always stand up and speak out against family and domestic violence, and that I would work to seek improvements in this area.

In my working life I have had quite a bit to do with both women and children who have been subjected to violence from other members of their families. I say the importance of this cannot be overstated. It is not only the terrible statistics we have in terms of children being killed or physically injured; it is the psychological damage it causes in children to see one of their parents—usually their mother—being subjected to violence, or indeed being subjected to that sort of violence and fear themselves, and the ongoing consequences of that on people’s lives. I am putting it in that context to say this is a very serious matter indeed, and if there are things we can do as a Parliament to strengthen this bill, we should. Two of my colleagues have put up Supplementary Order Papers to try to improve this bill, and I urge members opposite to look at them.

I also add my voice to those who say that Labour’s Domestic Violence Reform Bill has been languishing at the bottom of the Order Paper. It is a bill that is already there and ready to go, which meant we could have had change in this area much more rapidly than we have had. I raised this issue with the Minister, Simon Power, when he came before our select committee on the estimates. I was told that the rest of the changes in that bill are too expensive to make. Well, I think this is a priority for Government expenditure; working in this area must be a priority.

Returning to the bill, I say that it intends to provide more protection for children who are victims of domestic violence, to ensure that Family Courts can appropriately manage concurrent proceedings involving children, and to reduce administrative barriers to court processes. As the Hon Ruth Dyson said, there are good suggestions in this bill and there are specific changes that will make a difference. There is no question about that. That is why Labour is supporting this bill—as we will support any attempt to prevent and mitigate the harm of domestic violence. But it is not ambitious enough. We could have done this much more quickly, as Sue Moroney has said. We should have used Labour’s Domestic Violence Reform Bill, which is already in place.

Here are some of the statistics that sit around this issue. In 2008 police responded to 82,692 incidents involving some form of domestic violence, and most of those cases will have involved children. Our domestic violence rates do not compare well with other OECD countries and we have the worst rate in the developed world for child death by maltreatment. I put on record, in debating this bill, that it is an absolute scandal that funding for residential care in our refuges has been cut under this Government. It is an absolute scandal that at a time when rates of domestic violence are rising, and when, generally, refuges are the places where women will go with their children when seeking safety, we have less funding for residential refuge care. That is an absolute outrage.

The specific provisions I want to look at are the ones around the Care of Children Act 2004. Clauses 17 to 28 of the Child and Family Protection Bill amend the Care of Children Act 2004. They provide that where a protection order has been made against a party to an application for a parenting order, the court may make an order allowing the party only day-to-day care or contact with the child if the court is satisfied that the child will be safe. That is absolutely critically important. If the court is not satisfied that the child will be safe, it may make an order for supervised contact between the child and the party.

One of the things I think is particularly important—I referred to it earlier, and it is one of the things I strongly support in this bill—is that the procedures used in care of children hearings are extended to allegations of psychological abuse as well as physical abuse. We all know that in situations of family violence the psychological damage, as I said earlier, is hugely significant. This is about people who are meant to be a part of those who love and care for their children. Whether it is violence directed towards a child, or towards the child’s mother or other member of the family, the psychological damage and abuse that can occur in family violence situations is very severe, and it can be highly problematic for people in living the rest of their lives. So the fact that procedures used in care of children hearings are extended to allegations of psychological abuse is very important. I certainly applaud that change.

The bill also strengthens the protection for children from unlawful removal from New Zealand. Many of us will be aware that there are such situations, especially now that people are more mobile. Because people live in many different places and migrate between countries, this is much more of an issue than perhaps it was in the past. The amendments to the Care of Children Act in providing protection for unlawful removal from New Zealand and the amendments in Part 3 to the Adoption Act 1955, which also make some changes in relation to this issue of international movement of children, are worthy of note.

We think that the Government should be doing more in this area. As I said, cuts to the funding of refuges should be something that members opposite raise with their own ministerial colleagues. But also the remainder of the recommendations in Labour’s Domestic Violence Reform Bill could still be prioritised by this Government, and should still be prioritised by this Government. Simon Power has said that he intends to progress the remaining provisions, but when will that happen? Simon Power is intending to do quite a few things, but, as Ms Moroney said, there are very few sitting days left before the election. It is a shame that this bill has come to us so late in the parliamentary term, and here we are in the Committee stage, as Ms Moroney said.

Again I reiterate Labour’s support for the bill and our support for the two Supplementary Order Papers. I urge members opposite to consider them seriously and to at least strengthen the bill as far as they can within the confines of the remaining sitting time by agreeing to those two Supplementary Order Papers in the names of Lynne Pillay and Jacinda Ardern respectively. Thank you.

Dr RAJEN PRASAD (Labour) : I am pleased to take a call on the Committee stage of the Child and Family Protection Bill to add to the voices that have already expressed Labour’s support for this bill because of the area it addresses, and also to point out a number of other points.

When we take all of the clauses we are debating today as a whole, we have to ask ourselves whether they represent the Government’s next step in addressing domestic violence. We all know the nature of domestic violence. There is not a person in this Chamber who does not believe that we should be doing a whole lot more than we have done. Every bill on domestic violence that has come into this House has been supported by members on this side of the Chamber. I remember saying to the Minister of Justice directly that this was an area where we would cooperate with him. He assured us that there would be cooperation. He also said that these issues would be comprehensively addressed.

One also assumes that there was some urgency on this matter. But the clauses in Part 2, taken together, certainly do not constitute addressing domestic violence in a comprehensive way. Let us look at the time frame. The first step was in 2009, and the next step was taken 2 years later. Does that signal the urgency with which the Government sees this particular area? Of course it does not. The Government must wear as a criticism the fact that it has not managed the House or the issue—probably both—and that it needed to bring such an important issue to the House far more quickly, particularly when the work had been done at the select committee. I wonder how many children, how many cases, have passed since this bill was introduced in which the victims may not have benefited from the clauses. So this bill certainly does not constitute a comprehensive approach.

I will address a number of factors. Section 1B, which is inserted into the Domestic Violence Act by clause 6(2), talks, effectively, about the definition of “children”. We heard my colleagues talk about the two Labour Supplementary Order Papers, Supplementary Order Papers 178 and 179. What lies at the heart of those Supplementary Order Papers is the nature of childhood and the definition of “children”. I have not heard one argument that is actually sustainable as to why Jacinda Ardern’s Supplementary Order Paper cannot be accepted. I thought that Mr Borrows at one point actually argued against himself. He argued that because some children leave home at 16 years, the Government decided to have the age at 17 years. Well, there is no logic in that, because, as we know, the definition of “child” under UN conventions extends to 18 years. Here was an opportunity to fix that. There was certainly an opportunity in other bills—not this bill; it was not before the Social Services Committee—for the Government to signal that the age of 18 ought to be adopted. Here is another bill where it has not been, and there is an attempt here to fix that through our Supplementary Order Papers.

Jacinda Ardern’s amendment also internalises the fact that children reach maturation at different rates. If somebody reaches maturation at 14, 15, or 16 years that is well and good, but for others 18 years is at least the mandated age internationally. We must remember also that these children have been victims of violence and therefore God only knows to what extent that maturation has been retarded. So at the least we thought we might have had a better response from the Minister in the chair, the Associate Minister of Justice, and that the amendment might be looked at from an absolutely scientific point of view. There is nothing ideological about that; I am saying that there is an opportunity to address a particular problem. And, of course, the Minister has not taken that opportunity, but members on this side of Chamber are committed to addressing that.

Hon DAVID PARKER (Labour) : As prior speakers have said, the Labour Opposition supports the Child and Family Protection Bill, which will, on occasion, protect children who are being physically abused by their parents.

The contradiction I would like the Minister in the chair, the Associate Minister of Justice, to speak to is why this week the Government, when it is pretending it will do something to improve outcomes for abused children, is taking away the right of abused children to receive from the estate of their father who abused them some fair recompense following their his death. That is what the Government is doing this same week.

I ask the Minister to get to his feet and explain how it can be right to take away the effective right of an incest victim to make a claim against the estate of their deceased parent under the Family Protection Act by allowing the whole of the estate to be gifted, which is the effect of the changes to gift duty that the Government is pushing through the House this week. It seems to me to stand in stark contrast to this bill, which the Labour Opposition supports, and which does give protection to children, including children abused by their parents.

This bill makes some wise amendments to the Care of Children Act, and sets out procedures for dealing with applications for day-to-day care of, or contact with, children when there is an allegation that one of the parties has used violence against the child, which can include sexual violence—the alleged sexual molestation of a child. That is a laudable thing to do, as we know it sometimes happens in society. It is terrible when it does happen. It is terribly sad that sometimes when it happens, the parents become estranged from the child and blame the child. I am sure that anyone who has practised in this area of law will know this. Charles Chauvel will know this, I know this, and the former Race Relations Conciliator who was involved in the Families Commission will know this. On occasion the family, unjust though it is, blame the child. They become estranged from the child, and the child, who has been the defenceless victim of incest, is left estranged from the family and is, on occasion, cut out of the will.

Under New Zealand law the Family Protection Act, until now, allowed that child to make a claim against the estate, alleging that the testator—the person who has died—breached their moral duty to that child by cutting the child out of the will. The Family Protection Act has been on New Zealand’s book since 1955. This bill makes similar provisions for the protection of children, yet the Government this same week is taking away—

The CHAIRPERSON (Lindsay Tisch): Order!

Hon DAVID PARKER: Mr Chairman, I am asking the Minister to explain how he can reconcile extending the protection of children in this bill with taking away the rights of those children under the Family Protection Act, because those assets could be gifted out of the estate in the week before someone dies, or—

The CHAIRPERSON (Lindsay Tisch): When we are in the Committee stage we are to consider what is reported back in the bill. I have cautioned the member twice to come back to that. I ask the member to continue in that vein.

Hon DAVID PARKER: This bill makes changes to the child and family protection legislation, which are aimed at doing justice to a child who suffers violence. I am asking the Minister how he can pretend that he is advancing the interests of children when just yesterday in this Chamber—in fact, the vote may have gone through today; I am not sure—

The CHAIRPERSON (Lindsay Tisch): Order!

Hon DAVID PARKER: Mr Chairman, I am asking the Minister to justify why on the one hand that is right but on the other hand he can take away the rights of an incest victim to have a remedy against the estate of a deceased parent.

The CHAIRPERSON (Lindsay Tisch): I have just said that the Minister has no responsibility for a bill that is not currently before us. I have asked the member—this is my third occasion—to concentrate on the report back from the select committee and on the clauses of this bill. That is what we are debating.

Hon DAVID PARKER: I think the Minister should get to his feet and explain the inconsistencies in respect of this Government’s attitude to child protection laws.

CHARLES CHAUVEL (Labour) : I really do implore the Minister in the chair, the Associate Minister of Justice, to take a call, because a number of points have been raised by my colleagues in a bona fide attempt to make the Child and Family Protection Bill better. That is what we are here to do, particularly in respect of bills where we agree that the measure should proceed.

  • Progress reported.
  • Report adopted.
  • The House adjourned at 5.55 p.m.